Missouri Student Loan Forgiveness Program to Erase More Than $400,000 in Student Loans
As part of a statewide effort to support education in math and science, the Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority has agreed to forgive nearly $444,000 in student loans for almost 300 engineering and pre-engineering college students (“MOHELA Forgives Over $400,000 in Pre-Engineering Loan Program,” MarketWatch, Oct. 17, 2008).
The lender’s Prospective Engineering Student Loan Forgiveness Award Program will forgive up to $3,500 in federal Stafford student loans for any Missouri college freshman who enrolls in and completes two years of engineering classes in certain degree programs.
Students at 11 Missouri schools are eligible for the loan forgiveness program, which complements the state’s Math, Engineering, Technology, and Sciences Alliance (METS), an initiative created by Gov. Matt Blunt to improve student achievement in METS-based industries.
MOHELA’s loan forgiveness program will be funded, in part, by the revenues generated from tax-exempt bonds, says Raymond Bayer, Jr., MOHELA’s executive director and chief executive officer.
The state student loan agency also made a second announcement on Friday that it had recently closed on a $262.5 million bond issuance with Bank of America Securities (“MOHELA Announces $262.5 Million Bond Issuance,” MarketWatch, Oct. 17, 2008). This bond will give MOHELA the capital it needs to continue issuing federal student loans through the Federal Family Education Loan Program.
