California 2023-2024 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB1160 Compare Versions

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1-Amended IN Senate July 03, 2024 Amended IN Senate June 24, 2024 Amended IN Senate May 20, 2024 Amended IN Assembly January 22, 2024 Amended IN Assembly January 10, 2024 Amended IN Assembly March 16, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1160Introduced by Assembly Member PachecoFebruary 16, 2023An act to amend Sections 1788.91, 1788.92, and 1788.93 of the Civil Code, to amend Section 66022 of, and to add Article 4.3 (commencing with Section 66035) to Chapter 2 of Part 40 of Division 5 of Title 3 of, the Education Code, and to amend Section 12419.5 of the Government Code, relating to student debts.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 1160, as amended, Pacheco. Protecting Students from Creditor Colleges Act.Existing law establishes the California Community Colleges, under the administration of the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges, the California State University, under the administration of the Trustees of the California State University, the University of California, under the administration of the Regents of the University of California, independent institutions of higher education, and private postsecondary educational institutions as the segments of postsecondary education in the state.The Donahoe Higher Education Act requires public higher education entities to adopt regulations to withhold institutional services, including withholding grades and diplomas, upon notice to a student that they are in default on a loan made pursuant to specified federal law.Notwithstanding any other law, the Educational Debt Collection Practices Act prohibits a school, as defined, from refusing to provide a transcript for a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a debt, conditioning the provision of a transcript on the payment of a debt, charging a higher fee for obtaining a transcript, providing less favorable treatment of a transcript request because a student owes a debt, or using a transcript issuance as a tool for debt collection, as specified.This bill would expand the provisions described above to also prohibit a school from refusing to provide a diploma, as defined, for a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a debt, conditioning the provision of a diploma on the payment of a debt, charging a higher fee for obtaining a diploma, providing less favorable treatment of a diploma request because a student owes a debt, or using a diploma issuance as a tool for debt collection. The bill would make other conforming changes.This bill would prohibit an institution of higher education, as defined, from taking specified actions, including, among other things, charging a higher tuition or fee on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt, as defined. The bill would authorize an institution of higher education to prevent a current or former student that owes an institutional debt from enrolling or registering for courses on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt if the institution of higher education complies with specified conditions, including, among other conditions, that the institution grants a one-time exemption from an enrollment or registration hold on a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt, as provided. The bill would require an institution of higher education to establish a written policy defining standards and practices for the collection of institutional debt, as provided, and to provide the written policy to current or former students that owe an institutional debt. The bill would prohibit an institution of higher education from taking specified actions when collecting an institutional debt. The bill would require the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University, and request the office of the President of the University of California, to require each public institution to report, beginning on or before July 1, 2026, using a specified uniform format, and on a biennial basis, specified information regarding the number and dollar amount of institutional debts at each institution. The bill would require, on or before July 1, 2028, that biennial report to include additional specified information. By imposing new duties on community college districts, the bill would constitute a state-mandated local program.Existing law authorizes the Controller, in their discretion, to offset any amount due to a state agency from a person or entity, against any amount owing to that person or entity, including any tax refund, by any state agency, except as specified.This bill would prohibit the Controller, for taxable years beginning on and after January 1, 2025, from offsetting any amount due to a public or private postsecondary educational institution, as defined, from a current or former student, that was incurred in their capacity as a student, against any amount owing to that current or former student by a state agency, until 730 days after the amount was incurred.The bill would make its provisions severable.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Over the last decade, state and national attention has focused on the harmful impacts of the $1.7 trillion dollar student loan debt crisis. Across California, more than 3,900,000 borrowers owe nearly $148 million in student loan debt. Although state and federal governments have taken action to support student loan borrowers, another type of student debt has gone mostly unaddressed: institutional debt, which are debts owed by current or former students directly to an institution of higher education rather than the government or private lenders, and can range from library fines and parking tickets to certain unpaid fees and tuition carried over from a prior semester.(b) In addition to hidden or unexpected fines and fees, research suggests that institutional debt often arises when students relying on federal Title IV aid programs, such as Pell Grants, withdraw from an academic program before they are able to complete the program. When a student withdraws early before completing an academic term, a school must repay a portion of that students Title IV funds to the federal government using a formula proportional to the amount of class time the student completed, a federal policy known as Return to Title IV.(c) As a result of this federal policy, most institutions across all two-year, four-year public, private nonprofit, and private for-profit schools have created policies that then charge students for the amount of the Title IV aid returned to the federal government as part of their refund policies, which creates a balance on the students account. Suddenly students that may have intended to pay off their education over time with loans or grants find themselves owing debts immediately due to their school in the form of an institutional debt.(d) Available research indicates that institutional debt rates in the state have increased. Over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, as the economic and public health emergency forced record numbers of students to withdraw from their courses, the growing segment of institutional debts has ballooned, resulting in more than 750,000 low-income students owing more than $350 million in debt to California public colleges.(e) In 2019, California became the first state in the nation to pass limited protections for students who owe institutional debts, prohibiting schools from holding college transcripts hostage as a tactic to collect on institutional debts from former students.(f) Despite these reforms, current or former students with outstanding institutional debts still face disastrous consequences. Institutions of higher education have been found to place holds on a students account barring them from reenrolling in coursework and placing harmful barriers to degree completion, withholding degrees and certificates, harming a students employment prospects, and even placing students in private collections or subjecting them to benefits and tax return offsets through the Interagency Intercept Collection Program operated by the Franchise Tax Board.(g) Unlike federal student loans and other privately held debts, students with institutional debt lack many basic consumer protections. Furthermore, California policymakers and taxpayers lack transparent data on the prevalence and long-term harms of institutional debt.(h) While this act aims to mitigate the most harmful educational and economic barriers imposed by institutional debt collection practices, it does not allow students to remain enrolled for an academic term for which they have not paid required tuition and fees. Schools may still require students to pay tuition and fees pursuant to drop for nonpayment policies that ensure payment to cover courses for the enrolled term, and may still collect on institutional debts from past terms in a manner that is student centered, prioritizes student success, and prevents further economic hardship. SEC. 2. Section 1788.91 of the Civil Code is amended to read:1788.91. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Schools and colleges have threatened to withhold transcripts and diplomas from students as a debt collection tactic. The practice can cause severe hardship by preventing students from pursuing educational and career opportunities, and it is therefore unfair and contrary to public policy. Moreover, the practice is counterproductive as it may further delay the payment of the debt by creating obstacles to student employment.(b) It is the purpose of this title to prohibit schools from interfering with student educational and career opportunity by the withholding of transcripts or diplomas.SEC. 3. Section 1788.92 of the Civil Code is amended to read:1788.92. For purposes of this title, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(a) School means any public or private postsecondary school, or any public or private entity, responsible for providing transcripts or diplomas to current or former students of a school.(b) Debt means any money, obligation, claim, or sum, due or owing, or alleged to be due or owing, from a student, but does not include the fee, if any, charged to all students for the actual costs of providing the transcripts or issuing the diploma.(c) Diploma means a certificate or similar paper or electronic document evidencing that a school has conferred a degree, certificate, or similar qualification on a student.SEC. 4. Section 1788.93 of the Civil Code is amended to read:1788.93. Notwithstanding any other law, a school shall not do any of the following:(a) Refuse to provide a transcript or diploma for a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a debt.(b) Condition the provision of a transcript or diploma on the payment of a debt, other than a fee charged to provide the transcript or diploma.(c) Charge a higher fee for obtaining a transcript or diploma or provide less favorable treatment of a transcript or diploma request because a student owes a debt.(d) Use transcript or diploma issuance as a tool for debt collection.SEC. 5. Section 66022 of the Education Code is amended to read:66022. (a) (1) The governing board of every community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, and the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco shall adopt regulations providing for the withholding of institutional services from students or former students who have been notified in writing at the students or former students last known address that they are in default on a loan or loans under the Federal Family Education Loan Program.(2) For purposes of this section, default means the failure of a borrower to make an installment payment when due, or to meet other terms of the promissory note under circumstances in which the guarantee agency finds it reasonable to conclude that the borrower no longer intends to honor the obligation to repay, provided that this failure persists for 180 days for a loan repayable in monthly installments, or 240 days for a loan repayable in less frequent installments.(b) (1) The regulations adopted pursuant to subdivision (a) shall provide that the services withheld may be provided during a period when the facts are in dispute or when the student or former student demonstrates to either the governing board of the community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, or the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco, as appropriate, or to the Student Aid Commission, or both the commission and the appropriate entity or its designee, that reasonable progress has been made to repay the loan or that a reasonable justification exists for the delay as determined by the institution. The regulations shall specify the services to be withheld from the student and may include, but are not limited to, the provision of grades.(2) The adopted regulations shall not include the withholding of registration privileges, except as provided in Section 66036, transcripts, conferring a degree or diploma on a student that has satisfied all academic requirements, or the issuance of documentation of a degree or certificate.(c) This section shall not impose any requirement upon the University of California or the College of the Law, San Francisco unless the Regents of the University of California or the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco, respectively, by resolution, make this section applicable.(d) Guarantors, or those who act as their agents or act under their control, who provide information to postsecondary educational institutions pursuant to this section, shall defend, indemnify, and hold harmless the governing board of every community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, and the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco from action resulting from compliance with this section when the action arises as a result of incorrect, misleading, or untimely information provided to the postsecondary educational institution by the guarantors, their agents, or those acting under the control of the guarantors.SEC. 6. Article 4.3 (commencing with Section 66035) is added to Chapter 2 of Part 40 of Division 5 of Title 3 of the Education Code, to read: Article 4.3. Protecting Students from Creditor Colleges Act66035. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Degree means a credential conferred by an institution on a student in recognition of the students satisfaction of all academic requirements associated with a course of study. Degree shall include certificates, associate degrees, baccalaureate degrees, and graduate degrees.(b) Institution of higher education or institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations or distance education, that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid, and each institution of public higher education as defined in subdivision (a) of Section 66010, any independent institutions of higher education as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 66010, and any private postsecondary educational institutions as defined in Section 94858 that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid.(c) Institutional debt means any money, obligation, claim, or sum, due or owing, or alleged to be due or owing, whether or not reduced to court judgment, from a student, and that was incurred in their capacity as a student, to an institution of higher education. Institutional debt does not include any tuition, fees, room and board, or other costs of attendance for an academic term in which the student is actively enrolled or for an academic term in which the student seeks to enroll. enroll, however at the end of that academic term, any outstanding amounts become institutional debt. 66036. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall not charge a higher tuition or fee, fail to confer a degree on a student that has satisfied all academic requirements for their course of study, or otherwise prevent a current or former student from reenrolling, registering, or graduating at the institution of higher education on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt.(b) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education may prevent a current or former student who owes an institutional debt from enrolling or registering for courses on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt if the institution of higher education complies with all of the following conditions:(1) The institution of higher education grants a one-time exemption from an enrollment or registration hold on a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a past-due institutional debt. The one-time exemption shall only apply in the first instance a student seeks to enroll or register for an academic term following nonpayment of the students institutional debt that would otherwise trigger an enrollment or registration hold. An institution of higher education shall not prevent a current or former student who has been granted a one-time exemption pursuant to this paragraph from enrolling or registering for an academic term on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt. debt, provided that the student does not incur additional institutional debt.(2) The institution of higher education notifies any student that accrues a past-due institutional debt in writing of the one-time exemption and that the accumulation of additional institutional debt or failure to pay or enter into written agreement with the institution regarding the institutional debt by the end of the academic term for which the exemption is used may result in an enrollment or registration hold.(3) The institution of higher education does not place an enrollment or registration hold is not placed on the basis that a current or former student owes of an institutional debt on any for which a student that has entered into, and is in good standing on, a payment plan for any institutional debt. plan.(4) This subdivision shall only apply to an educational program that is intended to run for more than two academic terms. For purposes of this paragraph, educational program has the same as that term is defined in Section 55000 of Title 5 of the California Code of Regulations.(c) An institution of higher education shall provide the written policy established pursuant to Section 66037 to current or former students that owe an institutional debt.(d) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from withholding a degree, placing an enrollment or registration hold, or otherwise preventing a student from taking classes for violating any academic code of conduct or school honor code, failing to maintain satisfactory academic progress, or on other similar and permissible bases.(e) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from administering a drop for nonpayment policy or similar policies that disenroll a student from an academic term due to the students failure to pay tuition, fees, room and board, or other nontuition costs associated with the cost of attendance, for that same term, provided that any institutional debt that accrues as result of that nonpayment shall not be the basis for any future adverse action against the student, as prohibited on a one-time basis by subdivision (b). be subject to this article.66037. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall establish a written policy defining standards and practices for the collection of institutional debt. That policy shall be consistent with consumer protections established in Title 1.6C (commencing with Section 1788) of Part 4 of Division 3 of the Civil Code, and shall be made publicly accessible on its internet website.(b) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall not do any of the following when collecting on an institutional debt:(1) Engage a third-party debt collector that is not licensed pursuant to Division 25 (commencing with Section 100000) of the Financial Code.(2) Engage a third-party debt collector before 180 days have passed from the first communication from the institution of higher education requesting payment, and the institution of higher education has made all reasonable efforts, in accordance with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a), to communicate with the current or former student.(3) Engage a third-party debt collector to collect on an institutional debt without a written agreement with the debt collector that requires the debt collector to comply with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) An institution of higher education shall make reasonable efforts, in accordance with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a), to contact a current or former student to notify them of an institutional debt.(d) Before assigning an institutional debt to a third-party debt collector, an institution of higher education shall send a notice to the current or former student that includes all of the following information:(1) A written itemization of charges that constitute the institutional debt that is being assigned to collections.(2) An overview of emergency grant aid and other university resources to support students experiencing financial emergencies, if available.(3) The date or dates the student or former student was originally sent a notice about the institutional debt.(4) The name of the third-party debt collector to which the institutional debt is being assigned.(5) The consequences of a defaulted institutional debt, including the potential of reporting adverse information on a credit report and the risk of civil action.(6) How to submit a complaint with the Department of Financial Protection and Innovation and how to request assistance if they are subjected to abusive debt collection practices.(e) An institution of higher education or third-party debt collector shall not report adverse information to a consumer credit reporting agency or commence civil action against a current or former student for nonpayment of an institutional debt before 180 days after the first communication from the institution to the current or former student requesting payment.66038. (a) In order to increase transparency on the growth and prevalence of institutional debt across public institutions of higher education, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, require each public institution to report, beginning on or before July 1, 2026, using the uniform format developed pursuant to subdivision (b), and on a biennial basis not later than three months after the end of each public institutions fiscal year, all of the following information, as of the final day of the institutions previous fiscal year:(1) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts at each institution, including a breakdown of the institutional debts considered current and past due.(2) The total number of payment plans at each institution.(3) A breakdown of the total number and total dollar amount of institutional debts by both of the following categories:(A) Dollar amount in increments of five hundred dollars ($500).(B) The age of the institutional debt in increments of one year.(4) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed, in whole or in part, as the result of a current or former students federal financial aid being returned to the federal government.(5) A description of any policies related to administrative actions or account holds imposed on current or former students with an outstanding account due to an institutional debt.(6) The number of students and accounts subject to an administrative hold at each institution.(7) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts collected directly by the institution during the prior two fiscal years, without the use of a third-party debt collector or the Franchise Tax Board.(8) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts sold or assigned to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(9) The total number and dollar amount collected on institutional debts through third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(10) The number of institutional debts subject to collection through the Franchise Tax Board and the total dollar amount collected through the Franchise Tax Board during the prior two fiscal years.(11)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts sold to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(12)(11) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a loan made by the institution.(b)On or before July 1, 2028, the biennial report in subdivision (a) shall also include the following additional information:(1)The gender and racial demographic of the students.(2)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts subject to a payment plan at each institution, excluding tuition payment plans, and the payments that have been made pursuant to a payment plan.(3)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed by Pell Grant-eligible current or former students.(4)A breakdown of the total number and dollar amount of institutional debts by declared major and degree type being sought.(5)A breakdown of the source of institutional debts by underlying expense type, including tuition, room and board, fines, and campus fees.(6)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a tuition payment plan offered by the institution.(c)(b) In coordination with the Commissioner of Financial Protection and Innovation, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, no later than July 1, 2025, develop a uniform format for data collection and ensure data reporting is done in a timely manner.(d)(c) The Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, report in a publicly accessible manner on their internet websites the data compiled pursuant to this section across each campus on an annual basis.SEC. 7. Section 12419.5 of the Government Code is amended to read:12419.5. (a) (1) The Controller may, in the Controllers discretion, offset any amount due a state agency from a person or entity, against any amount owing that person or entity by any state agency. The Controller may deduct from the claim, and draw the Controllers warrants for the amounts offset in favor of the respective state agencies to which due, and, for any balance, in favor of the claimant. Whenever insufficient to offset all amounts due state agencies, the amount available shall be applied in the manner as the Controller, in the Controllers discretion, shall determine. If, in the discretion of the Controller, the person or entity refuses or neglects to file a claim within a reasonable time, the head of the state agency owing the amount shall file the claim on behalf of that person or entity. If approved by the Controller, the claim shall have the same force and effect as though filed by that person or entity. The amount due any person or entity from the state or any agency thereof is the net amount otherwise owing that person or entity after any offset as provided in this section.(2) For purposes of this section, an amount owing to a person or entity by any state agency shall include any tax refund.(3) This subdivision shall not apply to payment of online game prizes of ninety-nine dollars ($99) or lower by California State Lottery Retailers pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 8880.321.(b) (1) Notwithstanding any other law, for taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2025, the Controller shall not offset any amount due to a postsecondary institution from a current or former student, that was incurred in their capacity as a student, against any amount owing to that current or former student by a state agency, until 730 days after the amount was incurred.(2) For purpose of this subdivision, postsecondary institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations, or distance education, and includes each community college district, the California State University, and, upon agreement by the Regents of the University of California, the University of California.SEC. 8. The provisions of this act are severable. If any provision of this act or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.SEC. 9. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
1+Amended IN Senate June 24, 2024 Amended IN Senate May 20, 2024 Amended IN Assembly January 22, 2024 Amended IN Assembly January 10, 2024 Amended IN Assembly March 16, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1160Introduced by Assembly Member PachecoFebruary 16, 2023An act to amend Sections 1788.91, 1788.92, and 1788.93 of the Civil Code, to amend Section 66022 of, and to add Article 4.3 (commencing with Section 66035) to Chapter 2 of Part 40 of Division 5 of Title 3 of, the Education Code, and to amend Section 12419.5 of the Government Code, relating to student debts.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 1160, as amended, Pacheco. Protecting Students from Creditor Colleges Act.Existing law establishes the California Community Colleges, under the administration of the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges, the California State University, under the administration of the Trustees of the California State University, the University of California, under the administration of the Regents of the University of California, independent institutions of higher education, and private postsecondary educational institutions as the segments of postsecondary education in the state.The Donahoe Higher Education Act requires public higher education entities to adopt regulations to withhold institutional services, including withholding grades and diplomas, upon notice to a student that they are in default on a loan made pursuant to specified federal law.Notwithstanding any other law, the Educational Debt Collection Practices Act prohibits a school, as defined, from refusing to provide a transcript for a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a debt, conditioning the provision of a transcript on the payment of a debt, charging a higher fee for obtaining a transcript, providing less favorable treatment of a transcript request because a student owes a debt, or using a transcript issuance as a tool for debt collection, as specified.This bill would expand the provisions described above to also prohibit a school from refusing to provide a diploma, as defined, for a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a debt, conditioning the provision of a diploma on the payment of a debt, charging a higher fee for obtaining a diploma, providing less favorable treatment of a diploma request because a student owes a debt, or using a diploma issuance as a tool for debt collection. The bill would make other conforming changes.This bill would prohibit an institution of higher education, as defined, from taking specified actions, including, among other things, charging a higher tuition or fee on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt, as defined. The bill would authorize an institution of higher education to prevent a current or former student that owes an institutional debt from enrolling or registering for courses on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt if the institution of higher education complies with specified conditions, including, among other conditions, that the institution grants a one-time exemption from an enrollment or registration hold on a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt, as provided. The bill would require an institution of higher education to establish a written policy defining standards and practices for the collection of institutional debt, as provided, and to provide the written policy to current or former students that owe an institutional debt. The bill would prohibit an institution of higher education from taking specified actions when collecting an institutional debt. The bill would require the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University, and request the office of the President of the University of California, to require each public institution to report, beginning on or before July 1, 2025, 2026, using a specified uniform format, and on a biennial basis, specified information regarding the number and dollar amount of institutional debts at each institution. The bill would require, on or before July 1, 2028, that biennial report to include additional specified information. By imposing new duties on community college districts, the bill would constitute a state-mandated local program.Existing law authorizes the Controller, in their discretion, to offset any amount due to a state agency from a person or entity, against any amount owing to that person or entity, including any tax refund, by any state agency, except as specified.This bill would prohibit the Controller, for taxable years beginning on and after January 1, 2025, from offsetting any amount due to a public or private postsecondary educational institution, as defined, from a current or former student, that was incurred in their capacity as a student, against any amount owing to that current or former student by a state agency. agency, until 730 days after the amount was incurred.The bill would make its provisions severable.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Over the last decade, state and national attention has focused on the harmful impacts of the $1.7 trillion dollar student loan debt crisis. Across California, more than 3,900,000 borrowers owe nearly $148 million in student loan debt. Although state and federal governments have taken action to support student loan borrowers, another type of student debt has gone mostly unaddressed: institutional debt, which are debts owed by current or former students directly to an institution of higher education rather than the government or private lenders, and can range from library fines and parking tickets to certain unpaid fees and tuition carried over from a prior semester.(b) In addition to hidden or unexpected fines and fees, research suggests that institutional debt often arises when students relying on federal Title IV aid programs, such as Pell Grants, withdraw from an academic program before they are able to complete the program. When a student withdraws early before completing an academic term, a school must repay a portion of that students Title IV funds to the federal government using a formula proportional to the amount of class time the student completed, a federal policy known as Return to Title IV.(c) As a result of this federal policy, most institutions across all two-year, four-year public, private nonprofit, and private for-profit schools have created policies that then charge students for the amount of the Title IV aid returned to the federal government as part of their refund policies, which creates a balance on the students account. Suddenly students that may have intended to pay off their education over time with loans or grants find themselves owing debts immediately due to their school in the form of an institutional debt.(d) Available research indicates that institutional debt rates in the state have increased. Over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, as the economic and public health emergency forced record numbers of students to withdraw from their courses, the growing segment of institutional debts has ballooned, resulting in more than 750,000 low-income students owing more than $350 million in debt to California public colleges.(e) In 2019, California became the first state in the nation to pass limited protections for students who owe institutional debts, prohibiting schools from holding college transcripts hostage as a tactic to collect on institutional debts from former students.(f) Despite these reforms, current or former students with outstanding institutional debts still face disastrous consequences. Institutions of higher education have been found to place holds on a students account barring them from reenrolling in coursework and placing harmful barriers to degree completion, withholding degrees and certificates, harming a students employment prospects, and even placing students in private collections or subjecting them to benefits and tax return offsets through the Interagency Intercept Collection Program operated by the Franchise Tax Board.(g) Unlike federal student loans and other privately held debts, students with institutional debt lack many basic consumer protections. Furthermore, California policymakers and taxpayers lack transparent data on the prevalence and long-term harms of institutional debt.(h) While this act aims to mitigate the most harmful educational and economic barriers imposed by institutional debt collection practices, it does not allow students to remain enrolled for an academic term for which they have not paid required tuition and fees. Schools may still require students to pay tuition and fees pursuant to drop for nonpayment policies that ensure payment to cover courses for the enrolled term, and may still collect on institutional debts from past terms in a manner that is student centered, prioritizes student success, and prevents further economic hardship. SEC. 2. Section 1788.91 of the Civil Code is amended to read:1788.91. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Schools and colleges have threatened to withhold transcripts and diplomas from students as a debt collection tactic. The practice can cause severe hardship by preventing students from pursuing educational and career opportunities, and it is therefore unfair and contrary to public policy. Moreover, the practice is counterproductive as it may further delay the payment of the debt by creating obstacles to student employment.(b) It is the purpose of this title to prohibit schools from interfering with student educational and career opportunity by the withholding of transcripts or diplomas.SEC. 3. Section 1788.92 of the Civil Code is amended to read:1788.92. For purposes of this title, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(a) School means any public or private postsecondary school, or any public or private entity, responsible for providing transcripts or diplomas to current or former students of a school.(b) Debt means any money, obligation, claim, or sum, due or owing, or alleged to be due or owing, from a student, but does not include the fee, if any, charged to all students for the actual costs of providing the transcripts or issuing the diploma.(c) Diploma means a certificate or similar paper or electronic document evidencing that a school has conferred a degree, certificate, or similar qualification on a student.SEC. 4. Section 1788.93 of the Civil Code is amended to read:1788.93. Notwithstanding any other law, a school shall not do any of the following:(a) Refuse to provide a transcript or diploma for a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a debt.(b) Condition the provision of a transcript or diploma on the payment of a debt, other than a fee charged to provide the transcript or diploma.(c) Charge a higher fee for obtaining a transcript or diploma or provide less favorable treatment of a transcript or diploma request because a student owes a debt.(d) Use transcript or diploma issuance as a tool for debt collection.SEC. 5. Section 66022 of the Education Code is amended to read:66022. (a) (1) The governing board of every community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, and the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco shall adopt regulations providing for the withholding of institutional services from students or former students who have been notified in writing at the students or former students last known address that they are in default on a loan or loans under the Federal Family Education Loan Program.(2) For purposes of this section, default means the failure of a borrower to make an installment payment when due, or to meet other terms of the promissory note under circumstances in which the guarantee agency finds it reasonable to conclude that the borrower no longer intends to honor the obligation to repay, provided that this failure persists for 180 days for a loan repayable in monthly installments, or 240 days for a loan repayable in less frequent installments.(b) (1) The regulations adopted pursuant to subdivision (a) shall provide that the services withheld may be provided during a period when the facts are in dispute or when the student or former student demonstrates to either the governing board of the community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, or the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco, as appropriate, or to the Student Aid Commission, or both the commission and the appropriate entity or its designee, that reasonable progress has been made to repay the loan or that a reasonable justification exists for the delay as determined by the institution. The regulations shall specify the services to be withheld from the student and may include, but are not limited to, the provision of grades.(2) The adopted regulations shall not include the withholding of registration privileges, except as provided in Section 66036, transcripts, conferring a degree or diploma on a student that has satisfied all academic requirements, or the issuance of documentation of a degree or certificate.(c) This section shall not impose any requirement upon the University of California or the College of the Law, San Francisco unless the Regents of the University of California or the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco, respectively, by resolution, make this section applicable.(d) Guarantors, or those who act as their agents or act under their control, who provide information to postsecondary educational institutions pursuant to this section, shall defend, indemnify, and hold harmless the governing board of every community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, and the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco from action resulting from compliance with this section when the action arises as a result of incorrect, misleading, or untimely information provided to the postsecondary educational institution by the guarantors, their agents, or those acting under the control of the guarantors.SEC. 6. Article 4.3 (commencing with Section 66035) is added to Chapter 2 of Part 40 of Division 5 of Title 3 of the Education Code, to read: Article 4.3. Protecting Students from Creditor Colleges Act66035. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Degree means a credential conferred by an institution on a student in recognition of the students satisfaction of all academic requirements associated with a course of study. Degree shall include certificates, associate degrees, baccalaureate degrees, and graduate degrees.(b) Institution of higher education or institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations or distance education, that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid, and each institution of public higher education as defined in subdivision (a) of Section 66010, any independent institutions of higher education as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 66010, and any private postsecondary educational institutions as defined in Section 94858. 94858 that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid.(c) Institutional debt means any money, obligation, claim, or sum, due or owing, or alleged to be due or owing, whether or not reduced to court judgment, from a student, and that was incurred in their capacity as a student, to an institution of higher education. Institutional debt does not include tuition, fees, room and board, or other costs of attendance for an academic term in which the student is actively enrolled or for an academic term in which the student seeks to enroll.66036. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall not charge a higher tuition or fee, fail to confer a degree on a student that has satisfied all academic requirements for their course of study, or otherwise prevent a current or former student from reenrolling, registering, or graduating at the institution of higher education on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt.(b) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education may prevent a current or former student who owes an institutional debt from enrolling or registering for courses on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt if the institution of higher education complies with all of the following conditions:(1) The institution of higher education grants a one-time exemption from an enrollment or registration hold on a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a past-due institutional debt. The one-time exemption shall only apply in the first instance a student seeks to enroll or register for an academic term following nonpayment of the students institutional debt that would otherwise trigger an enrollment or registration hold. An institution of higher education shall not prevent a current or former student who has been granted a one-time exemption pursuant to this paragraph from enrolling or registering for an academic term on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt.(2) The institution of higher education notifies any student that accrues a past-due institutional debt in writing of the one-time exemption and that the accumulation of additional institutional debt or failure to pay or enter into written agreement with the institution regarding the institutional debt by the end of the academic term for which the exemption is used may result in an enrollment or registration hold.(3) The institution of higher education does not place an enrollment or registration hold on the basis that a current or former student owes an institutional debt on any student that has entered into, and is in good standing on, a payment plan for any institutional debt.(c) An institution of higher education shall provide the written policy established pursuant to Section 66037 to current or former students that owe an institutional debt.(d) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from withholding a degree, placing an enrollment or registration hold, or otherwise preventing a student from taking classes for violating any academic code of conduct or school honor code, failing to maintain satisfactory academic progress, or on other similar and permissible bases.(e) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from administering a drop for nonpayment policy or similar policies that disenroll a student from an academic term due to the students failure to pay tuition, fees, room and board, or other nontuition costs associated with the cost of attendance, for that same term, provided that any institutional debt that accrues as result of that nonpayment shall not be the basis for any future adverse action against the student, as prohibited on a one-time basis by subdivision (b).(f)Institutions of higher education shall implement any drop for nonpayment disenrollments before disbursing financial aid refunds or electronic transfers, and students shall not otherwise incur any institutional debt for tuition or fees associated with the term when dropped for nonpayment.66037. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall establish a written policy defining standards and practices for the collection of institutional debt. That policy shall be consistent with consumer protections established in Title 1.6C (commencing with Section 1788) of Part 4 of Division 3 of the Civil Code, and shall be made publicly accessible on its internet website.(b) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall not do any of the following when collecting on an institutional debt:(1) Engage a third-party debt collector that is not licensed pursuant to Division 25 (commencing with Section 100000) of the Financial Code.(2) Engage a third-party debt collector before 180 days have passed from the first communication from the institution of higher education requesting payment, and the institution of higher education has made all reasonable efforts, in accordance with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a), to communicate with the current or former student.(3) Engage a third-party debt collector to collect on an institutional debt without a written agreement with the debt collector that requires the debt collector to comply with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) An institution of higher education shall make reasonable efforts, in accordance with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a), to contact a current or former student to notify them of an institutional debt.(d) Before assigning an institutional debt to a third-party debt collector, an institution of higher education shall send a notice to the current or former student that includes all of the following information:(1) A written itemization of charges that constitute the institutional debt that is being assigned to collections.(2) An overview of emergency grant aid and other university resources available to support students experiencing financial emergencies. emergencies, if available.(3) The date or dates the student or former student was originally sent a notice about the institutional debt.(4) The name of the third-party debt collector to which the institutional debt is being assigned.(5) The consequences of a defaulted institutional debt, including the potential of reporting adverse information on a credit report and the risk of civil action.(6) How to submit a complaint with the Department of Financial Protection and Innovation and how to request assistance if they are subjected to abusive debt collection practices.(e) An institution of higher education or third-party debt collector shall not report adverse information to a consumer credit reporting agency or commence civil action against a current or former student for nonpayment of an institutional debt before 180 days after the first communication from the institution to the current or former student requesting payment.66038. (a) In order to increase transparency on the growth and prevalence of institutional debt across public institutions of higher education, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, require each public institution to report, beginning on or before July 1, 2025, 2026, using the uniform format developed pursuant to subdivision (b), and on a biennial basis not later than three months after the end of each public institutions fiscal year, all of the following information, as of the final day of the institutions previous fiscal year:(1) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts at each institution, including a breakdown of the institutional debts considered current and past due.(2) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts subject to a of payment plan plans at each institution, excluding tuition payment plans, and the payments that have been made pursuant to a payment plan. institution.(3) A breakdown of the total number and total dollar amount of institutional debts by each both of the following categories:(A) Dollar amount in increments of five hundred dollars ($500).(B) The age of the institutional debt in increments of one year.(C)The gender and racial demographic of the students.(4)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed by Pell Grant-eligible current or former students.(5)A breakdown of the total number and dollar amount of institutional debts by declared major and degree type being sought.(6)A breakdown of the source of institutional debts by underlying expense type, including tuition, room and board, fines, and campus fees.(7)(4) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed, in whole or in part, as the result of a current or former students federal financial aid being returned to the federal government.(8)(5) A description of any policies related to administrative actions or account holds imposed on current or former students with an outstanding account due to an institutional debt.(9)(6) The number of students and accounts subject to an administrative hold at each institution.(10)(7) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts collected directly by the institution during the prior two fiscal years, without the use of a third-party debt collector or the Franchise Tax Board.(11)(8) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts assigned to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(12)(9) The total number and dollar amount collected on institutional debts through third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(13)(10) The number of institutional debts subject to collection through the Franchise Tax Board and the total dollar amount collected through the Franchise Tax Board during the prior two fiscal years.(14)(11) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts sold to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(15)(12) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a loan made by the institution.(16)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a tuition payment plan offered by the institution.(b) On or before July 1, 2028, the biennial report in subdivision (a) shall also include the following additional information:(1) The gender and racial demographic of the students.(2) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts subject to a payment plan at each institution, excluding tuition payment plans, and the payments that have been made pursuant to a payment plan.(3) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed by Pell Grant-eligible current or former students.(4) A breakdown of the total number and dollar amount of institutional debts by declared major and degree type being sought.(5) A breakdown of the source of institutional debts by underlying expense type, including tuition, room and board, fines, and campus fees.(6) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a tuition payment plan offered by the institution.(b)(c) In coordination with the Commissioner of Financial Protection and Innovation, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, no later than July 1, 2025, develop a uniform format for data collection and ensure data reporting is done in a timely manner.(c)(d) The Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, report in a publicly accessible manner on their internet websites the data compiled pursuant to this section across each campus on an annual basis.SEC. 7. Section 12419.5 of the Government Code is amended to read:12419.5. (a) (1) The Controller may, in the Controllers discretion, offset any amount due a state agency from a person or entity, against any amount owing that person or entity by any state agency. The Controller may deduct from the claim, and draw the Controllers warrants for the amounts offset in favor of the respective state agencies to which due, and, for any balance, in favor of the claimant. Whenever insufficient to offset all amounts due state agencies, the amount available shall be applied in the manner as the Controller, in the Controllers discretion, shall determine. If, in the discretion of the Controller, the person or entity refuses or neglects to file a claim within a reasonable time, the head of the state agency owing the amount shall file the claim on behalf of that person or entity. If approved by the Controller, the claim shall have the same force and effect as though filed by that person or entity. The amount due any person or entity from the state or any agency thereof is the net amount otherwise owing that person or entity after any offset as provided in this section.(2) For purposes of this section, an amount owing to a person or entity by any state agency shall include any tax refund.(3) This subdivision shall not apply to payment of online game prizes of ninety-nine dollars ($99) or lower by California State Lottery Retailers pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 8880.321.(b) (1) Notwithstanding any other law, for taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2025, the Controller shall not offset any amount due to a postsecondary institution from a current or former student, that was incurred in their capacity as a student, against any amount owing to that current or former student by a state agency. agency, until 730 days after the amount was incurred.(2) For purpose of this subdivision, postsecondary institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations, or distance education, and includes each community college district, the California State University, and, upon agreement by the Regents of the University of California, the University of California.SEC. 8. The provisions of this act are severable. If any provision of this act or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.SEC. 9. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
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3- Amended IN Senate July 03, 2024 Amended IN Senate June 24, 2024 Amended IN Senate May 20, 2024 Amended IN Assembly January 22, 2024 Amended IN Assembly January 10, 2024 Amended IN Assembly March 16, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1160Introduced by Assembly Member PachecoFebruary 16, 2023An act to amend Sections 1788.91, 1788.92, and 1788.93 of the Civil Code, to amend Section 66022 of, and to add Article 4.3 (commencing with Section 66035) to Chapter 2 of Part 40 of Division 5 of Title 3 of, the Education Code, and to amend Section 12419.5 of the Government Code, relating to student debts.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 1160, as amended, Pacheco. Protecting Students from Creditor Colleges Act.Existing law establishes the California Community Colleges, under the administration of the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges, the California State University, under the administration of the Trustees of the California State University, the University of California, under the administration of the Regents of the University of California, independent institutions of higher education, and private postsecondary educational institutions as the segments of postsecondary education in the state.The Donahoe Higher Education Act requires public higher education entities to adopt regulations to withhold institutional services, including withholding grades and diplomas, upon notice to a student that they are in default on a loan made pursuant to specified federal law.Notwithstanding any other law, the Educational Debt Collection Practices Act prohibits a school, as defined, from refusing to provide a transcript for a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a debt, conditioning the provision of a transcript on the payment of a debt, charging a higher fee for obtaining a transcript, providing less favorable treatment of a transcript request because a student owes a debt, or using a transcript issuance as a tool for debt collection, as specified.This bill would expand the provisions described above to also prohibit a school from refusing to provide a diploma, as defined, for a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a debt, conditioning the provision of a diploma on the payment of a debt, charging a higher fee for obtaining a diploma, providing less favorable treatment of a diploma request because a student owes a debt, or using a diploma issuance as a tool for debt collection. The bill would make other conforming changes.This bill would prohibit an institution of higher education, as defined, from taking specified actions, including, among other things, charging a higher tuition or fee on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt, as defined. The bill would authorize an institution of higher education to prevent a current or former student that owes an institutional debt from enrolling or registering for courses on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt if the institution of higher education complies with specified conditions, including, among other conditions, that the institution grants a one-time exemption from an enrollment or registration hold on a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt, as provided. The bill would require an institution of higher education to establish a written policy defining standards and practices for the collection of institutional debt, as provided, and to provide the written policy to current or former students that owe an institutional debt. The bill would prohibit an institution of higher education from taking specified actions when collecting an institutional debt. The bill would require the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University, and request the office of the President of the University of California, to require each public institution to report, beginning on or before July 1, 2026, using a specified uniform format, and on a biennial basis, specified information regarding the number and dollar amount of institutional debts at each institution. The bill would require, on or before July 1, 2028, that biennial report to include additional specified information. By imposing new duties on community college districts, the bill would constitute a state-mandated local program.Existing law authorizes the Controller, in their discretion, to offset any amount due to a state agency from a person or entity, against any amount owing to that person or entity, including any tax refund, by any state agency, except as specified.This bill would prohibit the Controller, for taxable years beginning on and after January 1, 2025, from offsetting any amount due to a public or private postsecondary educational institution, as defined, from a current or former student, that was incurred in their capacity as a student, against any amount owing to that current or former student by a state agency, until 730 days after the amount was incurred.The bill would make its provisions severable.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES
3+ Amended IN Senate June 24, 2024 Amended IN Senate May 20, 2024 Amended IN Assembly January 22, 2024 Amended IN Assembly January 10, 2024 Amended IN Assembly March 16, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1160Introduced by Assembly Member PachecoFebruary 16, 2023An act to amend Sections 1788.91, 1788.92, and 1788.93 of the Civil Code, to amend Section 66022 of, and to add Article 4.3 (commencing with Section 66035) to Chapter 2 of Part 40 of Division 5 of Title 3 of, the Education Code, and to amend Section 12419.5 of the Government Code, relating to student debts.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 1160, as amended, Pacheco. Protecting Students from Creditor Colleges Act.Existing law establishes the California Community Colleges, under the administration of the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges, the California State University, under the administration of the Trustees of the California State University, the University of California, under the administration of the Regents of the University of California, independent institutions of higher education, and private postsecondary educational institutions as the segments of postsecondary education in the state.The Donahoe Higher Education Act requires public higher education entities to adopt regulations to withhold institutional services, including withholding grades and diplomas, upon notice to a student that they are in default on a loan made pursuant to specified federal law.Notwithstanding any other law, the Educational Debt Collection Practices Act prohibits a school, as defined, from refusing to provide a transcript for a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a debt, conditioning the provision of a transcript on the payment of a debt, charging a higher fee for obtaining a transcript, providing less favorable treatment of a transcript request because a student owes a debt, or using a transcript issuance as a tool for debt collection, as specified.This bill would expand the provisions described above to also prohibit a school from refusing to provide a diploma, as defined, for a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a debt, conditioning the provision of a diploma on the payment of a debt, charging a higher fee for obtaining a diploma, providing less favorable treatment of a diploma request because a student owes a debt, or using a diploma issuance as a tool for debt collection. The bill would make other conforming changes.This bill would prohibit an institution of higher education, as defined, from taking specified actions, including, among other things, charging a higher tuition or fee on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt, as defined. The bill would authorize an institution of higher education to prevent a current or former student that owes an institutional debt from enrolling or registering for courses on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt if the institution of higher education complies with specified conditions, including, among other conditions, that the institution grants a one-time exemption from an enrollment or registration hold on a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt, as provided. The bill would require an institution of higher education to establish a written policy defining standards and practices for the collection of institutional debt, as provided, and to provide the written policy to current or former students that owe an institutional debt. The bill would prohibit an institution of higher education from taking specified actions when collecting an institutional debt. The bill would require the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University, and request the office of the President of the University of California, to require each public institution to report, beginning on or before July 1, 2025, 2026, using a specified uniform format, and on a biennial basis, specified information regarding the number and dollar amount of institutional debts at each institution. The bill would require, on or before July 1, 2028, that biennial report to include additional specified information. By imposing new duties on community college districts, the bill would constitute a state-mandated local program.Existing law authorizes the Controller, in their discretion, to offset any amount due to a state agency from a person or entity, against any amount owing to that person or entity, including any tax refund, by any state agency, except as specified.This bill would prohibit the Controller, for taxable years beginning on and after January 1, 2025, from offsetting any amount due to a public or private postsecondary educational institution, as defined, from a current or former student, that was incurred in their capacity as a student, against any amount owing to that current or former student by a state agency. agency, until 730 days after the amount was incurred.The bill would make its provisions severable.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES
44
5- Amended IN Senate July 03, 2024 Amended IN Senate June 24, 2024 Amended IN Senate May 20, 2024 Amended IN Assembly January 22, 2024 Amended IN Assembly January 10, 2024 Amended IN Assembly March 16, 2023
5+ Amended IN Senate June 24, 2024 Amended IN Senate May 20, 2024 Amended IN Assembly January 22, 2024 Amended IN Assembly January 10, 2024 Amended IN Assembly March 16, 2023
66
7-Amended IN Senate July 03, 2024
87 Amended IN Senate June 24, 2024
98 Amended IN Senate May 20, 2024
109 Amended IN Assembly January 22, 2024
1110 Amended IN Assembly January 10, 2024
1211 Amended IN Assembly March 16, 2023
1312
1413 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION
1514
1615 Assembly Bill
1716
1817 No. 1160
1918
2019 Introduced by Assembly Member PachecoFebruary 16, 2023
2120
2221 Introduced by Assembly Member Pacheco
2322 February 16, 2023
2423
2524 An act to amend Sections 1788.91, 1788.92, and 1788.93 of the Civil Code, to amend Section 66022 of, and to add Article 4.3 (commencing with Section 66035) to Chapter 2 of Part 40 of Division 5 of Title 3 of, the Education Code, and to amend Section 12419.5 of the Government Code, relating to student debts.
2625
2726 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2827
2928 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
3029
3130 AB 1160, as amended, Pacheco. Protecting Students from Creditor Colleges Act.
3231
33-Existing law establishes the California Community Colleges, under the administration of the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges, the California State University, under the administration of the Trustees of the California State University, the University of California, under the administration of the Regents of the University of California, independent institutions of higher education, and private postsecondary educational institutions as the segments of postsecondary education in the state.The Donahoe Higher Education Act requires public higher education entities to adopt regulations to withhold institutional services, including withholding grades and diplomas, upon notice to a student that they are in default on a loan made pursuant to specified federal law.Notwithstanding any other law, the Educational Debt Collection Practices Act prohibits a school, as defined, from refusing to provide a transcript for a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a debt, conditioning the provision of a transcript on the payment of a debt, charging a higher fee for obtaining a transcript, providing less favorable treatment of a transcript request because a student owes a debt, or using a transcript issuance as a tool for debt collection, as specified.This bill would expand the provisions described above to also prohibit a school from refusing to provide a diploma, as defined, for a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a debt, conditioning the provision of a diploma on the payment of a debt, charging a higher fee for obtaining a diploma, providing less favorable treatment of a diploma request because a student owes a debt, or using a diploma issuance as a tool for debt collection. The bill would make other conforming changes.This bill would prohibit an institution of higher education, as defined, from taking specified actions, including, among other things, charging a higher tuition or fee on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt, as defined. The bill would authorize an institution of higher education to prevent a current or former student that owes an institutional debt from enrolling or registering for courses on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt if the institution of higher education complies with specified conditions, including, among other conditions, that the institution grants a one-time exemption from an enrollment or registration hold on a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt, as provided. The bill would require an institution of higher education to establish a written policy defining standards and practices for the collection of institutional debt, as provided, and to provide the written policy to current or former students that owe an institutional debt. The bill would prohibit an institution of higher education from taking specified actions when collecting an institutional debt. The bill would require the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University, and request the office of the President of the University of California, to require each public institution to report, beginning on or before July 1, 2026, using a specified uniform format, and on a biennial basis, specified information regarding the number and dollar amount of institutional debts at each institution. The bill would require, on or before July 1, 2028, that biennial report to include additional specified information. By imposing new duties on community college districts, the bill would constitute a state-mandated local program.Existing law authorizes the Controller, in their discretion, to offset any amount due to a state agency from a person or entity, against any amount owing to that person or entity, including any tax refund, by any state agency, except as specified.This bill would prohibit the Controller, for taxable years beginning on and after January 1, 2025, from offsetting any amount due to a public or private postsecondary educational institution, as defined, from a current or former student, that was incurred in their capacity as a student, against any amount owing to that current or former student by a state agency, until 730 days after the amount was incurred.The bill would make its provisions severable.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.
32+Existing law establishes the California Community Colleges, under the administration of the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges, the California State University, under the administration of the Trustees of the California State University, the University of California, under the administration of the Regents of the University of California, independent institutions of higher education, and private postsecondary educational institutions as the segments of postsecondary education in the state.The Donahoe Higher Education Act requires public higher education entities to adopt regulations to withhold institutional services, including withholding grades and diplomas, upon notice to a student that they are in default on a loan made pursuant to specified federal law.Notwithstanding any other law, the Educational Debt Collection Practices Act prohibits a school, as defined, from refusing to provide a transcript for a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a debt, conditioning the provision of a transcript on the payment of a debt, charging a higher fee for obtaining a transcript, providing less favorable treatment of a transcript request because a student owes a debt, or using a transcript issuance as a tool for debt collection, as specified.This bill would expand the provisions described above to also prohibit a school from refusing to provide a diploma, as defined, for a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a debt, conditioning the provision of a diploma on the payment of a debt, charging a higher fee for obtaining a diploma, providing less favorable treatment of a diploma request because a student owes a debt, or using a diploma issuance as a tool for debt collection. The bill would make other conforming changes.This bill would prohibit an institution of higher education, as defined, from taking specified actions, including, among other things, charging a higher tuition or fee on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt, as defined. The bill would authorize an institution of higher education to prevent a current or former student that owes an institutional debt from enrolling or registering for courses on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt if the institution of higher education complies with specified conditions, including, among other conditions, that the institution grants a one-time exemption from an enrollment or registration hold on a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt, as provided. The bill would require an institution of higher education to establish a written policy defining standards and practices for the collection of institutional debt, as provided, and to provide the written policy to current or former students that owe an institutional debt. The bill would prohibit an institution of higher education from taking specified actions when collecting an institutional debt. The bill would require the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University, and request the office of the President of the University of California, to require each public institution to report, beginning on or before July 1, 2025, 2026, using a specified uniform format, and on a biennial basis, specified information regarding the number and dollar amount of institutional debts at each institution. The bill would require, on or before July 1, 2028, that biennial report to include additional specified information. By imposing new duties on community college districts, the bill would constitute a state-mandated local program.Existing law authorizes the Controller, in their discretion, to offset any amount due to a state agency from a person or entity, against any amount owing to that person or entity, including any tax refund, by any state agency, except as specified.This bill would prohibit the Controller, for taxable years beginning on and after January 1, 2025, from offsetting any amount due to a public or private postsecondary educational institution, as defined, from a current or former student, that was incurred in their capacity as a student, against any amount owing to that current or former student by a state agency. agency, until 730 days after the amount was incurred.The bill would make its provisions severable.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.
3433
3534 Existing law establishes the California Community Colleges, under the administration of the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges, the California State University, under the administration of the Trustees of the California State University, the University of California, under the administration of the Regents of the University of California, independent institutions of higher education, and private postsecondary educational institutions as the segments of postsecondary education in the state.
3635
3736 The Donahoe Higher Education Act requires public higher education entities to adopt regulations to withhold institutional services, including withholding grades and diplomas, upon notice to a student that they are in default on a loan made pursuant to specified federal law.
3837
3938 Notwithstanding any other law, the Educational Debt Collection Practices Act prohibits a school, as defined, from refusing to provide a transcript for a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a debt, conditioning the provision of a transcript on the payment of a debt, charging a higher fee for obtaining a transcript, providing less favorable treatment of a transcript request because a student owes a debt, or using a transcript issuance as a tool for debt collection, as specified.
4039
4140 This bill would expand the provisions described above to also prohibit a school from refusing to provide a diploma, as defined, for a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a debt, conditioning the provision of a diploma on the payment of a debt, charging a higher fee for obtaining a diploma, providing less favorable treatment of a diploma request because a student owes a debt, or using a diploma issuance as a tool for debt collection. The bill would make other conforming changes.
4241
43-This bill would prohibit an institution of higher education, as defined, from taking specified actions, including, among other things, charging a higher tuition or fee on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt, as defined. The bill would authorize an institution of higher education to prevent a current or former student that owes an institutional debt from enrolling or registering for courses on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt if the institution of higher education complies with specified conditions, including, among other conditions, that the institution grants a one-time exemption from an enrollment or registration hold on a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt, as provided. The bill would require an institution of higher education to establish a written policy defining standards and practices for the collection of institutional debt, as provided, and to provide the written policy to current or former students that owe an institutional debt. The bill would prohibit an institution of higher education from taking specified actions when collecting an institutional debt. The bill would require the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University, and request the office of the President of the University of California, to require each public institution to report, beginning on or before July 1, 2026, using a specified uniform format, and on a biennial basis, specified information regarding the number and dollar amount of institutional debts at each institution. The bill would require, on or before July 1, 2028, that biennial report to include additional specified information. By imposing new duties on community college districts, the bill would constitute a state-mandated local program.
42+This bill would prohibit an institution of higher education, as defined, from taking specified actions, including, among other things, charging a higher tuition or fee on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt, as defined. The bill would authorize an institution of higher education to prevent a current or former student that owes an institutional debt from enrolling or registering for courses on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt if the institution of higher education complies with specified conditions, including, among other conditions, that the institution grants a one-time exemption from an enrollment or registration hold on a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt, as provided. The bill would require an institution of higher education to establish a written policy defining standards and practices for the collection of institutional debt, as provided, and to provide the written policy to current or former students that owe an institutional debt. The bill would prohibit an institution of higher education from taking specified actions when collecting an institutional debt. The bill would require the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University, and request the office of the President of the University of California, to require each public institution to report, beginning on or before July 1, 2025, 2026, using a specified uniform format, and on a biennial basis, specified information regarding the number and dollar amount of institutional debts at each institution. The bill would require, on or before July 1, 2028, that biennial report to include additional specified information. By imposing new duties on community college districts, the bill would constitute a state-mandated local program.
4443
4544 Existing law authorizes the Controller, in their discretion, to offset any amount due to a state agency from a person or entity, against any amount owing to that person or entity, including any tax refund, by any state agency, except as specified.
4645
47-This bill would prohibit the Controller, for taxable years beginning on and after January 1, 2025, from offsetting any amount due to a public or private postsecondary educational institution, as defined, from a current or former student, that was incurred in their capacity as a student, against any amount owing to that current or former student by a state agency, until 730 days after the amount was incurred.
46+This bill would prohibit the Controller, for taxable years beginning on and after January 1, 2025, from offsetting any amount due to a public or private postsecondary educational institution, as defined, from a current or former student, that was incurred in their capacity as a student, against any amount owing to that current or former student by a state agency. agency, until 730 days after the amount was incurred.
4847
4948 The bill would make its provisions severable.
5049
5150 The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.
5251
5352 This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.
5453
5554 ## Digest Key
5655
5756 ## Bill Text
5857
59-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Over the last decade, state and national attention has focused on the harmful impacts of the $1.7 trillion dollar student loan debt crisis. Across California, more than 3,900,000 borrowers owe nearly $148 million in student loan debt. Although state and federal governments have taken action to support student loan borrowers, another type of student debt has gone mostly unaddressed: institutional debt, which are debts owed by current or former students directly to an institution of higher education rather than the government or private lenders, and can range from library fines and parking tickets to certain unpaid fees and tuition carried over from a prior semester.(b) In addition to hidden or unexpected fines and fees, research suggests that institutional debt often arises when students relying on federal Title IV aid programs, such as Pell Grants, withdraw from an academic program before they are able to complete the program. When a student withdraws early before completing an academic term, a school must repay a portion of that students Title IV funds to the federal government using a formula proportional to the amount of class time the student completed, a federal policy known as Return to Title IV.(c) As a result of this federal policy, most institutions across all two-year, four-year public, private nonprofit, and private for-profit schools have created policies that then charge students for the amount of the Title IV aid returned to the federal government as part of their refund policies, which creates a balance on the students account. Suddenly students that may have intended to pay off their education over time with loans or grants find themselves owing debts immediately due to their school in the form of an institutional debt.(d) Available research indicates that institutional debt rates in the state have increased. Over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, as the economic and public health emergency forced record numbers of students to withdraw from their courses, the growing segment of institutional debts has ballooned, resulting in more than 750,000 low-income students owing more than $350 million in debt to California public colleges.(e) In 2019, California became the first state in the nation to pass limited protections for students who owe institutional debts, prohibiting schools from holding college transcripts hostage as a tactic to collect on institutional debts from former students.(f) Despite these reforms, current or former students with outstanding institutional debts still face disastrous consequences. Institutions of higher education have been found to place holds on a students account barring them from reenrolling in coursework and placing harmful barriers to degree completion, withholding degrees and certificates, harming a students employment prospects, and even placing students in private collections or subjecting them to benefits and tax return offsets through the Interagency Intercept Collection Program operated by the Franchise Tax Board.(g) Unlike federal student loans and other privately held debts, students with institutional debt lack many basic consumer protections. Furthermore, California policymakers and taxpayers lack transparent data on the prevalence and long-term harms of institutional debt.(h) While this act aims to mitigate the most harmful educational and economic barriers imposed by institutional debt collection practices, it does not allow students to remain enrolled for an academic term for which they have not paid required tuition and fees. Schools may still require students to pay tuition and fees pursuant to drop for nonpayment policies that ensure payment to cover courses for the enrolled term, and may still collect on institutional debts from past terms in a manner that is student centered, prioritizes student success, and prevents further economic hardship. SEC. 2. Section 1788.91 of the Civil Code is amended to read:1788.91. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Schools and colleges have threatened to withhold transcripts and diplomas from students as a debt collection tactic. The practice can cause severe hardship by preventing students from pursuing educational and career opportunities, and it is therefore unfair and contrary to public policy. Moreover, the practice is counterproductive as it may further delay the payment of the debt by creating obstacles to student employment.(b) It is the purpose of this title to prohibit schools from interfering with student educational and career opportunity by the withholding of transcripts or diplomas.SEC. 3. Section 1788.92 of the Civil Code is amended to read:1788.92. For purposes of this title, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(a) School means any public or private postsecondary school, or any public or private entity, responsible for providing transcripts or diplomas to current or former students of a school.(b) Debt means any money, obligation, claim, or sum, due or owing, or alleged to be due or owing, from a student, but does not include the fee, if any, charged to all students for the actual costs of providing the transcripts or issuing the diploma.(c) Diploma means a certificate or similar paper or electronic document evidencing that a school has conferred a degree, certificate, or similar qualification on a student.SEC. 4. Section 1788.93 of the Civil Code is amended to read:1788.93. Notwithstanding any other law, a school shall not do any of the following:(a) Refuse to provide a transcript or diploma for a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a debt.(b) Condition the provision of a transcript or diploma on the payment of a debt, other than a fee charged to provide the transcript or diploma.(c) Charge a higher fee for obtaining a transcript or diploma or provide less favorable treatment of a transcript or diploma request because a student owes a debt.(d) Use transcript or diploma issuance as a tool for debt collection.SEC. 5. Section 66022 of the Education Code is amended to read:66022. (a) (1) The governing board of every community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, and the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco shall adopt regulations providing for the withholding of institutional services from students or former students who have been notified in writing at the students or former students last known address that they are in default on a loan or loans under the Federal Family Education Loan Program.(2) For purposes of this section, default means the failure of a borrower to make an installment payment when due, or to meet other terms of the promissory note under circumstances in which the guarantee agency finds it reasonable to conclude that the borrower no longer intends to honor the obligation to repay, provided that this failure persists for 180 days for a loan repayable in monthly installments, or 240 days for a loan repayable in less frequent installments.(b) (1) The regulations adopted pursuant to subdivision (a) shall provide that the services withheld may be provided during a period when the facts are in dispute or when the student or former student demonstrates to either the governing board of the community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, or the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco, as appropriate, or to the Student Aid Commission, or both the commission and the appropriate entity or its designee, that reasonable progress has been made to repay the loan or that a reasonable justification exists for the delay as determined by the institution. The regulations shall specify the services to be withheld from the student and may include, but are not limited to, the provision of grades.(2) The adopted regulations shall not include the withholding of registration privileges, except as provided in Section 66036, transcripts, conferring a degree or diploma on a student that has satisfied all academic requirements, or the issuance of documentation of a degree or certificate.(c) This section shall not impose any requirement upon the University of California or the College of the Law, San Francisco unless the Regents of the University of California or the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco, respectively, by resolution, make this section applicable.(d) Guarantors, or those who act as their agents or act under their control, who provide information to postsecondary educational institutions pursuant to this section, shall defend, indemnify, and hold harmless the governing board of every community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, and the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco from action resulting from compliance with this section when the action arises as a result of incorrect, misleading, or untimely information provided to the postsecondary educational institution by the guarantors, their agents, or those acting under the control of the guarantors.SEC. 6. Article 4.3 (commencing with Section 66035) is added to Chapter 2 of Part 40 of Division 5 of Title 3 of the Education Code, to read: Article 4.3. Protecting Students from Creditor Colleges Act66035. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Degree means a credential conferred by an institution on a student in recognition of the students satisfaction of all academic requirements associated with a course of study. Degree shall include certificates, associate degrees, baccalaureate degrees, and graduate degrees.(b) Institution of higher education or institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations or distance education, that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid, and each institution of public higher education as defined in subdivision (a) of Section 66010, any independent institutions of higher education as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 66010, and any private postsecondary educational institutions as defined in Section 94858 that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid.(c) Institutional debt means any money, obligation, claim, or sum, due or owing, or alleged to be due or owing, whether or not reduced to court judgment, from a student, and that was incurred in their capacity as a student, to an institution of higher education. Institutional debt does not include any tuition, fees, room and board, or other costs of attendance for an academic term in which the student is actively enrolled or for an academic term in which the student seeks to enroll. enroll, however at the end of that academic term, any outstanding amounts become institutional debt. 66036. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall not charge a higher tuition or fee, fail to confer a degree on a student that has satisfied all academic requirements for their course of study, or otherwise prevent a current or former student from reenrolling, registering, or graduating at the institution of higher education on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt.(b) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education may prevent a current or former student who owes an institutional debt from enrolling or registering for courses on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt if the institution of higher education complies with all of the following conditions:(1) The institution of higher education grants a one-time exemption from an enrollment or registration hold on a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a past-due institutional debt. The one-time exemption shall only apply in the first instance a student seeks to enroll or register for an academic term following nonpayment of the students institutional debt that would otherwise trigger an enrollment or registration hold. An institution of higher education shall not prevent a current or former student who has been granted a one-time exemption pursuant to this paragraph from enrolling or registering for an academic term on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt. debt, provided that the student does not incur additional institutional debt.(2) The institution of higher education notifies any student that accrues a past-due institutional debt in writing of the one-time exemption and that the accumulation of additional institutional debt or failure to pay or enter into written agreement with the institution regarding the institutional debt by the end of the academic term for which the exemption is used may result in an enrollment or registration hold.(3) The institution of higher education does not place an enrollment or registration hold is not placed on the basis that a current or former student owes of an institutional debt on any for which a student that has entered into, and is in good standing on, a payment plan for any institutional debt. plan.(4) This subdivision shall only apply to an educational program that is intended to run for more than two academic terms. For purposes of this paragraph, educational program has the same as that term is defined in Section 55000 of Title 5 of the California Code of Regulations.(c) An institution of higher education shall provide the written policy established pursuant to Section 66037 to current or former students that owe an institutional debt.(d) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from withholding a degree, placing an enrollment or registration hold, or otherwise preventing a student from taking classes for violating any academic code of conduct or school honor code, failing to maintain satisfactory academic progress, or on other similar and permissible bases.(e) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from administering a drop for nonpayment policy or similar policies that disenroll a student from an academic term due to the students failure to pay tuition, fees, room and board, or other nontuition costs associated with the cost of attendance, for that same term, provided that any institutional debt that accrues as result of that nonpayment shall not be the basis for any future adverse action against the student, as prohibited on a one-time basis by subdivision (b). be subject to this article.66037. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall establish a written policy defining standards and practices for the collection of institutional debt. That policy shall be consistent with consumer protections established in Title 1.6C (commencing with Section 1788) of Part 4 of Division 3 of the Civil Code, and shall be made publicly accessible on its internet website.(b) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall not do any of the following when collecting on an institutional debt:(1) Engage a third-party debt collector that is not licensed pursuant to Division 25 (commencing with Section 100000) of the Financial Code.(2) Engage a third-party debt collector before 180 days have passed from the first communication from the institution of higher education requesting payment, and the institution of higher education has made all reasonable efforts, in accordance with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a), to communicate with the current or former student.(3) Engage a third-party debt collector to collect on an institutional debt without a written agreement with the debt collector that requires the debt collector to comply with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) An institution of higher education shall make reasonable efforts, in accordance with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a), to contact a current or former student to notify them of an institutional debt.(d) Before assigning an institutional debt to a third-party debt collector, an institution of higher education shall send a notice to the current or former student that includes all of the following information:(1) A written itemization of charges that constitute the institutional debt that is being assigned to collections.(2) An overview of emergency grant aid and other university resources to support students experiencing financial emergencies, if available.(3) The date or dates the student or former student was originally sent a notice about the institutional debt.(4) The name of the third-party debt collector to which the institutional debt is being assigned.(5) The consequences of a defaulted institutional debt, including the potential of reporting adverse information on a credit report and the risk of civil action.(6) How to submit a complaint with the Department of Financial Protection and Innovation and how to request assistance if they are subjected to abusive debt collection practices.(e) An institution of higher education or third-party debt collector shall not report adverse information to a consumer credit reporting agency or commence civil action against a current or former student for nonpayment of an institutional debt before 180 days after the first communication from the institution to the current or former student requesting payment.66038. (a) In order to increase transparency on the growth and prevalence of institutional debt across public institutions of higher education, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, require each public institution to report, beginning on or before July 1, 2026, using the uniform format developed pursuant to subdivision (b), and on a biennial basis not later than three months after the end of each public institutions fiscal year, all of the following information, as of the final day of the institutions previous fiscal year:(1) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts at each institution, including a breakdown of the institutional debts considered current and past due.(2) The total number of payment plans at each institution.(3) A breakdown of the total number and total dollar amount of institutional debts by both of the following categories:(A) Dollar amount in increments of five hundred dollars ($500).(B) The age of the institutional debt in increments of one year.(4) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed, in whole or in part, as the result of a current or former students federal financial aid being returned to the federal government.(5) A description of any policies related to administrative actions or account holds imposed on current or former students with an outstanding account due to an institutional debt.(6) The number of students and accounts subject to an administrative hold at each institution.(7) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts collected directly by the institution during the prior two fiscal years, without the use of a third-party debt collector or the Franchise Tax Board.(8) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts sold or assigned to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(9) The total number and dollar amount collected on institutional debts through third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(10) The number of institutional debts subject to collection through the Franchise Tax Board and the total dollar amount collected through the Franchise Tax Board during the prior two fiscal years.(11)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts sold to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(12)(11) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a loan made by the institution.(b)On or before July 1, 2028, the biennial report in subdivision (a) shall also include the following additional information:(1)The gender and racial demographic of the students.(2)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts subject to a payment plan at each institution, excluding tuition payment plans, and the payments that have been made pursuant to a payment plan.(3)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed by Pell Grant-eligible current or former students.(4)A breakdown of the total number and dollar amount of institutional debts by declared major and degree type being sought.(5)A breakdown of the source of institutional debts by underlying expense type, including tuition, room and board, fines, and campus fees.(6)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a tuition payment plan offered by the institution.(c)(b) In coordination with the Commissioner of Financial Protection and Innovation, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, no later than July 1, 2025, develop a uniform format for data collection and ensure data reporting is done in a timely manner.(d)(c) The Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, report in a publicly accessible manner on their internet websites the data compiled pursuant to this section across each campus on an annual basis.SEC. 7. Section 12419.5 of the Government Code is amended to read:12419.5. (a) (1) The Controller may, in the Controllers discretion, offset any amount due a state agency from a person or entity, against any amount owing that person or entity by any state agency. The Controller may deduct from the claim, and draw the Controllers warrants for the amounts offset in favor of the respective state agencies to which due, and, for any balance, in favor of the claimant. Whenever insufficient to offset all amounts due state agencies, the amount available shall be applied in the manner as the Controller, in the Controllers discretion, shall determine. If, in the discretion of the Controller, the person or entity refuses or neglects to file a claim within a reasonable time, the head of the state agency owing the amount shall file the claim on behalf of that person or entity. If approved by the Controller, the claim shall have the same force and effect as though filed by that person or entity. The amount due any person or entity from the state or any agency thereof is the net amount otherwise owing that person or entity after any offset as provided in this section.(2) For purposes of this section, an amount owing to a person or entity by any state agency shall include any tax refund.(3) This subdivision shall not apply to payment of online game prizes of ninety-nine dollars ($99) or lower by California State Lottery Retailers pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 8880.321.(b) (1) Notwithstanding any other law, for taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2025, the Controller shall not offset any amount due to a postsecondary institution from a current or former student, that was incurred in their capacity as a student, against any amount owing to that current or former student by a state agency, until 730 days after the amount was incurred.(2) For purpose of this subdivision, postsecondary institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations, or distance education, and includes each community college district, the California State University, and, upon agreement by the Regents of the University of California, the University of California.SEC. 8. The provisions of this act are severable. If any provision of this act or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.SEC. 9. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
58+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Over the last decade, state and national attention has focused on the harmful impacts of the $1.7 trillion dollar student loan debt crisis. Across California, more than 3,900,000 borrowers owe nearly $148 million in student loan debt. Although state and federal governments have taken action to support student loan borrowers, another type of student debt has gone mostly unaddressed: institutional debt, which are debts owed by current or former students directly to an institution of higher education rather than the government or private lenders, and can range from library fines and parking tickets to certain unpaid fees and tuition carried over from a prior semester.(b) In addition to hidden or unexpected fines and fees, research suggests that institutional debt often arises when students relying on federal Title IV aid programs, such as Pell Grants, withdraw from an academic program before they are able to complete the program. When a student withdraws early before completing an academic term, a school must repay a portion of that students Title IV funds to the federal government using a formula proportional to the amount of class time the student completed, a federal policy known as Return to Title IV.(c) As a result of this federal policy, most institutions across all two-year, four-year public, private nonprofit, and private for-profit schools have created policies that then charge students for the amount of the Title IV aid returned to the federal government as part of their refund policies, which creates a balance on the students account. Suddenly students that may have intended to pay off their education over time with loans or grants find themselves owing debts immediately due to their school in the form of an institutional debt.(d) Available research indicates that institutional debt rates in the state have increased. Over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, as the economic and public health emergency forced record numbers of students to withdraw from their courses, the growing segment of institutional debts has ballooned, resulting in more than 750,000 low-income students owing more than $350 million in debt to California public colleges.(e) In 2019, California became the first state in the nation to pass limited protections for students who owe institutional debts, prohibiting schools from holding college transcripts hostage as a tactic to collect on institutional debts from former students.(f) Despite these reforms, current or former students with outstanding institutional debts still face disastrous consequences. Institutions of higher education have been found to place holds on a students account barring them from reenrolling in coursework and placing harmful barriers to degree completion, withholding degrees and certificates, harming a students employment prospects, and even placing students in private collections or subjecting them to benefits and tax return offsets through the Interagency Intercept Collection Program operated by the Franchise Tax Board.(g) Unlike federal student loans and other privately held debts, students with institutional debt lack many basic consumer protections. Furthermore, California policymakers and taxpayers lack transparent data on the prevalence and long-term harms of institutional debt.(h) While this act aims to mitigate the most harmful educational and economic barriers imposed by institutional debt collection practices, it does not allow students to remain enrolled for an academic term for which they have not paid required tuition and fees. Schools may still require students to pay tuition and fees pursuant to drop for nonpayment policies that ensure payment to cover courses for the enrolled term, and may still collect on institutional debts from past terms in a manner that is student centered, prioritizes student success, and prevents further economic hardship. SEC. 2. Section 1788.91 of the Civil Code is amended to read:1788.91. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Schools and colleges have threatened to withhold transcripts and diplomas from students as a debt collection tactic. The practice can cause severe hardship by preventing students from pursuing educational and career opportunities, and it is therefore unfair and contrary to public policy. Moreover, the practice is counterproductive as it may further delay the payment of the debt by creating obstacles to student employment.(b) It is the purpose of this title to prohibit schools from interfering with student educational and career opportunity by the withholding of transcripts or diplomas.SEC. 3. Section 1788.92 of the Civil Code is amended to read:1788.92. For purposes of this title, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(a) School means any public or private postsecondary school, or any public or private entity, responsible for providing transcripts or diplomas to current or former students of a school.(b) Debt means any money, obligation, claim, or sum, due or owing, or alleged to be due or owing, from a student, but does not include the fee, if any, charged to all students for the actual costs of providing the transcripts or issuing the diploma.(c) Diploma means a certificate or similar paper or electronic document evidencing that a school has conferred a degree, certificate, or similar qualification on a student.SEC. 4. Section 1788.93 of the Civil Code is amended to read:1788.93. Notwithstanding any other law, a school shall not do any of the following:(a) Refuse to provide a transcript or diploma for a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a debt.(b) Condition the provision of a transcript or diploma on the payment of a debt, other than a fee charged to provide the transcript or diploma.(c) Charge a higher fee for obtaining a transcript or diploma or provide less favorable treatment of a transcript or diploma request because a student owes a debt.(d) Use transcript or diploma issuance as a tool for debt collection.SEC. 5. Section 66022 of the Education Code is amended to read:66022. (a) (1) The governing board of every community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, and the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco shall adopt regulations providing for the withholding of institutional services from students or former students who have been notified in writing at the students or former students last known address that they are in default on a loan or loans under the Federal Family Education Loan Program.(2) For purposes of this section, default means the failure of a borrower to make an installment payment when due, or to meet other terms of the promissory note under circumstances in which the guarantee agency finds it reasonable to conclude that the borrower no longer intends to honor the obligation to repay, provided that this failure persists for 180 days for a loan repayable in monthly installments, or 240 days for a loan repayable in less frequent installments.(b) (1) The regulations adopted pursuant to subdivision (a) shall provide that the services withheld may be provided during a period when the facts are in dispute or when the student or former student demonstrates to either the governing board of the community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, or the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco, as appropriate, or to the Student Aid Commission, or both the commission and the appropriate entity or its designee, that reasonable progress has been made to repay the loan or that a reasonable justification exists for the delay as determined by the institution. The regulations shall specify the services to be withheld from the student and may include, but are not limited to, the provision of grades.(2) The adopted regulations shall not include the withholding of registration privileges, except as provided in Section 66036, transcripts, conferring a degree or diploma on a student that has satisfied all academic requirements, or the issuance of documentation of a degree or certificate.(c) This section shall not impose any requirement upon the University of California or the College of the Law, San Francisco unless the Regents of the University of California or the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco, respectively, by resolution, make this section applicable.(d) Guarantors, or those who act as their agents or act under their control, who provide information to postsecondary educational institutions pursuant to this section, shall defend, indemnify, and hold harmless the governing board of every community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, and the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco from action resulting from compliance with this section when the action arises as a result of incorrect, misleading, or untimely information provided to the postsecondary educational institution by the guarantors, their agents, or those acting under the control of the guarantors.SEC. 6. Article 4.3 (commencing with Section 66035) is added to Chapter 2 of Part 40 of Division 5 of Title 3 of the Education Code, to read: Article 4.3. Protecting Students from Creditor Colleges Act66035. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Degree means a credential conferred by an institution on a student in recognition of the students satisfaction of all academic requirements associated with a course of study. Degree shall include certificates, associate degrees, baccalaureate degrees, and graduate degrees.(b) Institution of higher education or institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations or distance education, that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid, and each institution of public higher education as defined in subdivision (a) of Section 66010, any independent institutions of higher education as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 66010, and any private postsecondary educational institutions as defined in Section 94858. 94858 that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid.(c) Institutional debt means any money, obligation, claim, or sum, due or owing, or alleged to be due or owing, whether or not reduced to court judgment, from a student, and that was incurred in their capacity as a student, to an institution of higher education. Institutional debt does not include tuition, fees, room and board, or other costs of attendance for an academic term in which the student is actively enrolled or for an academic term in which the student seeks to enroll.66036. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall not charge a higher tuition or fee, fail to confer a degree on a student that has satisfied all academic requirements for their course of study, or otherwise prevent a current or former student from reenrolling, registering, or graduating at the institution of higher education on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt.(b) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education may prevent a current or former student who owes an institutional debt from enrolling or registering for courses on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt if the institution of higher education complies with all of the following conditions:(1) The institution of higher education grants a one-time exemption from an enrollment or registration hold on a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a past-due institutional debt. The one-time exemption shall only apply in the first instance a student seeks to enroll or register for an academic term following nonpayment of the students institutional debt that would otherwise trigger an enrollment or registration hold. An institution of higher education shall not prevent a current or former student who has been granted a one-time exemption pursuant to this paragraph from enrolling or registering for an academic term on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt.(2) The institution of higher education notifies any student that accrues a past-due institutional debt in writing of the one-time exemption and that the accumulation of additional institutional debt or failure to pay or enter into written agreement with the institution regarding the institutional debt by the end of the academic term for which the exemption is used may result in an enrollment or registration hold.(3) The institution of higher education does not place an enrollment or registration hold on the basis that a current or former student owes an institutional debt on any student that has entered into, and is in good standing on, a payment plan for any institutional debt.(c) An institution of higher education shall provide the written policy established pursuant to Section 66037 to current or former students that owe an institutional debt.(d) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from withholding a degree, placing an enrollment or registration hold, or otherwise preventing a student from taking classes for violating any academic code of conduct or school honor code, failing to maintain satisfactory academic progress, or on other similar and permissible bases.(e) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from administering a drop for nonpayment policy or similar policies that disenroll a student from an academic term due to the students failure to pay tuition, fees, room and board, or other nontuition costs associated with the cost of attendance, for that same term, provided that any institutional debt that accrues as result of that nonpayment shall not be the basis for any future adverse action against the student, as prohibited on a one-time basis by subdivision (b).(f)Institutions of higher education shall implement any drop for nonpayment disenrollments before disbursing financial aid refunds or electronic transfers, and students shall not otherwise incur any institutional debt for tuition or fees associated with the term when dropped for nonpayment.66037. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall establish a written policy defining standards and practices for the collection of institutional debt. That policy shall be consistent with consumer protections established in Title 1.6C (commencing with Section 1788) of Part 4 of Division 3 of the Civil Code, and shall be made publicly accessible on its internet website.(b) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall not do any of the following when collecting on an institutional debt:(1) Engage a third-party debt collector that is not licensed pursuant to Division 25 (commencing with Section 100000) of the Financial Code.(2) Engage a third-party debt collector before 180 days have passed from the first communication from the institution of higher education requesting payment, and the institution of higher education has made all reasonable efforts, in accordance with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a), to communicate with the current or former student.(3) Engage a third-party debt collector to collect on an institutional debt without a written agreement with the debt collector that requires the debt collector to comply with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) An institution of higher education shall make reasonable efforts, in accordance with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a), to contact a current or former student to notify them of an institutional debt.(d) Before assigning an institutional debt to a third-party debt collector, an institution of higher education shall send a notice to the current or former student that includes all of the following information:(1) A written itemization of charges that constitute the institutional debt that is being assigned to collections.(2) An overview of emergency grant aid and other university resources available to support students experiencing financial emergencies. emergencies, if available.(3) The date or dates the student or former student was originally sent a notice about the institutional debt.(4) The name of the third-party debt collector to which the institutional debt is being assigned.(5) The consequences of a defaulted institutional debt, including the potential of reporting adverse information on a credit report and the risk of civil action.(6) How to submit a complaint with the Department of Financial Protection and Innovation and how to request assistance if they are subjected to abusive debt collection practices.(e) An institution of higher education or third-party debt collector shall not report adverse information to a consumer credit reporting agency or commence civil action against a current or former student for nonpayment of an institutional debt before 180 days after the first communication from the institution to the current or former student requesting payment.66038. (a) In order to increase transparency on the growth and prevalence of institutional debt across public institutions of higher education, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, require each public institution to report, beginning on or before July 1, 2025, 2026, using the uniform format developed pursuant to subdivision (b), and on a biennial basis not later than three months after the end of each public institutions fiscal year, all of the following information, as of the final day of the institutions previous fiscal year:(1) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts at each institution, including a breakdown of the institutional debts considered current and past due.(2) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts subject to a of payment plan plans at each institution, excluding tuition payment plans, and the payments that have been made pursuant to a payment plan. institution.(3) A breakdown of the total number and total dollar amount of institutional debts by each both of the following categories:(A) Dollar amount in increments of five hundred dollars ($500).(B) The age of the institutional debt in increments of one year.(C)The gender and racial demographic of the students.(4)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed by Pell Grant-eligible current or former students.(5)A breakdown of the total number and dollar amount of institutional debts by declared major and degree type being sought.(6)A breakdown of the source of institutional debts by underlying expense type, including tuition, room and board, fines, and campus fees.(7)(4) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed, in whole or in part, as the result of a current or former students federal financial aid being returned to the federal government.(8)(5) A description of any policies related to administrative actions or account holds imposed on current or former students with an outstanding account due to an institutional debt.(9)(6) The number of students and accounts subject to an administrative hold at each institution.(10)(7) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts collected directly by the institution during the prior two fiscal years, without the use of a third-party debt collector or the Franchise Tax Board.(11)(8) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts assigned to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(12)(9) The total number and dollar amount collected on institutional debts through third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(13)(10) The number of institutional debts subject to collection through the Franchise Tax Board and the total dollar amount collected through the Franchise Tax Board during the prior two fiscal years.(14)(11) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts sold to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(15)(12) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a loan made by the institution.(16)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a tuition payment plan offered by the institution.(b) On or before July 1, 2028, the biennial report in subdivision (a) shall also include the following additional information:(1) The gender and racial demographic of the students.(2) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts subject to a payment plan at each institution, excluding tuition payment plans, and the payments that have been made pursuant to a payment plan.(3) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed by Pell Grant-eligible current or former students.(4) A breakdown of the total number and dollar amount of institutional debts by declared major and degree type being sought.(5) A breakdown of the source of institutional debts by underlying expense type, including tuition, room and board, fines, and campus fees.(6) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a tuition payment plan offered by the institution.(b)(c) In coordination with the Commissioner of Financial Protection and Innovation, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, no later than July 1, 2025, develop a uniform format for data collection and ensure data reporting is done in a timely manner.(c)(d) The Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, report in a publicly accessible manner on their internet websites the data compiled pursuant to this section across each campus on an annual basis.SEC. 7. Section 12419.5 of the Government Code is amended to read:12419.5. (a) (1) The Controller may, in the Controllers discretion, offset any amount due a state agency from a person or entity, against any amount owing that person or entity by any state agency. The Controller may deduct from the claim, and draw the Controllers warrants for the amounts offset in favor of the respective state agencies to which due, and, for any balance, in favor of the claimant. Whenever insufficient to offset all amounts due state agencies, the amount available shall be applied in the manner as the Controller, in the Controllers discretion, shall determine. If, in the discretion of the Controller, the person or entity refuses or neglects to file a claim within a reasonable time, the head of the state agency owing the amount shall file the claim on behalf of that person or entity. If approved by the Controller, the claim shall have the same force and effect as though filed by that person or entity. The amount due any person or entity from the state or any agency thereof is the net amount otherwise owing that person or entity after any offset as provided in this section.(2) For purposes of this section, an amount owing to a person or entity by any state agency shall include any tax refund.(3) This subdivision shall not apply to payment of online game prizes of ninety-nine dollars ($99) or lower by California State Lottery Retailers pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 8880.321.(b) (1) Notwithstanding any other law, for taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2025, the Controller shall not offset any amount due to a postsecondary institution from a current or former student, that was incurred in their capacity as a student, against any amount owing to that current or former student by a state agency. agency, until 730 days after the amount was incurred.(2) For purpose of this subdivision, postsecondary institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations, or distance education, and includes each community college district, the California State University, and, upon agreement by the Regents of the University of California, the University of California.SEC. 8. The provisions of this act are severable. If any provision of this act or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.SEC. 9. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
6059
6160 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
6261
6362 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
6463
6564 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Over the last decade, state and national attention has focused on the harmful impacts of the $1.7 trillion dollar student loan debt crisis. Across California, more than 3,900,000 borrowers owe nearly $148 million in student loan debt. Although state and federal governments have taken action to support student loan borrowers, another type of student debt has gone mostly unaddressed: institutional debt, which are debts owed by current or former students directly to an institution of higher education rather than the government or private lenders, and can range from library fines and parking tickets to certain unpaid fees and tuition carried over from a prior semester.(b) In addition to hidden or unexpected fines and fees, research suggests that institutional debt often arises when students relying on federal Title IV aid programs, such as Pell Grants, withdraw from an academic program before they are able to complete the program. When a student withdraws early before completing an academic term, a school must repay a portion of that students Title IV funds to the federal government using a formula proportional to the amount of class time the student completed, a federal policy known as Return to Title IV.(c) As a result of this federal policy, most institutions across all two-year, four-year public, private nonprofit, and private for-profit schools have created policies that then charge students for the amount of the Title IV aid returned to the federal government as part of their refund policies, which creates a balance on the students account. Suddenly students that may have intended to pay off their education over time with loans or grants find themselves owing debts immediately due to their school in the form of an institutional debt.(d) Available research indicates that institutional debt rates in the state have increased. Over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, as the economic and public health emergency forced record numbers of students to withdraw from their courses, the growing segment of institutional debts has ballooned, resulting in more than 750,000 low-income students owing more than $350 million in debt to California public colleges.(e) In 2019, California became the first state in the nation to pass limited protections for students who owe institutional debts, prohibiting schools from holding college transcripts hostage as a tactic to collect on institutional debts from former students.(f) Despite these reforms, current or former students with outstanding institutional debts still face disastrous consequences. Institutions of higher education have been found to place holds on a students account barring them from reenrolling in coursework and placing harmful barriers to degree completion, withholding degrees and certificates, harming a students employment prospects, and even placing students in private collections or subjecting them to benefits and tax return offsets through the Interagency Intercept Collection Program operated by the Franchise Tax Board.(g) Unlike federal student loans and other privately held debts, students with institutional debt lack many basic consumer protections. Furthermore, California policymakers and taxpayers lack transparent data on the prevalence and long-term harms of institutional debt.(h) While this act aims to mitigate the most harmful educational and economic barriers imposed by institutional debt collection practices, it does not allow students to remain enrolled for an academic term for which they have not paid required tuition and fees. Schools may still require students to pay tuition and fees pursuant to drop for nonpayment policies that ensure payment to cover courses for the enrolled term, and may still collect on institutional debts from past terms in a manner that is student centered, prioritizes student success, and prevents further economic hardship.
6665
6766 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Over the last decade, state and national attention has focused on the harmful impacts of the $1.7 trillion dollar student loan debt crisis. Across California, more than 3,900,000 borrowers owe nearly $148 million in student loan debt. Although state and federal governments have taken action to support student loan borrowers, another type of student debt has gone mostly unaddressed: institutional debt, which are debts owed by current or former students directly to an institution of higher education rather than the government or private lenders, and can range from library fines and parking tickets to certain unpaid fees and tuition carried over from a prior semester.(b) In addition to hidden or unexpected fines and fees, research suggests that institutional debt often arises when students relying on federal Title IV aid programs, such as Pell Grants, withdraw from an academic program before they are able to complete the program. When a student withdraws early before completing an academic term, a school must repay a portion of that students Title IV funds to the federal government using a formula proportional to the amount of class time the student completed, a federal policy known as Return to Title IV.(c) As a result of this federal policy, most institutions across all two-year, four-year public, private nonprofit, and private for-profit schools have created policies that then charge students for the amount of the Title IV aid returned to the federal government as part of their refund policies, which creates a balance on the students account. Suddenly students that may have intended to pay off their education over time with loans or grants find themselves owing debts immediately due to their school in the form of an institutional debt.(d) Available research indicates that institutional debt rates in the state have increased. Over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, as the economic and public health emergency forced record numbers of students to withdraw from their courses, the growing segment of institutional debts has ballooned, resulting in more than 750,000 low-income students owing more than $350 million in debt to California public colleges.(e) In 2019, California became the first state in the nation to pass limited protections for students who owe institutional debts, prohibiting schools from holding college transcripts hostage as a tactic to collect on institutional debts from former students.(f) Despite these reforms, current or former students with outstanding institutional debts still face disastrous consequences. Institutions of higher education have been found to place holds on a students account barring them from reenrolling in coursework and placing harmful barriers to degree completion, withholding degrees and certificates, harming a students employment prospects, and even placing students in private collections or subjecting them to benefits and tax return offsets through the Interagency Intercept Collection Program operated by the Franchise Tax Board.(g) Unlike federal student loans and other privately held debts, students with institutional debt lack many basic consumer protections. Furthermore, California policymakers and taxpayers lack transparent data on the prevalence and long-term harms of institutional debt.(h) While this act aims to mitigate the most harmful educational and economic barriers imposed by institutional debt collection practices, it does not allow students to remain enrolled for an academic term for which they have not paid required tuition and fees. Schools may still require students to pay tuition and fees pursuant to drop for nonpayment policies that ensure payment to cover courses for the enrolled term, and may still collect on institutional debts from past terms in a manner that is student centered, prioritizes student success, and prevents further economic hardship.
6867
6968 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
7069
7170 ### SECTION 1.
7271
7372 (a) Over the last decade, state and national attention has focused on the harmful impacts of the $1.7 trillion dollar student loan debt crisis. Across California, more than 3,900,000 borrowers owe nearly $148 million in student loan debt. Although state and federal governments have taken action to support student loan borrowers, another type of student debt has gone mostly unaddressed: institutional debt, which are debts owed by current or former students directly to an institution of higher education rather than the government or private lenders, and can range from library fines and parking tickets to certain unpaid fees and tuition carried over from a prior semester.
7473
7574 (b) In addition to hidden or unexpected fines and fees, research suggests that institutional debt often arises when students relying on federal Title IV aid programs, such as Pell Grants, withdraw from an academic program before they are able to complete the program. When a student withdraws early before completing an academic term, a school must repay a portion of that students Title IV funds to the federal government using a formula proportional to the amount of class time the student completed, a federal policy known as Return to Title IV.
7675
7776 (c) As a result of this federal policy, most institutions across all two-year, four-year public, private nonprofit, and private for-profit schools have created policies that then charge students for the amount of the Title IV aid returned to the federal government as part of their refund policies, which creates a balance on the students account. Suddenly students that may have intended to pay off their education over time with loans or grants find themselves owing debts immediately due to their school in the form of an institutional debt.
7877
7978 (d) Available research indicates that institutional debt rates in the state have increased. Over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, as the economic and public health emergency forced record numbers of students to withdraw from their courses, the growing segment of institutional debts has ballooned, resulting in more than 750,000 low-income students owing more than $350 million in debt to California public colleges.
8079
8180 (e) In 2019, California became the first state in the nation to pass limited protections for students who owe institutional debts, prohibiting schools from holding college transcripts hostage as a tactic to collect on institutional debts from former students.
8281
8382 (f) Despite these reforms, current or former students with outstanding institutional debts still face disastrous consequences. Institutions of higher education have been found to place holds on a students account barring them from reenrolling in coursework and placing harmful barriers to degree completion, withholding degrees and certificates, harming a students employment prospects, and even placing students in private collections or subjecting them to benefits and tax return offsets through the Interagency Intercept Collection Program operated by the Franchise Tax Board.
8483
8584 (g) Unlike federal student loans and other privately held debts, students with institutional debt lack many basic consumer protections. Furthermore, California policymakers and taxpayers lack transparent data on the prevalence and long-term harms of institutional debt.
8685
8786 (h) While this act aims to mitigate the most harmful educational and economic barriers imposed by institutional debt collection practices, it does not allow students to remain enrolled for an academic term for which they have not paid required tuition and fees. Schools may still require students to pay tuition and fees pursuant to drop for nonpayment policies that ensure payment to cover courses for the enrolled term, and may still collect on institutional debts from past terms in a manner that is student centered, prioritizes student success, and prevents further economic hardship.
8887
8988 SEC. 2. Section 1788.91 of the Civil Code is amended to read:1788.91. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Schools and colleges have threatened to withhold transcripts and diplomas from students as a debt collection tactic. The practice can cause severe hardship by preventing students from pursuing educational and career opportunities, and it is therefore unfair and contrary to public policy. Moreover, the practice is counterproductive as it may further delay the payment of the debt by creating obstacles to student employment.(b) It is the purpose of this title to prohibit schools from interfering with student educational and career opportunity by the withholding of transcripts or diplomas.
9089
9190 SEC. 2. Section 1788.91 of the Civil Code is amended to read:
9291
9392 ### SEC. 2.
9493
9594 1788.91. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Schools and colleges have threatened to withhold transcripts and diplomas from students as a debt collection tactic. The practice can cause severe hardship by preventing students from pursuing educational and career opportunities, and it is therefore unfair and contrary to public policy. Moreover, the practice is counterproductive as it may further delay the payment of the debt by creating obstacles to student employment.(b) It is the purpose of this title to prohibit schools from interfering with student educational and career opportunity by the withholding of transcripts or diplomas.
9695
9796 1788.91. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Schools and colleges have threatened to withhold transcripts and diplomas from students as a debt collection tactic. The practice can cause severe hardship by preventing students from pursuing educational and career opportunities, and it is therefore unfair and contrary to public policy. Moreover, the practice is counterproductive as it may further delay the payment of the debt by creating obstacles to student employment.(b) It is the purpose of this title to prohibit schools from interfering with student educational and career opportunity by the withholding of transcripts or diplomas.
9897
9998 1788.91. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) Schools and colleges have threatened to withhold transcripts and diplomas from students as a debt collection tactic. The practice can cause severe hardship by preventing students from pursuing educational and career opportunities, and it is therefore unfair and contrary to public policy. Moreover, the practice is counterproductive as it may further delay the payment of the debt by creating obstacles to student employment.(b) It is the purpose of this title to prohibit schools from interfering with student educational and career opportunity by the withholding of transcripts or diplomas.
10099
101100
102101
103102 1788.91. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
104103
105104 (a) Schools and colleges have threatened to withhold transcripts and diplomas from students as a debt collection tactic. The practice can cause severe hardship by preventing students from pursuing educational and career opportunities, and it is therefore unfair and contrary to public policy. Moreover, the practice is counterproductive as it may further delay the payment of the debt by creating obstacles to student employment.
106105
107106 (b) It is the purpose of this title to prohibit schools from interfering with student educational and career opportunity by the withholding of transcripts or diplomas.
108107
109108 SEC. 3. Section 1788.92 of the Civil Code is amended to read:1788.92. For purposes of this title, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(a) School means any public or private postsecondary school, or any public or private entity, responsible for providing transcripts or diplomas to current or former students of a school.(b) Debt means any money, obligation, claim, or sum, due or owing, or alleged to be due or owing, from a student, but does not include the fee, if any, charged to all students for the actual costs of providing the transcripts or issuing the diploma.(c) Diploma means a certificate or similar paper or electronic document evidencing that a school has conferred a degree, certificate, or similar qualification on a student.
110109
111110 SEC. 3. Section 1788.92 of the Civil Code is amended to read:
112111
113112 ### SEC. 3.
114113
115114 1788.92. For purposes of this title, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(a) School means any public or private postsecondary school, or any public or private entity, responsible for providing transcripts or diplomas to current or former students of a school.(b) Debt means any money, obligation, claim, or sum, due or owing, or alleged to be due or owing, from a student, but does not include the fee, if any, charged to all students for the actual costs of providing the transcripts or issuing the diploma.(c) Diploma means a certificate or similar paper or electronic document evidencing that a school has conferred a degree, certificate, or similar qualification on a student.
116115
117116 1788.92. For purposes of this title, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(a) School means any public or private postsecondary school, or any public or private entity, responsible for providing transcripts or diplomas to current or former students of a school.(b) Debt means any money, obligation, claim, or sum, due or owing, or alleged to be due or owing, from a student, but does not include the fee, if any, charged to all students for the actual costs of providing the transcripts or issuing the diploma.(c) Diploma means a certificate or similar paper or electronic document evidencing that a school has conferred a degree, certificate, or similar qualification on a student.
118117
119118 1788.92. For purposes of this title, the following terms shall have the following meanings:(a) School means any public or private postsecondary school, or any public or private entity, responsible for providing transcripts or diplomas to current or former students of a school.(b) Debt means any money, obligation, claim, or sum, due or owing, or alleged to be due or owing, from a student, but does not include the fee, if any, charged to all students for the actual costs of providing the transcripts or issuing the diploma.(c) Diploma means a certificate or similar paper or electronic document evidencing that a school has conferred a degree, certificate, or similar qualification on a student.
120119
121120
122121
123122 1788.92. For purposes of this title, the following terms shall have the following meanings:
124123
125124 (a) School means any public or private postsecondary school, or any public or private entity, responsible for providing transcripts or diplomas to current or former students of a school.
126125
127126 (b) Debt means any money, obligation, claim, or sum, due or owing, or alleged to be due or owing, from a student, but does not include the fee, if any, charged to all students for the actual costs of providing the transcripts or issuing the diploma.
128127
129128 (c) Diploma means a certificate or similar paper or electronic document evidencing that a school has conferred a degree, certificate, or similar qualification on a student.
130129
131130 SEC. 4. Section 1788.93 of the Civil Code is amended to read:1788.93. Notwithstanding any other law, a school shall not do any of the following:(a) Refuse to provide a transcript or diploma for a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a debt.(b) Condition the provision of a transcript or diploma on the payment of a debt, other than a fee charged to provide the transcript or diploma.(c) Charge a higher fee for obtaining a transcript or diploma or provide less favorable treatment of a transcript or diploma request because a student owes a debt.(d) Use transcript or diploma issuance as a tool for debt collection.
132131
133132 SEC. 4. Section 1788.93 of the Civil Code is amended to read:
134133
135134 ### SEC. 4.
136135
137136 1788.93. Notwithstanding any other law, a school shall not do any of the following:(a) Refuse to provide a transcript or diploma for a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a debt.(b) Condition the provision of a transcript or diploma on the payment of a debt, other than a fee charged to provide the transcript or diploma.(c) Charge a higher fee for obtaining a transcript or diploma or provide less favorable treatment of a transcript or diploma request because a student owes a debt.(d) Use transcript or diploma issuance as a tool for debt collection.
138137
139138 1788.93. Notwithstanding any other law, a school shall not do any of the following:(a) Refuse to provide a transcript or diploma for a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a debt.(b) Condition the provision of a transcript or diploma on the payment of a debt, other than a fee charged to provide the transcript or diploma.(c) Charge a higher fee for obtaining a transcript or diploma or provide less favorable treatment of a transcript or diploma request because a student owes a debt.(d) Use transcript or diploma issuance as a tool for debt collection.
140139
141140 1788.93. Notwithstanding any other law, a school shall not do any of the following:(a) Refuse to provide a transcript or diploma for a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a debt.(b) Condition the provision of a transcript or diploma on the payment of a debt, other than a fee charged to provide the transcript or diploma.(c) Charge a higher fee for obtaining a transcript or diploma or provide less favorable treatment of a transcript or diploma request because a student owes a debt.(d) Use transcript or diploma issuance as a tool for debt collection.
142141
143142
144143
145144 1788.93. Notwithstanding any other law, a school shall not do any of the following:
146145
147146 (a) Refuse to provide a transcript or diploma for a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a debt.
148147
149148 (b) Condition the provision of a transcript or diploma on the payment of a debt, other than a fee charged to provide the transcript or diploma.
150149
151150 (c) Charge a higher fee for obtaining a transcript or diploma or provide less favorable treatment of a transcript or diploma request because a student owes a debt.
152151
153152 (d) Use transcript or diploma issuance as a tool for debt collection.
154153
155154 SEC. 5. Section 66022 of the Education Code is amended to read:66022. (a) (1) The governing board of every community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, and the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco shall adopt regulations providing for the withholding of institutional services from students or former students who have been notified in writing at the students or former students last known address that they are in default on a loan or loans under the Federal Family Education Loan Program.(2) For purposes of this section, default means the failure of a borrower to make an installment payment when due, or to meet other terms of the promissory note under circumstances in which the guarantee agency finds it reasonable to conclude that the borrower no longer intends to honor the obligation to repay, provided that this failure persists for 180 days for a loan repayable in monthly installments, or 240 days for a loan repayable in less frequent installments.(b) (1) The regulations adopted pursuant to subdivision (a) shall provide that the services withheld may be provided during a period when the facts are in dispute or when the student or former student demonstrates to either the governing board of the community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, or the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco, as appropriate, or to the Student Aid Commission, or both the commission and the appropriate entity or its designee, that reasonable progress has been made to repay the loan or that a reasonable justification exists for the delay as determined by the institution. The regulations shall specify the services to be withheld from the student and may include, but are not limited to, the provision of grades.(2) The adopted regulations shall not include the withholding of registration privileges, except as provided in Section 66036, transcripts, conferring a degree or diploma on a student that has satisfied all academic requirements, or the issuance of documentation of a degree or certificate.(c) This section shall not impose any requirement upon the University of California or the College of the Law, San Francisco unless the Regents of the University of California or the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco, respectively, by resolution, make this section applicable.(d) Guarantors, or those who act as their agents or act under their control, who provide information to postsecondary educational institutions pursuant to this section, shall defend, indemnify, and hold harmless the governing board of every community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, and the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco from action resulting from compliance with this section when the action arises as a result of incorrect, misleading, or untimely information provided to the postsecondary educational institution by the guarantors, their agents, or those acting under the control of the guarantors.
156155
157156 SEC. 5. Section 66022 of the Education Code is amended to read:
158157
159158 ### SEC. 5.
160159
161160 66022. (a) (1) The governing board of every community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, and the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco shall adopt regulations providing for the withholding of institutional services from students or former students who have been notified in writing at the students or former students last known address that they are in default on a loan or loans under the Federal Family Education Loan Program.(2) For purposes of this section, default means the failure of a borrower to make an installment payment when due, or to meet other terms of the promissory note under circumstances in which the guarantee agency finds it reasonable to conclude that the borrower no longer intends to honor the obligation to repay, provided that this failure persists for 180 days for a loan repayable in monthly installments, or 240 days for a loan repayable in less frequent installments.(b) (1) The regulations adopted pursuant to subdivision (a) shall provide that the services withheld may be provided during a period when the facts are in dispute or when the student or former student demonstrates to either the governing board of the community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, or the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco, as appropriate, or to the Student Aid Commission, or both the commission and the appropriate entity or its designee, that reasonable progress has been made to repay the loan or that a reasonable justification exists for the delay as determined by the institution. The regulations shall specify the services to be withheld from the student and may include, but are not limited to, the provision of grades.(2) The adopted regulations shall not include the withholding of registration privileges, except as provided in Section 66036, transcripts, conferring a degree or diploma on a student that has satisfied all academic requirements, or the issuance of documentation of a degree or certificate.(c) This section shall not impose any requirement upon the University of California or the College of the Law, San Francisco unless the Regents of the University of California or the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco, respectively, by resolution, make this section applicable.(d) Guarantors, or those who act as their agents or act under their control, who provide information to postsecondary educational institutions pursuant to this section, shall defend, indemnify, and hold harmless the governing board of every community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, and the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco from action resulting from compliance with this section when the action arises as a result of incorrect, misleading, or untimely information provided to the postsecondary educational institution by the guarantors, their agents, or those acting under the control of the guarantors.
162161
163162 66022. (a) (1) The governing board of every community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, and the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco shall adopt regulations providing for the withholding of institutional services from students or former students who have been notified in writing at the students or former students last known address that they are in default on a loan or loans under the Federal Family Education Loan Program.(2) For purposes of this section, default means the failure of a borrower to make an installment payment when due, or to meet other terms of the promissory note under circumstances in which the guarantee agency finds it reasonable to conclude that the borrower no longer intends to honor the obligation to repay, provided that this failure persists for 180 days for a loan repayable in monthly installments, or 240 days for a loan repayable in less frequent installments.(b) (1) The regulations adopted pursuant to subdivision (a) shall provide that the services withheld may be provided during a period when the facts are in dispute or when the student or former student demonstrates to either the governing board of the community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, or the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco, as appropriate, or to the Student Aid Commission, or both the commission and the appropriate entity or its designee, that reasonable progress has been made to repay the loan or that a reasonable justification exists for the delay as determined by the institution. The regulations shall specify the services to be withheld from the student and may include, but are not limited to, the provision of grades.(2) The adopted regulations shall not include the withholding of registration privileges, except as provided in Section 66036, transcripts, conferring a degree or diploma on a student that has satisfied all academic requirements, or the issuance of documentation of a degree or certificate.(c) This section shall not impose any requirement upon the University of California or the College of the Law, San Francisco unless the Regents of the University of California or the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco, respectively, by resolution, make this section applicable.(d) Guarantors, or those who act as their agents or act under their control, who provide information to postsecondary educational institutions pursuant to this section, shall defend, indemnify, and hold harmless the governing board of every community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, and the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco from action resulting from compliance with this section when the action arises as a result of incorrect, misleading, or untimely information provided to the postsecondary educational institution by the guarantors, their agents, or those acting under the control of the guarantors.
164163
165164 66022. (a) (1) The governing board of every community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, and the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco shall adopt regulations providing for the withholding of institutional services from students or former students who have been notified in writing at the students or former students last known address that they are in default on a loan or loans under the Federal Family Education Loan Program.(2) For purposes of this section, default means the failure of a borrower to make an installment payment when due, or to meet other terms of the promissory note under circumstances in which the guarantee agency finds it reasonable to conclude that the borrower no longer intends to honor the obligation to repay, provided that this failure persists for 180 days for a loan repayable in monthly installments, or 240 days for a loan repayable in less frequent installments.(b) (1) The regulations adopted pursuant to subdivision (a) shall provide that the services withheld may be provided during a period when the facts are in dispute or when the student or former student demonstrates to either the governing board of the community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, or the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco, as appropriate, or to the Student Aid Commission, or both the commission and the appropriate entity or its designee, that reasonable progress has been made to repay the loan or that a reasonable justification exists for the delay as determined by the institution. The regulations shall specify the services to be withheld from the student and may include, but are not limited to, the provision of grades.(2) The adopted regulations shall not include the withholding of registration privileges, except as provided in Section 66036, transcripts, conferring a degree or diploma on a student that has satisfied all academic requirements, or the issuance of documentation of a degree or certificate.(c) This section shall not impose any requirement upon the University of California or the College of the Law, San Francisco unless the Regents of the University of California or the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco, respectively, by resolution, make this section applicable.(d) Guarantors, or those who act as their agents or act under their control, who provide information to postsecondary educational institutions pursuant to this section, shall defend, indemnify, and hold harmless the governing board of every community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, and the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco from action resulting from compliance with this section when the action arises as a result of incorrect, misleading, or untimely information provided to the postsecondary educational institution by the guarantors, their agents, or those acting under the control of the guarantors.
166165
167166
168167
169168 66022. (a) (1) The governing board of every community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, and the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco shall adopt regulations providing for the withholding of institutional services from students or former students who have been notified in writing at the students or former students last known address that they are in default on a loan or loans under the Federal Family Education Loan Program.
170169
171170 (2) For purposes of this section, default means the failure of a borrower to make an installment payment when due, or to meet other terms of the promissory note under circumstances in which the guarantee agency finds it reasonable to conclude that the borrower no longer intends to honor the obligation to repay, provided that this failure persists for 180 days for a loan repayable in monthly installments, or 240 days for a loan repayable in less frequent installments.
172171
173172 (b) (1) The regulations adopted pursuant to subdivision (a) shall provide that the services withheld may be provided during a period when the facts are in dispute or when the student or former student demonstrates to either the governing board of the community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, or the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco, as appropriate, or to the Student Aid Commission, or both the commission and the appropriate entity or its designee, that reasonable progress has been made to repay the loan or that a reasonable justification exists for the delay as determined by the institution. The regulations shall specify the services to be withheld from the student and may include, but are not limited to, the provision of grades.
174173
175174 (2) The adopted regulations shall not include the withholding of registration privileges, except as provided in Section 66036, transcripts, conferring a degree or diploma on a student that has satisfied all academic requirements, or the issuance of documentation of a degree or certificate.
176175
177176 (c) This section shall not impose any requirement upon the University of California or the College of the Law, San Francisco unless the Regents of the University of California or the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco, respectively, by resolution, make this section applicable.
178177
179178 (d) Guarantors, or those who act as their agents or act under their control, who provide information to postsecondary educational institutions pursuant to this section, shall defend, indemnify, and hold harmless the governing board of every community college district, the Trustees of the California State University, the Regents of the University of California, and the Board of Directors of the College of the Law, San Francisco from action resulting from compliance with this section when the action arises as a result of incorrect, misleading, or untimely information provided to the postsecondary educational institution by the guarantors, their agents, or those acting under the control of the guarantors.
180179
181-SEC. 6. Article 4.3 (commencing with Section 66035) is added to Chapter 2 of Part 40 of Division 5 of Title 3 of the Education Code, to read: Article 4.3. Protecting Students from Creditor Colleges Act66035. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Degree means a credential conferred by an institution on a student in recognition of the students satisfaction of all academic requirements associated with a course of study. Degree shall include certificates, associate degrees, baccalaureate degrees, and graduate degrees.(b) Institution of higher education or institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations or distance education, that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid, and each institution of public higher education as defined in subdivision (a) of Section 66010, any independent institutions of higher education as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 66010, and any private postsecondary educational institutions as defined in Section 94858 that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid.(c) Institutional debt means any money, obligation, claim, or sum, due or owing, or alleged to be due or owing, whether or not reduced to court judgment, from a student, and that was incurred in their capacity as a student, to an institution of higher education. Institutional debt does not include any tuition, fees, room and board, or other costs of attendance for an academic term in which the student is actively enrolled or for an academic term in which the student seeks to enroll. enroll, however at the end of that academic term, any outstanding amounts become institutional debt. 66036. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall not charge a higher tuition or fee, fail to confer a degree on a student that has satisfied all academic requirements for their course of study, or otherwise prevent a current or former student from reenrolling, registering, or graduating at the institution of higher education on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt.(b) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education may prevent a current or former student who owes an institutional debt from enrolling or registering for courses on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt if the institution of higher education complies with all of the following conditions:(1) The institution of higher education grants a one-time exemption from an enrollment or registration hold on a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a past-due institutional debt. The one-time exemption shall only apply in the first instance a student seeks to enroll or register for an academic term following nonpayment of the students institutional debt that would otherwise trigger an enrollment or registration hold. An institution of higher education shall not prevent a current or former student who has been granted a one-time exemption pursuant to this paragraph from enrolling or registering for an academic term on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt. debt, provided that the student does not incur additional institutional debt.(2) The institution of higher education notifies any student that accrues a past-due institutional debt in writing of the one-time exemption and that the accumulation of additional institutional debt or failure to pay or enter into written agreement with the institution regarding the institutional debt by the end of the academic term for which the exemption is used may result in an enrollment or registration hold.(3) The institution of higher education does not place an enrollment or registration hold is not placed on the basis that a current or former student owes of an institutional debt on any for which a student that has entered into, and is in good standing on, a payment plan for any institutional debt. plan.(4) This subdivision shall only apply to an educational program that is intended to run for more than two academic terms. For purposes of this paragraph, educational program has the same as that term is defined in Section 55000 of Title 5 of the California Code of Regulations.(c) An institution of higher education shall provide the written policy established pursuant to Section 66037 to current or former students that owe an institutional debt.(d) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from withholding a degree, placing an enrollment or registration hold, or otherwise preventing a student from taking classes for violating any academic code of conduct or school honor code, failing to maintain satisfactory academic progress, or on other similar and permissible bases.(e) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from administering a drop for nonpayment policy or similar policies that disenroll a student from an academic term due to the students failure to pay tuition, fees, room and board, or other nontuition costs associated with the cost of attendance, for that same term, provided that any institutional debt that accrues as result of that nonpayment shall not be the basis for any future adverse action against the student, as prohibited on a one-time basis by subdivision (b). be subject to this article.66037. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall establish a written policy defining standards and practices for the collection of institutional debt. That policy shall be consistent with consumer protections established in Title 1.6C (commencing with Section 1788) of Part 4 of Division 3 of the Civil Code, and shall be made publicly accessible on its internet website.(b) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall not do any of the following when collecting on an institutional debt:(1) Engage a third-party debt collector that is not licensed pursuant to Division 25 (commencing with Section 100000) of the Financial Code.(2) Engage a third-party debt collector before 180 days have passed from the first communication from the institution of higher education requesting payment, and the institution of higher education has made all reasonable efforts, in accordance with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a), to communicate with the current or former student.(3) Engage a third-party debt collector to collect on an institutional debt without a written agreement with the debt collector that requires the debt collector to comply with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) An institution of higher education shall make reasonable efforts, in accordance with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a), to contact a current or former student to notify them of an institutional debt.(d) Before assigning an institutional debt to a third-party debt collector, an institution of higher education shall send a notice to the current or former student that includes all of the following information:(1) A written itemization of charges that constitute the institutional debt that is being assigned to collections.(2) An overview of emergency grant aid and other university resources to support students experiencing financial emergencies, if available.(3) The date or dates the student or former student was originally sent a notice about the institutional debt.(4) The name of the third-party debt collector to which the institutional debt is being assigned.(5) The consequences of a defaulted institutional debt, including the potential of reporting adverse information on a credit report and the risk of civil action.(6) How to submit a complaint with the Department of Financial Protection and Innovation and how to request assistance if they are subjected to abusive debt collection practices.(e) An institution of higher education or third-party debt collector shall not report adverse information to a consumer credit reporting agency or commence civil action against a current or former student for nonpayment of an institutional debt before 180 days after the first communication from the institution to the current or former student requesting payment.66038. (a) In order to increase transparency on the growth and prevalence of institutional debt across public institutions of higher education, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, require each public institution to report, beginning on or before July 1, 2026, using the uniform format developed pursuant to subdivision (b), and on a biennial basis not later than three months after the end of each public institutions fiscal year, all of the following information, as of the final day of the institutions previous fiscal year:(1) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts at each institution, including a breakdown of the institutional debts considered current and past due.(2) The total number of payment plans at each institution.(3) A breakdown of the total number and total dollar amount of institutional debts by both of the following categories:(A) Dollar amount in increments of five hundred dollars ($500).(B) The age of the institutional debt in increments of one year.(4) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed, in whole or in part, as the result of a current or former students federal financial aid being returned to the federal government.(5) A description of any policies related to administrative actions or account holds imposed on current or former students with an outstanding account due to an institutional debt.(6) The number of students and accounts subject to an administrative hold at each institution.(7) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts collected directly by the institution during the prior two fiscal years, without the use of a third-party debt collector or the Franchise Tax Board.(8) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts sold or assigned to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(9) The total number and dollar amount collected on institutional debts through third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(10) The number of institutional debts subject to collection through the Franchise Tax Board and the total dollar amount collected through the Franchise Tax Board during the prior two fiscal years.(11)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts sold to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(12)(11) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a loan made by the institution.(b)On or before July 1, 2028, the biennial report in subdivision (a) shall also include the following additional information:(1)The gender and racial demographic of the students.(2)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts subject to a payment plan at each institution, excluding tuition payment plans, and the payments that have been made pursuant to a payment plan.(3)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed by Pell Grant-eligible current or former students.(4)A breakdown of the total number and dollar amount of institutional debts by declared major and degree type being sought.(5)A breakdown of the source of institutional debts by underlying expense type, including tuition, room and board, fines, and campus fees.(6)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a tuition payment plan offered by the institution.(c)(b) In coordination with the Commissioner of Financial Protection and Innovation, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, no later than July 1, 2025, develop a uniform format for data collection and ensure data reporting is done in a timely manner.(d)(c) The Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, report in a publicly accessible manner on their internet websites the data compiled pursuant to this section across each campus on an annual basis.
180+SEC. 6. Article 4.3 (commencing with Section 66035) is added to Chapter 2 of Part 40 of Division 5 of Title 3 of the Education Code, to read: Article 4.3. Protecting Students from Creditor Colleges Act66035. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Degree means a credential conferred by an institution on a student in recognition of the students satisfaction of all academic requirements associated with a course of study. Degree shall include certificates, associate degrees, baccalaureate degrees, and graduate degrees.(b) Institution of higher education or institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations or distance education, that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid, and each institution of public higher education as defined in subdivision (a) of Section 66010, any independent institutions of higher education as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 66010, and any private postsecondary educational institutions as defined in Section 94858. 94858 that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid.(c) Institutional debt means any money, obligation, claim, or sum, due or owing, or alleged to be due or owing, whether or not reduced to court judgment, from a student, and that was incurred in their capacity as a student, to an institution of higher education. Institutional debt does not include tuition, fees, room and board, or other costs of attendance for an academic term in which the student is actively enrolled or for an academic term in which the student seeks to enroll.66036. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall not charge a higher tuition or fee, fail to confer a degree on a student that has satisfied all academic requirements for their course of study, or otherwise prevent a current or former student from reenrolling, registering, or graduating at the institution of higher education on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt.(b) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education may prevent a current or former student who owes an institutional debt from enrolling or registering for courses on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt if the institution of higher education complies with all of the following conditions:(1) The institution of higher education grants a one-time exemption from an enrollment or registration hold on a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a past-due institutional debt. The one-time exemption shall only apply in the first instance a student seeks to enroll or register for an academic term following nonpayment of the students institutional debt that would otherwise trigger an enrollment or registration hold. An institution of higher education shall not prevent a current or former student who has been granted a one-time exemption pursuant to this paragraph from enrolling or registering for an academic term on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt.(2) The institution of higher education notifies any student that accrues a past-due institutional debt in writing of the one-time exemption and that the accumulation of additional institutional debt or failure to pay or enter into written agreement with the institution regarding the institutional debt by the end of the academic term for which the exemption is used may result in an enrollment or registration hold.(3) The institution of higher education does not place an enrollment or registration hold on the basis that a current or former student owes an institutional debt on any student that has entered into, and is in good standing on, a payment plan for any institutional debt.(c) An institution of higher education shall provide the written policy established pursuant to Section 66037 to current or former students that owe an institutional debt.(d) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from withholding a degree, placing an enrollment or registration hold, or otherwise preventing a student from taking classes for violating any academic code of conduct or school honor code, failing to maintain satisfactory academic progress, or on other similar and permissible bases.(e) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from administering a drop for nonpayment policy or similar policies that disenroll a student from an academic term due to the students failure to pay tuition, fees, room and board, or other nontuition costs associated with the cost of attendance, for that same term, provided that any institutional debt that accrues as result of that nonpayment shall not be the basis for any future adverse action against the student, as prohibited on a one-time basis by subdivision (b).(f)Institutions of higher education shall implement any drop for nonpayment disenrollments before disbursing financial aid refunds or electronic transfers, and students shall not otherwise incur any institutional debt for tuition or fees associated with the term when dropped for nonpayment.66037. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall establish a written policy defining standards and practices for the collection of institutional debt. That policy shall be consistent with consumer protections established in Title 1.6C (commencing with Section 1788) of Part 4 of Division 3 of the Civil Code, and shall be made publicly accessible on its internet website.(b) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall not do any of the following when collecting on an institutional debt:(1) Engage a third-party debt collector that is not licensed pursuant to Division 25 (commencing with Section 100000) of the Financial Code.(2) Engage a third-party debt collector before 180 days have passed from the first communication from the institution of higher education requesting payment, and the institution of higher education has made all reasonable efforts, in accordance with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a), to communicate with the current or former student.(3) Engage a third-party debt collector to collect on an institutional debt without a written agreement with the debt collector that requires the debt collector to comply with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) An institution of higher education shall make reasonable efforts, in accordance with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a), to contact a current or former student to notify them of an institutional debt.(d) Before assigning an institutional debt to a third-party debt collector, an institution of higher education shall send a notice to the current or former student that includes all of the following information:(1) A written itemization of charges that constitute the institutional debt that is being assigned to collections.(2) An overview of emergency grant aid and other university resources available to support students experiencing financial emergencies. emergencies, if available.(3) The date or dates the student or former student was originally sent a notice about the institutional debt.(4) The name of the third-party debt collector to which the institutional debt is being assigned.(5) The consequences of a defaulted institutional debt, including the potential of reporting adverse information on a credit report and the risk of civil action.(6) How to submit a complaint with the Department of Financial Protection and Innovation and how to request assistance if they are subjected to abusive debt collection practices.(e) An institution of higher education or third-party debt collector shall not report adverse information to a consumer credit reporting agency or commence civil action against a current or former student for nonpayment of an institutional debt before 180 days after the first communication from the institution to the current or former student requesting payment.66038. (a) In order to increase transparency on the growth and prevalence of institutional debt across public institutions of higher education, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, require each public institution to report, beginning on or before July 1, 2025, 2026, using the uniform format developed pursuant to subdivision (b), and on a biennial basis not later than three months after the end of each public institutions fiscal year, all of the following information, as of the final day of the institutions previous fiscal year:(1) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts at each institution, including a breakdown of the institutional debts considered current and past due.(2) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts subject to a of payment plan plans at each institution, excluding tuition payment plans, and the payments that have been made pursuant to a payment plan. institution.(3) A breakdown of the total number and total dollar amount of institutional debts by each both of the following categories:(A) Dollar amount in increments of five hundred dollars ($500).(B) The age of the institutional debt in increments of one year.(C)The gender and racial demographic of the students.(4)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed by Pell Grant-eligible current or former students.(5)A breakdown of the total number and dollar amount of institutional debts by declared major and degree type being sought.(6)A breakdown of the source of institutional debts by underlying expense type, including tuition, room and board, fines, and campus fees.(7)(4) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed, in whole or in part, as the result of a current or former students federal financial aid being returned to the federal government.(8)(5) A description of any policies related to administrative actions or account holds imposed on current or former students with an outstanding account due to an institutional debt.(9)(6) The number of students and accounts subject to an administrative hold at each institution.(10)(7) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts collected directly by the institution during the prior two fiscal years, without the use of a third-party debt collector or the Franchise Tax Board.(11)(8) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts assigned to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(12)(9) The total number and dollar amount collected on institutional debts through third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(13)(10) The number of institutional debts subject to collection through the Franchise Tax Board and the total dollar amount collected through the Franchise Tax Board during the prior two fiscal years.(14)(11) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts sold to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(15)(12) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a loan made by the institution.(16)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a tuition payment plan offered by the institution.(b) On or before July 1, 2028, the biennial report in subdivision (a) shall also include the following additional information:(1) The gender and racial demographic of the students.(2) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts subject to a payment plan at each institution, excluding tuition payment plans, and the payments that have been made pursuant to a payment plan.(3) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed by Pell Grant-eligible current or former students.(4) A breakdown of the total number and dollar amount of institutional debts by declared major and degree type being sought.(5) A breakdown of the source of institutional debts by underlying expense type, including tuition, room and board, fines, and campus fees.(6) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a tuition payment plan offered by the institution.(b)(c) In coordination with the Commissioner of Financial Protection and Innovation, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, no later than July 1, 2025, develop a uniform format for data collection and ensure data reporting is done in a timely manner.(c)(d) The Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, report in a publicly accessible manner on their internet websites the data compiled pursuant to this section across each campus on an annual basis.
182181
183182 SEC. 6. Article 4.3 (commencing with Section 66035) is added to Chapter 2 of Part 40 of Division 5 of Title 3 of the Education Code, to read:
184183
185184 ### SEC. 6.
186185
187- Article 4.3. Protecting Students from Creditor Colleges Act66035. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Degree means a credential conferred by an institution on a student in recognition of the students satisfaction of all academic requirements associated with a course of study. Degree shall include certificates, associate degrees, baccalaureate degrees, and graduate degrees.(b) Institution of higher education or institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations or distance education, that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid, and each institution of public higher education as defined in subdivision (a) of Section 66010, any independent institutions of higher education as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 66010, and any private postsecondary educational institutions as defined in Section 94858 that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid.(c) Institutional debt means any money, obligation, claim, or sum, due or owing, or alleged to be due or owing, whether or not reduced to court judgment, from a student, and that was incurred in their capacity as a student, to an institution of higher education. Institutional debt does not include any tuition, fees, room and board, or other costs of attendance for an academic term in which the student is actively enrolled or for an academic term in which the student seeks to enroll. enroll, however at the end of that academic term, any outstanding amounts become institutional debt. 66036. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall not charge a higher tuition or fee, fail to confer a degree on a student that has satisfied all academic requirements for their course of study, or otherwise prevent a current or former student from reenrolling, registering, or graduating at the institution of higher education on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt.(b) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education may prevent a current or former student who owes an institutional debt from enrolling or registering for courses on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt if the institution of higher education complies with all of the following conditions:(1) The institution of higher education grants a one-time exemption from an enrollment or registration hold on a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a past-due institutional debt. The one-time exemption shall only apply in the first instance a student seeks to enroll or register for an academic term following nonpayment of the students institutional debt that would otherwise trigger an enrollment or registration hold. An institution of higher education shall not prevent a current or former student who has been granted a one-time exemption pursuant to this paragraph from enrolling or registering for an academic term on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt. debt, provided that the student does not incur additional institutional debt.(2) The institution of higher education notifies any student that accrues a past-due institutional debt in writing of the one-time exemption and that the accumulation of additional institutional debt or failure to pay or enter into written agreement with the institution regarding the institutional debt by the end of the academic term for which the exemption is used may result in an enrollment or registration hold.(3) The institution of higher education does not place an enrollment or registration hold is not placed on the basis that a current or former student owes of an institutional debt on any for which a student that has entered into, and is in good standing on, a payment plan for any institutional debt. plan.(4) This subdivision shall only apply to an educational program that is intended to run for more than two academic terms. For purposes of this paragraph, educational program has the same as that term is defined in Section 55000 of Title 5 of the California Code of Regulations.(c) An institution of higher education shall provide the written policy established pursuant to Section 66037 to current or former students that owe an institutional debt.(d) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from withholding a degree, placing an enrollment or registration hold, or otherwise preventing a student from taking classes for violating any academic code of conduct or school honor code, failing to maintain satisfactory academic progress, or on other similar and permissible bases.(e) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from administering a drop for nonpayment policy or similar policies that disenroll a student from an academic term due to the students failure to pay tuition, fees, room and board, or other nontuition costs associated with the cost of attendance, for that same term, provided that any institutional debt that accrues as result of that nonpayment shall not be the basis for any future adverse action against the student, as prohibited on a one-time basis by subdivision (b). be subject to this article.66037. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall establish a written policy defining standards and practices for the collection of institutional debt. That policy shall be consistent with consumer protections established in Title 1.6C (commencing with Section 1788) of Part 4 of Division 3 of the Civil Code, and shall be made publicly accessible on its internet website.(b) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall not do any of the following when collecting on an institutional debt:(1) Engage a third-party debt collector that is not licensed pursuant to Division 25 (commencing with Section 100000) of the Financial Code.(2) Engage a third-party debt collector before 180 days have passed from the first communication from the institution of higher education requesting payment, and the institution of higher education has made all reasonable efforts, in accordance with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a), to communicate with the current or former student.(3) Engage a third-party debt collector to collect on an institutional debt without a written agreement with the debt collector that requires the debt collector to comply with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) An institution of higher education shall make reasonable efforts, in accordance with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a), to contact a current or former student to notify them of an institutional debt.(d) Before assigning an institutional debt to a third-party debt collector, an institution of higher education shall send a notice to the current or former student that includes all of the following information:(1) A written itemization of charges that constitute the institutional debt that is being assigned to collections.(2) An overview of emergency grant aid and other university resources to support students experiencing financial emergencies, if available.(3) The date or dates the student or former student was originally sent a notice about the institutional debt.(4) The name of the third-party debt collector to which the institutional debt is being assigned.(5) The consequences of a defaulted institutional debt, including the potential of reporting adverse information on a credit report and the risk of civil action.(6) How to submit a complaint with the Department of Financial Protection and Innovation and how to request assistance if they are subjected to abusive debt collection practices.(e) An institution of higher education or third-party debt collector shall not report adverse information to a consumer credit reporting agency or commence civil action against a current or former student for nonpayment of an institutional debt before 180 days after the first communication from the institution to the current or former student requesting payment.66038. (a) In order to increase transparency on the growth and prevalence of institutional debt across public institutions of higher education, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, require each public institution to report, beginning on or before July 1, 2026, using the uniform format developed pursuant to subdivision (b), and on a biennial basis not later than three months after the end of each public institutions fiscal year, all of the following information, as of the final day of the institutions previous fiscal year:(1) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts at each institution, including a breakdown of the institutional debts considered current and past due.(2) The total number of payment plans at each institution.(3) A breakdown of the total number and total dollar amount of institutional debts by both of the following categories:(A) Dollar amount in increments of five hundred dollars ($500).(B) The age of the institutional debt in increments of one year.(4) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed, in whole or in part, as the result of a current or former students federal financial aid being returned to the federal government.(5) A description of any policies related to administrative actions or account holds imposed on current or former students with an outstanding account due to an institutional debt.(6) The number of students and accounts subject to an administrative hold at each institution.(7) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts collected directly by the institution during the prior two fiscal years, without the use of a third-party debt collector or the Franchise Tax Board.(8) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts sold or assigned to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(9) The total number and dollar amount collected on institutional debts through third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(10) The number of institutional debts subject to collection through the Franchise Tax Board and the total dollar amount collected through the Franchise Tax Board during the prior two fiscal years.(11)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts sold to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(12)(11) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a loan made by the institution.(b)On or before July 1, 2028, the biennial report in subdivision (a) shall also include the following additional information:(1)The gender and racial demographic of the students.(2)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts subject to a payment plan at each institution, excluding tuition payment plans, and the payments that have been made pursuant to a payment plan.(3)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed by Pell Grant-eligible current or former students.(4)A breakdown of the total number and dollar amount of institutional debts by declared major and degree type being sought.(5)A breakdown of the source of institutional debts by underlying expense type, including tuition, room and board, fines, and campus fees.(6)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a tuition payment plan offered by the institution.(c)(b) In coordination with the Commissioner of Financial Protection and Innovation, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, no later than July 1, 2025, develop a uniform format for data collection and ensure data reporting is done in a timely manner.(d)(c) The Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, report in a publicly accessible manner on their internet websites the data compiled pursuant to this section across each campus on an annual basis.
186+ Article 4.3. Protecting Students from Creditor Colleges Act66035. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Degree means a credential conferred by an institution on a student in recognition of the students satisfaction of all academic requirements associated with a course of study. Degree shall include certificates, associate degrees, baccalaureate degrees, and graduate degrees.(b) Institution of higher education or institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations or distance education, that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid, and each institution of public higher education as defined in subdivision (a) of Section 66010, any independent institutions of higher education as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 66010, and any private postsecondary educational institutions as defined in Section 94858. 94858 that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid.(c) Institutional debt means any money, obligation, claim, or sum, due or owing, or alleged to be due or owing, whether or not reduced to court judgment, from a student, and that was incurred in their capacity as a student, to an institution of higher education. Institutional debt does not include tuition, fees, room and board, or other costs of attendance for an academic term in which the student is actively enrolled or for an academic term in which the student seeks to enroll.66036. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall not charge a higher tuition or fee, fail to confer a degree on a student that has satisfied all academic requirements for their course of study, or otherwise prevent a current or former student from reenrolling, registering, or graduating at the institution of higher education on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt.(b) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education may prevent a current or former student who owes an institutional debt from enrolling or registering for courses on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt if the institution of higher education complies with all of the following conditions:(1) The institution of higher education grants a one-time exemption from an enrollment or registration hold on a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a past-due institutional debt. The one-time exemption shall only apply in the first instance a student seeks to enroll or register for an academic term following nonpayment of the students institutional debt that would otherwise trigger an enrollment or registration hold. An institution of higher education shall not prevent a current or former student who has been granted a one-time exemption pursuant to this paragraph from enrolling or registering for an academic term on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt.(2) The institution of higher education notifies any student that accrues a past-due institutional debt in writing of the one-time exemption and that the accumulation of additional institutional debt or failure to pay or enter into written agreement with the institution regarding the institutional debt by the end of the academic term for which the exemption is used may result in an enrollment or registration hold.(3) The institution of higher education does not place an enrollment or registration hold on the basis that a current or former student owes an institutional debt on any student that has entered into, and is in good standing on, a payment plan for any institutional debt.(c) An institution of higher education shall provide the written policy established pursuant to Section 66037 to current or former students that owe an institutional debt.(d) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from withholding a degree, placing an enrollment or registration hold, or otherwise preventing a student from taking classes for violating any academic code of conduct or school honor code, failing to maintain satisfactory academic progress, or on other similar and permissible bases.(e) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from administering a drop for nonpayment policy or similar policies that disenroll a student from an academic term due to the students failure to pay tuition, fees, room and board, or other nontuition costs associated with the cost of attendance, for that same term, provided that any institutional debt that accrues as result of that nonpayment shall not be the basis for any future adverse action against the student, as prohibited on a one-time basis by subdivision (b).(f)Institutions of higher education shall implement any drop for nonpayment disenrollments before disbursing financial aid refunds or electronic transfers, and students shall not otherwise incur any institutional debt for tuition or fees associated with the term when dropped for nonpayment.66037. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall establish a written policy defining standards and practices for the collection of institutional debt. That policy shall be consistent with consumer protections established in Title 1.6C (commencing with Section 1788) of Part 4 of Division 3 of the Civil Code, and shall be made publicly accessible on its internet website.(b) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall not do any of the following when collecting on an institutional debt:(1) Engage a third-party debt collector that is not licensed pursuant to Division 25 (commencing with Section 100000) of the Financial Code.(2) Engage a third-party debt collector before 180 days have passed from the first communication from the institution of higher education requesting payment, and the institution of higher education has made all reasonable efforts, in accordance with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a), to communicate with the current or former student.(3) Engage a third-party debt collector to collect on an institutional debt without a written agreement with the debt collector that requires the debt collector to comply with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) An institution of higher education shall make reasonable efforts, in accordance with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a), to contact a current or former student to notify them of an institutional debt.(d) Before assigning an institutional debt to a third-party debt collector, an institution of higher education shall send a notice to the current or former student that includes all of the following information:(1) A written itemization of charges that constitute the institutional debt that is being assigned to collections.(2) An overview of emergency grant aid and other university resources available to support students experiencing financial emergencies. emergencies, if available.(3) The date or dates the student or former student was originally sent a notice about the institutional debt.(4) The name of the third-party debt collector to which the institutional debt is being assigned.(5) The consequences of a defaulted institutional debt, including the potential of reporting adverse information on a credit report and the risk of civil action.(6) How to submit a complaint with the Department of Financial Protection and Innovation and how to request assistance if they are subjected to abusive debt collection practices.(e) An institution of higher education or third-party debt collector shall not report adverse information to a consumer credit reporting agency or commence civil action against a current or former student for nonpayment of an institutional debt before 180 days after the first communication from the institution to the current or former student requesting payment.66038. (a) In order to increase transparency on the growth and prevalence of institutional debt across public institutions of higher education, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, require each public institution to report, beginning on or before July 1, 2025, 2026, using the uniform format developed pursuant to subdivision (b), and on a biennial basis not later than three months after the end of each public institutions fiscal year, all of the following information, as of the final day of the institutions previous fiscal year:(1) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts at each institution, including a breakdown of the institutional debts considered current and past due.(2) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts subject to a of payment plan plans at each institution, excluding tuition payment plans, and the payments that have been made pursuant to a payment plan. institution.(3) A breakdown of the total number and total dollar amount of institutional debts by each both of the following categories:(A) Dollar amount in increments of five hundred dollars ($500).(B) The age of the institutional debt in increments of one year.(C)The gender and racial demographic of the students.(4)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed by Pell Grant-eligible current or former students.(5)A breakdown of the total number and dollar amount of institutional debts by declared major and degree type being sought.(6)A breakdown of the source of institutional debts by underlying expense type, including tuition, room and board, fines, and campus fees.(7)(4) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed, in whole or in part, as the result of a current or former students federal financial aid being returned to the federal government.(8)(5) A description of any policies related to administrative actions or account holds imposed on current or former students with an outstanding account due to an institutional debt.(9)(6) The number of students and accounts subject to an administrative hold at each institution.(10)(7) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts collected directly by the institution during the prior two fiscal years, without the use of a third-party debt collector or the Franchise Tax Board.(11)(8) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts assigned to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(12)(9) The total number and dollar amount collected on institutional debts through third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(13)(10) The number of institutional debts subject to collection through the Franchise Tax Board and the total dollar amount collected through the Franchise Tax Board during the prior two fiscal years.(14)(11) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts sold to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(15)(12) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a loan made by the institution.(16)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a tuition payment plan offered by the institution.(b) On or before July 1, 2028, the biennial report in subdivision (a) shall also include the following additional information:(1) The gender and racial demographic of the students.(2) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts subject to a payment plan at each institution, excluding tuition payment plans, and the payments that have been made pursuant to a payment plan.(3) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed by Pell Grant-eligible current or former students.(4) A breakdown of the total number and dollar amount of institutional debts by declared major and degree type being sought.(5) A breakdown of the source of institutional debts by underlying expense type, including tuition, room and board, fines, and campus fees.(6) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a tuition payment plan offered by the institution.(b)(c) In coordination with the Commissioner of Financial Protection and Innovation, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, no later than July 1, 2025, develop a uniform format for data collection and ensure data reporting is done in a timely manner.(c)(d) The Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, report in a publicly accessible manner on their internet websites the data compiled pursuant to this section across each campus on an annual basis.
188187
189- Article 4.3. Protecting Students from Creditor Colleges Act66035. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Degree means a credential conferred by an institution on a student in recognition of the students satisfaction of all academic requirements associated with a course of study. Degree shall include certificates, associate degrees, baccalaureate degrees, and graduate degrees.(b) Institution of higher education or institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations or distance education, that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid, and each institution of public higher education as defined in subdivision (a) of Section 66010, any independent institutions of higher education as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 66010, and any private postsecondary educational institutions as defined in Section 94858 that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid.(c) Institutional debt means any money, obligation, claim, or sum, due or owing, or alleged to be due or owing, whether or not reduced to court judgment, from a student, and that was incurred in their capacity as a student, to an institution of higher education. Institutional debt does not include any tuition, fees, room and board, or other costs of attendance for an academic term in which the student is actively enrolled or for an academic term in which the student seeks to enroll. enroll, however at the end of that academic term, any outstanding amounts become institutional debt. 66036. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall not charge a higher tuition or fee, fail to confer a degree on a student that has satisfied all academic requirements for their course of study, or otherwise prevent a current or former student from reenrolling, registering, or graduating at the institution of higher education on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt.(b) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education may prevent a current or former student who owes an institutional debt from enrolling or registering for courses on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt if the institution of higher education complies with all of the following conditions:(1) The institution of higher education grants a one-time exemption from an enrollment or registration hold on a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a past-due institutional debt. The one-time exemption shall only apply in the first instance a student seeks to enroll or register for an academic term following nonpayment of the students institutional debt that would otherwise trigger an enrollment or registration hold. An institution of higher education shall not prevent a current or former student who has been granted a one-time exemption pursuant to this paragraph from enrolling or registering for an academic term on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt. debt, provided that the student does not incur additional institutional debt.(2) The institution of higher education notifies any student that accrues a past-due institutional debt in writing of the one-time exemption and that the accumulation of additional institutional debt or failure to pay or enter into written agreement with the institution regarding the institutional debt by the end of the academic term for which the exemption is used may result in an enrollment or registration hold.(3) The institution of higher education does not place an enrollment or registration hold is not placed on the basis that a current or former student owes of an institutional debt on any for which a student that has entered into, and is in good standing on, a payment plan for any institutional debt. plan.(4) This subdivision shall only apply to an educational program that is intended to run for more than two academic terms. For purposes of this paragraph, educational program has the same as that term is defined in Section 55000 of Title 5 of the California Code of Regulations.(c) An institution of higher education shall provide the written policy established pursuant to Section 66037 to current or former students that owe an institutional debt.(d) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from withholding a degree, placing an enrollment or registration hold, or otherwise preventing a student from taking classes for violating any academic code of conduct or school honor code, failing to maintain satisfactory academic progress, or on other similar and permissible bases.(e) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from administering a drop for nonpayment policy or similar policies that disenroll a student from an academic term due to the students failure to pay tuition, fees, room and board, or other nontuition costs associated with the cost of attendance, for that same term, provided that any institutional debt that accrues as result of that nonpayment shall not be the basis for any future adverse action against the student, as prohibited on a one-time basis by subdivision (b). be subject to this article.66037. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall establish a written policy defining standards and practices for the collection of institutional debt. That policy shall be consistent with consumer protections established in Title 1.6C (commencing with Section 1788) of Part 4 of Division 3 of the Civil Code, and shall be made publicly accessible on its internet website.(b) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall not do any of the following when collecting on an institutional debt:(1) Engage a third-party debt collector that is not licensed pursuant to Division 25 (commencing with Section 100000) of the Financial Code.(2) Engage a third-party debt collector before 180 days have passed from the first communication from the institution of higher education requesting payment, and the institution of higher education has made all reasonable efforts, in accordance with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a), to communicate with the current or former student.(3) Engage a third-party debt collector to collect on an institutional debt without a written agreement with the debt collector that requires the debt collector to comply with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) An institution of higher education shall make reasonable efforts, in accordance with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a), to contact a current or former student to notify them of an institutional debt.(d) Before assigning an institutional debt to a third-party debt collector, an institution of higher education shall send a notice to the current or former student that includes all of the following information:(1) A written itemization of charges that constitute the institutional debt that is being assigned to collections.(2) An overview of emergency grant aid and other university resources to support students experiencing financial emergencies, if available.(3) The date or dates the student or former student was originally sent a notice about the institutional debt.(4) The name of the third-party debt collector to which the institutional debt is being assigned.(5) The consequences of a defaulted institutional debt, including the potential of reporting adverse information on a credit report and the risk of civil action.(6) How to submit a complaint with the Department of Financial Protection and Innovation and how to request assistance if they are subjected to abusive debt collection practices.(e) An institution of higher education or third-party debt collector shall not report adverse information to a consumer credit reporting agency or commence civil action against a current or former student for nonpayment of an institutional debt before 180 days after the first communication from the institution to the current or former student requesting payment.66038. (a) In order to increase transparency on the growth and prevalence of institutional debt across public institutions of higher education, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, require each public institution to report, beginning on or before July 1, 2026, using the uniform format developed pursuant to subdivision (b), and on a biennial basis not later than three months after the end of each public institutions fiscal year, all of the following information, as of the final day of the institutions previous fiscal year:(1) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts at each institution, including a breakdown of the institutional debts considered current and past due.(2) The total number of payment plans at each institution.(3) A breakdown of the total number and total dollar amount of institutional debts by both of the following categories:(A) Dollar amount in increments of five hundred dollars ($500).(B) The age of the institutional debt in increments of one year.(4) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed, in whole or in part, as the result of a current or former students federal financial aid being returned to the federal government.(5) A description of any policies related to administrative actions or account holds imposed on current or former students with an outstanding account due to an institutional debt.(6) The number of students and accounts subject to an administrative hold at each institution.(7) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts collected directly by the institution during the prior two fiscal years, without the use of a third-party debt collector or the Franchise Tax Board.(8) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts sold or assigned to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(9) The total number and dollar amount collected on institutional debts through third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(10) The number of institutional debts subject to collection through the Franchise Tax Board and the total dollar amount collected through the Franchise Tax Board during the prior two fiscal years.(11)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts sold to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(12)(11) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a loan made by the institution.(b)On or before July 1, 2028, the biennial report in subdivision (a) shall also include the following additional information:(1)The gender and racial demographic of the students.(2)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts subject to a payment plan at each institution, excluding tuition payment plans, and the payments that have been made pursuant to a payment plan.(3)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed by Pell Grant-eligible current or former students.(4)A breakdown of the total number and dollar amount of institutional debts by declared major and degree type being sought.(5)A breakdown of the source of institutional debts by underlying expense type, including tuition, room and board, fines, and campus fees.(6)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a tuition payment plan offered by the institution.(c)(b) In coordination with the Commissioner of Financial Protection and Innovation, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, no later than July 1, 2025, develop a uniform format for data collection and ensure data reporting is done in a timely manner.(d)(c) The Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, report in a publicly accessible manner on their internet websites the data compiled pursuant to this section across each campus on an annual basis.
188+ Article 4.3. Protecting Students from Creditor Colleges Act66035. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Degree means a credential conferred by an institution on a student in recognition of the students satisfaction of all academic requirements associated with a course of study. Degree shall include certificates, associate degrees, baccalaureate degrees, and graduate degrees.(b) Institution of higher education or institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations or distance education, that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid, and each institution of public higher education as defined in subdivision (a) of Section 66010, any independent institutions of higher education as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 66010, and any private postsecondary educational institutions as defined in Section 94858. 94858 that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid.(c) Institutional debt means any money, obligation, claim, or sum, due or owing, or alleged to be due or owing, whether or not reduced to court judgment, from a student, and that was incurred in their capacity as a student, to an institution of higher education. Institutional debt does not include tuition, fees, room and board, or other costs of attendance for an academic term in which the student is actively enrolled or for an academic term in which the student seeks to enroll.66036. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall not charge a higher tuition or fee, fail to confer a degree on a student that has satisfied all academic requirements for their course of study, or otherwise prevent a current or former student from reenrolling, registering, or graduating at the institution of higher education on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt.(b) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education may prevent a current or former student who owes an institutional debt from enrolling or registering for courses on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt if the institution of higher education complies with all of the following conditions:(1) The institution of higher education grants a one-time exemption from an enrollment or registration hold on a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a past-due institutional debt. The one-time exemption shall only apply in the first instance a student seeks to enroll or register for an academic term following nonpayment of the students institutional debt that would otherwise trigger an enrollment or registration hold. An institution of higher education shall not prevent a current or former student who has been granted a one-time exemption pursuant to this paragraph from enrolling or registering for an academic term on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt.(2) The institution of higher education notifies any student that accrues a past-due institutional debt in writing of the one-time exemption and that the accumulation of additional institutional debt or failure to pay or enter into written agreement with the institution regarding the institutional debt by the end of the academic term for which the exemption is used may result in an enrollment or registration hold.(3) The institution of higher education does not place an enrollment or registration hold on the basis that a current or former student owes an institutional debt on any student that has entered into, and is in good standing on, a payment plan for any institutional debt.(c) An institution of higher education shall provide the written policy established pursuant to Section 66037 to current or former students that owe an institutional debt.(d) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from withholding a degree, placing an enrollment or registration hold, or otherwise preventing a student from taking classes for violating any academic code of conduct or school honor code, failing to maintain satisfactory academic progress, or on other similar and permissible bases.(e) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from administering a drop for nonpayment policy or similar policies that disenroll a student from an academic term due to the students failure to pay tuition, fees, room and board, or other nontuition costs associated with the cost of attendance, for that same term, provided that any institutional debt that accrues as result of that nonpayment shall not be the basis for any future adverse action against the student, as prohibited on a one-time basis by subdivision (b).(f)Institutions of higher education shall implement any drop for nonpayment disenrollments before disbursing financial aid refunds or electronic transfers, and students shall not otherwise incur any institutional debt for tuition or fees associated with the term when dropped for nonpayment.66037. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall establish a written policy defining standards and practices for the collection of institutional debt. That policy shall be consistent with consumer protections established in Title 1.6C (commencing with Section 1788) of Part 4 of Division 3 of the Civil Code, and shall be made publicly accessible on its internet website.(b) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall not do any of the following when collecting on an institutional debt:(1) Engage a third-party debt collector that is not licensed pursuant to Division 25 (commencing with Section 100000) of the Financial Code.(2) Engage a third-party debt collector before 180 days have passed from the first communication from the institution of higher education requesting payment, and the institution of higher education has made all reasonable efforts, in accordance with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a), to communicate with the current or former student.(3) Engage a third-party debt collector to collect on an institutional debt without a written agreement with the debt collector that requires the debt collector to comply with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) An institution of higher education shall make reasonable efforts, in accordance with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a), to contact a current or former student to notify them of an institutional debt.(d) Before assigning an institutional debt to a third-party debt collector, an institution of higher education shall send a notice to the current or former student that includes all of the following information:(1) A written itemization of charges that constitute the institutional debt that is being assigned to collections.(2) An overview of emergency grant aid and other university resources available to support students experiencing financial emergencies. emergencies, if available.(3) The date or dates the student or former student was originally sent a notice about the institutional debt.(4) The name of the third-party debt collector to which the institutional debt is being assigned.(5) The consequences of a defaulted institutional debt, including the potential of reporting adverse information on a credit report and the risk of civil action.(6) How to submit a complaint with the Department of Financial Protection and Innovation and how to request assistance if they are subjected to abusive debt collection practices.(e) An institution of higher education or third-party debt collector shall not report adverse information to a consumer credit reporting agency or commence civil action against a current or former student for nonpayment of an institutional debt before 180 days after the first communication from the institution to the current or former student requesting payment.66038. (a) In order to increase transparency on the growth and prevalence of institutional debt across public institutions of higher education, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, require each public institution to report, beginning on or before July 1, 2025, 2026, using the uniform format developed pursuant to subdivision (b), and on a biennial basis not later than three months after the end of each public institutions fiscal year, all of the following information, as of the final day of the institutions previous fiscal year:(1) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts at each institution, including a breakdown of the institutional debts considered current and past due.(2) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts subject to a of payment plan plans at each institution, excluding tuition payment plans, and the payments that have been made pursuant to a payment plan. institution.(3) A breakdown of the total number and total dollar amount of institutional debts by each both of the following categories:(A) Dollar amount in increments of five hundred dollars ($500).(B) The age of the institutional debt in increments of one year.(C)The gender and racial demographic of the students.(4)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed by Pell Grant-eligible current or former students.(5)A breakdown of the total number and dollar amount of institutional debts by declared major and degree type being sought.(6)A breakdown of the source of institutional debts by underlying expense type, including tuition, room and board, fines, and campus fees.(7)(4) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed, in whole or in part, as the result of a current or former students federal financial aid being returned to the federal government.(8)(5) A description of any policies related to administrative actions or account holds imposed on current or former students with an outstanding account due to an institutional debt.(9)(6) The number of students and accounts subject to an administrative hold at each institution.(10)(7) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts collected directly by the institution during the prior two fiscal years, without the use of a third-party debt collector or the Franchise Tax Board.(11)(8) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts assigned to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(12)(9) The total number and dollar amount collected on institutional debts through third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(13)(10) The number of institutional debts subject to collection through the Franchise Tax Board and the total dollar amount collected through the Franchise Tax Board during the prior two fiscal years.(14)(11) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts sold to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(15)(12) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a loan made by the institution.(16)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a tuition payment plan offered by the institution.(b) On or before July 1, 2028, the biennial report in subdivision (a) shall also include the following additional information:(1) The gender and racial demographic of the students.(2) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts subject to a payment plan at each institution, excluding tuition payment plans, and the payments that have been made pursuant to a payment plan.(3) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed by Pell Grant-eligible current or former students.(4) A breakdown of the total number and dollar amount of institutional debts by declared major and degree type being sought.(5) A breakdown of the source of institutional debts by underlying expense type, including tuition, room and board, fines, and campus fees.(6) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a tuition payment plan offered by the institution.(b)(c) In coordination with the Commissioner of Financial Protection and Innovation, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, no later than July 1, 2025, develop a uniform format for data collection and ensure data reporting is done in a timely manner.(c)(d) The Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, report in a publicly accessible manner on their internet websites the data compiled pursuant to this section across each campus on an annual basis.
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191190 Article 4.3. Protecting Students from Creditor Colleges Act
192191
193192 Article 4.3. Protecting Students from Creditor Colleges Act
194193
195-66035. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Degree means a credential conferred by an institution on a student in recognition of the students satisfaction of all academic requirements associated with a course of study. Degree shall include certificates, associate degrees, baccalaureate degrees, and graduate degrees.(b) Institution of higher education or institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations or distance education, that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid, and each institution of public higher education as defined in subdivision (a) of Section 66010, any independent institutions of higher education as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 66010, and any private postsecondary educational institutions as defined in Section 94858 that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid.(c) Institutional debt means any money, obligation, claim, or sum, due or owing, or alleged to be due or owing, whether or not reduced to court judgment, from a student, and that was incurred in their capacity as a student, to an institution of higher education. Institutional debt does not include any tuition, fees, room and board, or other costs of attendance for an academic term in which the student is actively enrolled or for an academic term in which the student seeks to enroll. enroll, however at the end of that academic term, any outstanding amounts become institutional debt.
194+66035. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:(a) Degree means a credential conferred by an institution on a student in recognition of the students satisfaction of all academic requirements associated with a course of study. Degree shall include certificates, associate degrees, baccalaureate degrees, and graduate degrees.(b) Institution of higher education or institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations or distance education, that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid, and each institution of public higher education as defined in subdivision (a) of Section 66010, any independent institutions of higher education as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 66010, and any private postsecondary educational institutions as defined in Section 94858. 94858 that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid.(c) Institutional debt means any money, obligation, claim, or sum, due or owing, or alleged to be due or owing, whether or not reduced to court judgment, from a student, and that was incurred in their capacity as a student, to an institution of higher education. Institutional debt does not include tuition, fees, room and board, or other costs of attendance for an academic term in which the student is actively enrolled or for an academic term in which the student seeks to enroll.
196195
197196
198197
199198 66035. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply:
200199
201200 (a) Degree means a credential conferred by an institution on a student in recognition of the students satisfaction of all academic requirements associated with a course of study. Degree shall include certificates, associate degrees, baccalaureate degrees, and graduate degrees.
202201
203-(b) Institution of higher education or institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations or distance education, that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid, and each institution of public higher education as defined in subdivision (a) of Section 66010, any independent institutions of higher education as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 66010, and any private postsecondary educational institutions as defined in Section 94858 that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid.
202+(b) Institution of higher education or institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations or distance education, that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid, and each institution of public higher education as defined in subdivision (a) of Section 66010, any independent institutions of higher education as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 66010, and any private postsecondary educational institutions as defined in Section 94858. 94858 that receives or benefits from state financial assistance, or enrolls students who receive state student financial aid.
204203
205-(c) Institutional debt means any money, obligation, claim, or sum, due or owing, or alleged to be due or owing, whether or not reduced to court judgment, from a student, and that was incurred in their capacity as a student, to an institution of higher education. Institutional debt does not include any tuition, fees, room and board, or other costs of attendance for an academic term in which the student is actively enrolled or for an academic term in which the student seeks to enroll. enroll, however at the end of that academic term, any outstanding amounts become institutional debt.
204+(c) Institutional debt means any money, obligation, claim, or sum, due or owing, or alleged to be due or owing, whether or not reduced to court judgment, from a student, and that was incurred in their capacity as a student, to an institution of higher education. Institutional debt does not include tuition, fees, room and board, or other costs of attendance for an academic term in which the student is actively enrolled or for an academic term in which the student seeks to enroll.
206205
207-66036. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall not charge a higher tuition or fee, fail to confer a degree on a student that has satisfied all academic requirements for their course of study, or otherwise prevent a current or former student from reenrolling, registering, or graduating at the institution of higher education on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt.(b) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education may prevent a current or former student who owes an institutional debt from enrolling or registering for courses on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt if the institution of higher education complies with all of the following conditions:(1) The institution of higher education grants a one-time exemption from an enrollment or registration hold on a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a past-due institutional debt. The one-time exemption shall only apply in the first instance a student seeks to enroll or register for an academic term following nonpayment of the students institutional debt that would otherwise trigger an enrollment or registration hold. An institution of higher education shall not prevent a current or former student who has been granted a one-time exemption pursuant to this paragraph from enrolling or registering for an academic term on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt. debt, provided that the student does not incur additional institutional debt.(2) The institution of higher education notifies any student that accrues a past-due institutional debt in writing of the one-time exemption and that the accumulation of additional institutional debt or failure to pay or enter into written agreement with the institution regarding the institutional debt by the end of the academic term for which the exemption is used may result in an enrollment or registration hold.(3) The institution of higher education does not place an enrollment or registration hold is not placed on the basis that a current or former student owes of an institutional debt on any for which a student that has entered into, and is in good standing on, a payment plan for any institutional debt. plan.(4) This subdivision shall only apply to an educational program that is intended to run for more than two academic terms. For purposes of this paragraph, educational program has the same as that term is defined in Section 55000 of Title 5 of the California Code of Regulations.(c) An institution of higher education shall provide the written policy established pursuant to Section 66037 to current or former students that owe an institutional debt.(d) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from withholding a degree, placing an enrollment or registration hold, or otherwise preventing a student from taking classes for violating any academic code of conduct or school honor code, failing to maintain satisfactory academic progress, or on other similar and permissible bases.(e) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from administering a drop for nonpayment policy or similar policies that disenroll a student from an academic term due to the students failure to pay tuition, fees, room and board, or other nontuition costs associated with the cost of attendance, for that same term, provided that any institutional debt that accrues as result of that nonpayment shall not be the basis for any future adverse action against the student, as prohibited on a one-time basis by subdivision (b). be subject to this article.
206+66036. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall not charge a higher tuition or fee, fail to confer a degree on a student that has satisfied all academic requirements for their course of study, or otherwise prevent a current or former student from reenrolling, registering, or graduating at the institution of higher education on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt.(b) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education may prevent a current or former student who owes an institutional debt from enrolling or registering for courses on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt if the institution of higher education complies with all of the following conditions:(1) The institution of higher education grants a one-time exemption from an enrollment or registration hold on a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a past-due institutional debt. The one-time exemption shall only apply in the first instance a student seeks to enroll or register for an academic term following nonpayment of the students institutional debt that would otherwise trigger an enrollment or registration hold. An institution of higher education shall not prevent a current or former student who has been granted a one-time exemption pursuant to this paragraph from enrolling or registering for an academic term on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt.(2) The institution of higher education notifies any student that accrues a past-due institutional debt in writing of the one-time exemption and that the accumulation of additional institutional debt or failure to pay or enter into written agreement with the institution regarding the institutional debt by the end of the academic term for which the exemption is used may result in an enrollment or registration hold.(3) The institution of higher education does not place an enrollment or registration hold on the basis that a current or former student owes an institutional debt on any student that has entered into, and is in good standing on, a payment plan for any institutional debt.(c) An institution of higher education shall provide the written policy established pursuant to Section 66037 to current or former students that owe an institutional debt.(d) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from withholding a degree, placing an enrollment or registration hold, or otherwise preventing a student from taking classes for violating any academic code of conduct or school honor code, failing to maintain satisfactory academic progress, or on other similar and permissible bases.(e) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from administering a drop for nonpayment policy or similar policies that disenroll a student from an academic term due to the students failure to pay tuition, fees, room and board, or other nontuition costs associated with the cost of attendance, for that same term, provided that any institutional debt that accrues as result of that nonpayment shall not be the basis for any future adverse action against the student, as prohibited on a one-time basis by subdivision (b).(f)Institutions of higher education shall implement any drop for nonpayment disenrollments before disbursing financial aid refunds or electronic transfers, and students shall not otherwise incur any institutional debt for tuition or fees associated with the term when dropped for nonpayment.
208207
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210209
211210 66036. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall not charge a higher tuition or fee, fail to confer a degree on a student that has satisfied all academic requirements for their course of study, or otherwise prevent a current or former student from reenrolling, registering, or graduating at the institution of higher education on the grounds that the student owes an institutional debt.
212211
213212 (b) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education may prevent a current or former student who owes an institutional debt from enrolling or registering for courses on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt if the institution of higher education complies with all of the following conditions:
214213
215-(1) The institution of higher education grants a one-time exemption from an enrollment or registration hold on a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a past-due institutional debt. The one-time exemption shall only apply in the first instance a student seeks to enroll or register for an academic term following nonpayment of the students institutional debt that would otherwise trigger an enrollment or registration hold. An institution of higher education shall not prevent a current or former student who has been granted a one-time exemption pursuant to this paragraph from enrolling or registering for an academic term on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt. debt, provided that the student does not incur additional institutional debt.
214+(1) The institution of higher education grants a one-time exemption from an enrollment or registration hold on a current or former student on the grounds that the student owes a past-due institutional debt. The one-time exemption shall only apply in the first instance a student seeks to enroll or register for an academic term following nonpayment of the students institutional debt that would otherwise trigger an enrollment or registration hold. An institution of higher education shall not prevent a current or former student who has been granted a one-time exemption pursuant to this paragraph from enrolling or registering for an academic term on the basis that the student owes an institutional debt.
216215
217216 (2) The institution of higher education notifies any student that accrues a past-due institutional debt in writing of the one-time exemption and that the accumulation of additional institutional debt or failure to pay or enter into written agreement with the institution regarding the institutional debt by the end of the academic term for which the exemption is used may result in an enrollment or registration hold.
218217
219-(3) The institution of higher education does not place an enrollment or registration hold is not placed on the basis that a current or former student owes of an institutional debt on any for which a student that has entered into, and is in good standing on, a payment plan for any institutional debt. plan.
220-
221-(4) This subdivision shall only apply to an educational program that is intended to run for more than two academic terms. For purposes of this paragraph, educational program has the same as that term is defined in Section 55000 of Title 5 of the California Code of Regulations.
218+(3) The institution of higher education does not place an enrollment or registration hold on the basis that a current or former student owes an institutional debt on any student that has entered into, and is in good standing on, a payment plan for any institutional debt.
222219
223220 (c) An institution of higher education shall provide the written policy established pursuant to Section 66037 to current or former students that owe an institutional debt.
224221
225222 (d) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from withholding a degree, placing an enrollment or registration hold, or otherwise preventing a student from taking classes for violating any academic code of conduct or school honor code, failing to maintain satisfactory academic progress, or on other similar and permissible bases.
226223
227-(e) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from administering a drop for nonpayment policy or similar policies that disenroll a student from an academic term due to the students failure to pay tuition, fees, room and board, or other nontuition costs associated with the cost of attendance, for that same term, provided that any institutional debt that accrues as result of that nonpayment shall not be the basis for any future adverse action against the student, as prohibited on a one-time basis by subdivision (b). be subject to this article.
224+(e) This article does not prohibit an institution of higher education from administering a drop for nonpayment policy or similar policies that disenroll a student from an academic term due to the students failure to pay tuition, fees, room and board, or other nontuition costs associated with the cost of attendance, for that same term, provided that any institutional debt that accrues as result of that nonpayment shall not be the basis for any future adverse action against the student, as prohibited on a one-time basis by subdivision (b).
228225
229-66037. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall establish a written policy defining standards and practices for the collection of institutional debt. That policy shall be consistent with consumer protections established in Title 1.6C (commencing with Section 1788) of Part 4 of Division 3 of the Civil Code, and shall be made publicly accessible on its internet website.(b) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall not do any of the following when collecting on an institutional debt:(1) Engage a third-party debt collector that is not licensed pursuant to Division 25 (commencing with Section 100000) of the Financial Code.(2) Engage a third-party debt collector before 180 days have passed from the first communication from the institution of higher education requesting payment, and the institution of higher education has made all reasonable efforts, in accordance with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a), to communicate with the current or former student.(3) Engage a third-party debt collector to collect on an institutional debt without a written agreement with the debt collector that requires the debt collector to comply with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) An institution of higher education shall make reasonable efforts, in accordance with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a), to contact a current or former student to notify them of an institutional debt.(d) Before assigning an institutional debt to a third-party debt collector, an institution of higher education shall send a notice to the current or former student that includes all of the following information:(1) A written itemization of charges that constitute the institutional debt that is being assigned to collections.(2) An overview of emergency grant aid and other university resources to support students experiencing financial emergencies, if available.(3) The date or dates the student or former student was originally sent a notice about the institutional debt.(4) The name of the third-party debt collector to which the institutional debt is being assigned.(5) The consequences of a defaulted institutional debt, including the potential of reporting adverse information on a credit report and the risk of civil action.(6) How to submit a complaint with the Department of Financial Protection and Innovation and how to request assistance if they are subjected to abusive debt collection practices.(e) An institution of higher education or third-party debt collector shall not report adverse information to a consumer credit reporting agency or commence civil action against a current or former student for nonpayment of an institutional debt before 180 days after the first communication from the institution to the current or former student requesting payment.
226+(f)Institutions of higher education shall implement any drop for nonpayment disenrollments before disbursing financial aid refunds or electronic transfers, and students shall not otherwise incur any institutional debt for tuition or fees associated with the term when dropped for nonpayment.
227+
228+
229+
230+66037. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall establish a written policy defining standards and practices for the collection of institutional debt. That policy shall be consistent with consumer protections established in Title 1.6C (commencing with Section 1788) of Part 4 of Division 3 of the Civil Code, and shall be made publicly accessible on its internet website.(b) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall not do any of the following when collecting on an institutional debt:(1) Engage a third-party debt collector that is not licensed pursuant to Division 25 (commencing with Section 100000) of the Financial Code.(2) Engage a third-party debt collector before 180 days have passed from the first communication from the institution of higher education requesting payment, and the institution of higher education has made all reasonable efforts, in accordance with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a), to communicate with the current or former student.(3) Engage a third-party debt collector to collect on an institutional debt without a written agreement with the debt collector that requires the debt collector to comply with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) An institution of higher education shall make reasonable efforts, in accordance with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a), to contact a current or former student to notify them of an institutional debt.(d) Before assigning an institutional debt to a third-party debt collector, an institution of higher education shall send a notice to the current or former student that includes all of the following information:(1) A written itemization of charges that constitute the institutional debt that is being assigned to collections.(2) An overview of emergency grant aid and other university resources available to support students experiencing financial emergencies. emergencies, if available.(3) The date or dates the student or former student was originally sent a notice about the institutional debt.(4) The name of the third-party debt collector to which the institutional debt is being assigned.(5) The consequences of a defaulted institutional debt, including the potential of reporting adverse information on a credit report and the risk of civil action.(6) How to submit a complaint with the Department of Financial Protection and Innovation and how to request assistance if they are subjected to abusive debt collection practices.(e) An institution of higher education or third-party debt collector shall not report adverse information to a consumer credit reporting agency or commence civil action against a current or former student for nonpayment of an institutional debt before 180 days after the first communication from the institution to the current or former student requesting payment.
230231
231232
232233
233234 66037. (a) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall establish a written policy defining standards and practices for the collection of institutional debt. That policy shall be consistent with consumer protections established in Title 1.6C (commencing with Section 1788) of Part 4 of Division 3 of the Civil Code, and shall be made publicly accessible on its internet website.
234235
235236 (b) Notwithstanding any other law, an institution of higher education shall not do any of the following when collecting on an institutional debt:
236237
237238 (1) Engage a third-party debt collector that is not licensed pursuant to Division 25 (commencing with Section 100000) of the Financial Code.
238239
239240 (2) Engage a third-party debt collector before 180 days have passed from the first communication from the institution of higher education requesting payment, and the institution of higher education has made all reasonable efforts, in accordance with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a), to communicate with the current or former student.
240241
241242 (3) Engage a third-party debt collector to collect on an institutional debt without a written agreement with the debt collector that requires the debt collector to comply with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a).
242243
243244 (c) An institution of higher education shall make reasonable efforts, in accordance with the written policy established pursuant to subdivision (a), to contact a current or former student to notify them of an institutional debt.
244245
245246 (d) Before assigning an institutional debt to a third-party debt collector, an institution of higher education shall send a notice to the current or former student that includes all of the following information:
246247
247248 (1) A written itemization of charges that constitute the institutional debt that is being assigned to collections.
248249
249-(2) An overview of emergency grant aid and other university resources to support students experiencing financial emergencies, if available.
250+(2) An overview of emergency grant aid and other university resources available to support students experiencing financial emergencies. emergencies, if available.
250251
251252 (3) The date or dates the student or former student was originally sent a notice about the institutional debt.
252253
253254 (4) The name of the third-party debt collector to which the institutional debt is being assigned.
254255
255256 (5) The consequences of a defaulted institutional debt, including the potential of reporting adverse information on a credit report and the risk of civil action.
256257
257258 (6) How to submit a complaint with the Department of Financial Protection and Innovation and how to request assistance if they are subjected to abusive debt collection practices.
258259
259260 (e) An institution of higher education or third-party debt collector shall not report adverse information to a consumer credit reporting agency or commence civil action against a current or former student for nonpayment of an institutional debt before 180 days after the first communication from the institution to the current or former student requesting payment.
260261
261-66038. (a) In order to increase transparency on the growth and prevalence of institutional debt across public institutions of higher education, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, require each public institution to report, beginning on or before July 1, 2026, using the uniform format developed pursuant to subdivision (b), and on a biennial basis not later than three months after the end of each public institutions fiscal year, all of the following information, as of the final day of the institutions previous fiscal year:(1) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts at each institution, including a breakdown of the institutional debts considered current and past due.(2) The total number of payment plans at each institution.(3) A breakdown of the total number and total dollar amount of institutional debts by both of the following categories:(A) Dollar amount in increments of five hundred dollars ($500).(B) The age of the institutional debt in increments of one year.(4) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed, in whole or in part, as the result of a current or former students federal financial aid being returned to the federal government.(5) A description of any policies related to administrative actions or account holds imposed on current or former students with an outstanding account due to an institutional debt.(6) The number of students and accounts subject to an administrative hold at each institution.(7) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts collected directly by the institution during the prior two fiscal years, without the use of a third-party debt collector or the Franchise Tax Board.(8) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts sold or assigned to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(9) The total number and dollar amount collected on institutional debts through third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(10) The number of institutional debts subject to collection through the Franchise Tax Board and the total dollar amount collected through the Franchise Tax Board during the prior two fiscal years.(11)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts sold to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(12)(11) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a loan made by the institution.(b)On or before July 1, 2028, the biennial report in subdivision (a) shall also include the following additional information:(1)The gender and racial demographic of the students.(2)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts subject to a payment plan at each institution, excluding tuition payment plans, and the payments that have been made pursuant to a payment plan.(3)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed by Pell Grant-eligible current or former students.(4)A breakdown of the total number and dollar amount of institutional debts by declared major and degree type being sought.(5)A breakdown of the source of institutional debts by underlying expense type, including tuition, room and board, fines, and campus fees.(6)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a tuition payment plan offered by the institution.(c)(b) In coordination with the Commissioner of Financial Protection and Innovation, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, no later than July 1, 2025, develop a uniform format for data collection and ensure data reporting is done in a timely manner.(d)(c) The Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, report in a publicly accessible manner on their internet websites the data compiled pursuant to this section across each campus on an annual basis.
262+66038. (a) In order to increase transparency on the growth and prevalence of institutional debt across public institutions of higher education, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, require each public institution to report, beginning on or before July 1, 2025, 2026, using the uniform format developed pursuant to subdivision (b), and on a biennial basis not later than three months after the end of each public institutions fiscal year, all of the following information, as of the final day of the institutions previous fiscal year:(1) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts at each institution, including a breakdown of the institutional debts considered current and past due.(2) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts subject to a of payment plan plans at each institution, excluding tuition payment plans, and the payments that have been made pursuant to a payment plan. institution.(3) A breakdown of the total number and total dollar amount of institutional debts by each both of the following categories:(A) Dollar amount in increments of five hundred dollars ($500).(B) The age of the institutional debt in increments of one year.(C)The gender and racial demographic of the students.(4)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed by Pell Grant-eligible current or former students.(5)A breakdown of the total number and dollar amount of institutional debts by declared major and degree type being sought.(6)A breakdown of the source of institutional debts by underlying expense type, including tuition, room and board, fines, and campus fees.(7)(4) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed, in whole or in part, as the result of a current or former students federal financial aid being returned to the federal government.(8)(5) A description of any policies related to administrative actions or account holds imposed on current or former students with an outstanding account due to an institutional debt.(9)(6) The number of students and accounts subject to an administrative hold at each institution.(10)(7) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts collected directly by the institution during the prior two fiscal years, without the use of a third-party debt collector or the Franchise Tax Board.(11)(8) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts assigned to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(12)(9) The total number and dollar amount collected on institutional debts through third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(13)(10) The number of institutional debts subject to collection through the Franchise Tax Board and the total dollar amount collected through the Franchise Tax Board during the prior two fiscal years.(14)(11) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts sold to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.(15)(12) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a loan made by the institution.(16)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a tuition payment plan offered by the institution.(b) On or before July 1, 2028, the biennial report in subdivision (a) shall also include the following additional information:(1) The gender and racial demographic of the students.(2) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts subject to a payment plan at each institution, excluding tuition payment plans, and the payments that have been made pursuant to a payment plan.(3) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed by Pell Grant-eligible current or former students.(4) A breakdown of the total number and dollar amount of institutional debts by declared major and degree type being sought.(5) A breakdown of the source of institutional debts by underlying expense type, including tuition, room and board, fines, and campus fees.(6) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a tuition payment plan offered by the institution.(b)(c) In coordination with the Commissioner of Financial Protection and Innovation, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, no later than July 1, 2025, develop a uniform format for data collection and ensure data reporting is done in a timely manner.(c)(d) The Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, report in a publicly accessible manner on their internet websites the data compiled pursuant to this section across each campus on an annual basis.
262263
263264
264265
265-66038. (a) In order to increase transparency on the growth and prevalence of institutional debt across public institutions of higher education, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, require each public institution to report, beginning on or before July 1, 2026, using the uniform format developed pursuant to subdivision (b), and on a biennial basis not later than three months after the end of each public institutions fiscal year, all of the following information, as of the final day of the institutions previous fiscal year:
266+66038. (a) In order to increase transparency on the growth and prevalence of institutional debt across public institutions of higher education, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, require each public institution to report, beginning on or before July 1, 2025, 2026, using the uniform format developed pursuant to subdivision (b), and on a biennial basis not later than three months after the end of each public institutions fiscal year, all of the following information, as of the final day of the institutions previous fiscal year:
266267
267268 (1) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts at each institution, including a breakdown of the institutional debts considered current and past due.
268269
269-(2) The total number of payment plans at each institution.
270+(2) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts subject to a of payment plan plans at each institution, excluding tuition payment plans, and the payments that have been made pursuant to a payment plan. institution.
270271
271-(3) A breakdown of the total number and total dollar amount of institutional debts by both of the following categories:
272+(3) A breakdown of the total number and total dollar amount of institutional debts by each both of the following categories:
272273
273274 (A) Dollar amount in increments of five hundred dollars ($500).
274275
275276 (B) The age of the institutional debt in increments of one year.
276277
278+(C)The gender and racial demographic of the students.
279+
280+
281+
282+(4)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed by Pell Grant-eligible current or former students.
283+
284+
285+
286+(5)A breakdown of the total number and dollar amount of institutional debts by declared major and degree type being sought.
287+
288+
289+
290+(6)A breakdown of the source of institutional debts by underlying expense type, including tuition, room and board, fines, and campus fees.
291+
292+
293+
294+(7)
295+
296+
297+
277298 (4) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed, in whole or in part, as the result of a current or former students federal financial aid being returned to the federal government.
299+
300+(8)
301+
302+
278303
279304 (5) A description of any policies related to administrative actions or account holds imposed on current or former students with an outstanding account due to an institutional debt.
280305
306+(9)
307+
308+
309+
281310 (6) The number of students and accounts subject to an administrative hold at each institution.
311+
312+(10)
313+
314+
282315
283316 (7) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts collected directly by the institution during the prior two fiscal years, without the use of a third-party debt collector or the Franchise Tax Board.
284317
285-(8) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts sold or assigned to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.
286-
287-(9) The total number and dollar amount collected on institutional debts through third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.
288-
289-(10) The number of institutional debts subject to collection through the Franchise Tax Board and the total dollar amount collected through the Franchise Tax Board during the prior two fiscal years.
290-
291-(11)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts sold to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.
318+(11)
292319
293320
321+
322+(8) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts assigned to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.
294323
295324 (12)
296325
297326
298327
299-(11) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a loan made by the institution.
328+(9) The total number and dollar amount collected on institutional debts through third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.
329+
330+(13)
331+
332+
333+
334+(10) The number of institutional debts subject to collection through the Franchise Tax Board and the total dollar amount collected through the Franchise Tax Board during the prior two fiscal years.
335+
336+(14)
337+
338+
339+
340+(11) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts sold to third-party debt collectors during the prior two fiscal years.
341+
342+(15)
343+
344+
345+
346+(12) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a loan made by the institution.
347+
348+(16)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a tuition payment plan offered by the institution.
349+
350+
300351
301352 (b) On or before July 1, 2028, the biennial report in subdivision (a) shall also include the following additional information:
302353
354+(1) The gender and racial demographic of the students.
303355
356+(2) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts subject to a payment plan at each institution, excluding tuition payment plans, and the payments that have been made pursuant to a payment plan.
304357
305-(1)The gender and racial demographic of the students.
358+(3) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed by Pell Grant-eligible current or former students.
359+
360+(4) A breakdown of the total number and dollar amount of institutional debts by declared major and degree type being sought.
361+
362+(5) A breakdown of the source of institutional debts by underlying expense type, including tuition, room and board, fines, and campus fees.
363+
364+(6) The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a tuition payment plan offered by the institution.
365+
366+(b)
306367
307368
308369
309-(2)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts subject to a payment plan at each institution, excluding tuition payment plans, and the payments that have been made pursuant to a payment plan.
310-
311-
312-
313-(3)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts owed by Pell Grant-eligible current or former students.
314-
315-
316-
317-(4)A breakdown of the total number and dollar amount of institutional debts by declared major and degree type being sought.
318-
319-
320-
321-(5)A breakdown of the source of institutional debts by underlying expense type, including tuition, room and board, fines, and campus fees.
322-
323-
324-
325-(6)The total number and dollar amount of institutional debts that are the result of a tuition payment plan offered by the institution.
326-
327-
370+(c) In coordination with the Commissioner of Financial Protection and Innovation, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, no later than July 1, 2025, develop a uniform format for data collection and ensure data reporting is done in a timely manner.
328371
329372 (c)
330373
331374
332375
333-(b) In coordination with the Commissioner of Financial Protection and Innovation, the Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, no later than July 1, 2025, develop a uniform format for data collection and ensure data reporting is done in a timely manner.
376+(d) The Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, report in a publicly accessible manner on their internet websites the data compiled pursuant to this section across each campus on an annual basis.
334377
335-(d)
336-
337-
338-
339-(c) The Board of Governors of the California Community Colleges and the Trustees of the California State University shall, and the office of the President of the University of California is requested to, report in a publicly accessible manner on their internet websites the data compiled pursuant to this section across each campus on an annual basis.
340-
341-SEC. 7. Section 12419.5 of the Government Code is amended to read:12419.5. (a) (1) The Controller may, in the Controllers discretion, offset any amount due a state agency from a person or entity, against any amount owing that person or entity by any state agency. The Controller may deduct from the claim, and draw the Controllers warrants for the amounts offset in favor of the respective state agencies to which due, and, for any balance, in favor of the claimant. Whenever insufficient to offset all amounts due state agencies, the amount available shall be applied in the manner as the Controller, in the Controllers discretion, shall determine. If, in the discretion of the Controller, the person or entity refuses or neglects to file a claim within a reasonable time, the head of the state agency owing the amount shall file the claim on behalf of that person or entity. If approved by the Controller, the claim shall have the same force and effect as though filed by that person or entity. The amount due any person or entity from the state or any agency thereof is the net amount otherwise owing that person or entity after any offset as provided in this section.(2) For purposes of this section, an amount owing to a person or entity by any state agency shall include any tax refund.(3) This subdivision shall not apply to payment of online game prizes of ninety-nine dollars ($99) or lower by California State Lottery Retailers pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 8880.321.(b) (1) Notwithstanding any other law, for taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2025, the Controller shall not offset any amount due to a postsecondary institution from a current or former student, that was incurred in their capacity as a student, against any amount owing to that current or former student by a state agency, until 730 days after the amount was incurred.(2) For purpose of this subdivision, postsecondary institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations, or distance education, and includes each community college district, the California State University, and, upon agreement by the Regents of the University of California, the University of California.
378+SEC. 7. Section 12419.5 of the Government Code is amended to read:12419.5. (a) (1) The Controller may, in the Controllers discretion, offset any amount due a state agency from a person or entity, against any amount owing that person or entity by any state agency. The Controller may deduct from the claim, and draw the Controllers warrants for the amounts offset in favor of the respective state agencies to which due, and, for any balance, in favor of the claimant. Whenever insufficient to offset all amounts due state agencies, the amount available shall be applied in the manner as the Controller, in the Controllers discretion, shall determine. If, in the discretion of the Controller, the person or entity refuses or neglects to file a claim within a reasonable time, the head of the state agency owing the amount shall file the claim on behalf of that person or entity. If approved by the Controller, the claim shall have the same force and effect as though filed by that person or entity. The amount due any person or entity from the state or any agency thereof is the net amount otherwise owing that person or entity after any offset as provided in this section.(2) For purposes of this section, an amount owing to a person or entity by any state agency shall include any tax refund.(3) This subdivision shall not apply to payment of online game prizes of ninety-nine dollars ($99) or lower by California State Lottery Retailers pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 8880.321.(b) (1) Notwithstanding any other law, for taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2025, the Controller shall not offset any amount due to a postsecondary institution from a current or former student, that was incurred in their capacity as a student, against any amount owing to that current or former student by a state agency. agency, until 730 days after the amount was incurred.(2) For purpose of this subdivision, postsecondary institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations, or distance education, and includes each community college district, the California State University, and, upon agreement by the Regents of the University of California, the University of California.
342379
343380 SEC. 7. Section 12419.5 of the Government Code is amended to read:
344381
345382 ### SEC. 7.
346383
347-12419.5. (a) (1) The Controller may, in the Controllers discretion, offset any amount due a state agency from a person or entity, against any amount owing that person or entity by any state agency. The Controller may deduct from the claim, and draw the Controllers warrants for the amounts offset in favor of the respective state agencies to which due, and, for any balance, in favor of the claimant. Whenever insufficient to offset all amounts due state agencies, the amount available shall be applied in the manner as the Controller, in the Controllers discretion, shall determine. If, in the discretion of the Controller, the person or entity refuses or neglects to file a claim within a reasonable time, the head of the state agency owing the amount shall file the claim on behalf of that person or entity. If approved by the Controller, the claim shall have the same force and effect as though filed by that person or entity. The amount due any person or entity from the state or any agency thereof is the net amount otherwise owing that person or entity after any offset as provided in this section.(2) For purposes of this section, an amount owing to a person or entity by any state agency shall include any tax refund.(3) This subdivision shall not apply to payment of online game prizes of ninety-nine dollars ($99) or lower by California State Lottery Retailers pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 8880.321.(b) (1) Notwithstanding any other law, for taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2025, the Controller shall not offset any amount due to a postsecondary institution from a current or former student, that was incurred in their capacity as a student, against any amount owing to that current or former student by a state agency, until 730 days after the amount was incurred.(2) For purpose of this subdivision, postsecondary institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations, or distance education, and includes each community college district, the California State University, and, upon agreement by the Regents of the University of California, the University of California.
384+12419.5. (a) (1) The Controller may, in the Controllers discretion, offset any amount due a state agency from a person or entity, against any amount owing that person or entity by any state agency. The Controller may deduct from the claim, and draw the Controllers warrants for the amounts offset in favor of the respective state agencies to which due, and, for any balance, in favor of the claimant. Whenever insufficient to offset all amounts due state agencies, the amount available shall be applied in the manner as the Controller, in the Controllers discretion, shall determine. If, in the discretion of the Controller, the person or entity refuses or neglects to file a claim within a reasonable time, the head of the state agency owing the amount shall file the claim on behalf of that person or entity. If approved by the Controller, the claim shall have the same force and effect as though filed by that person or entity. The amount due any person or entity from the state or any agency thereof is the net amount otherwise owing that person or entity after any offset as provided in this section.(2) For purposes of this section, an amount owing to a person or entity by any state agency shall include any tax refund.(3) This subdivision shall not apply to payment of online game prizes of ninety-nine dollars ($99) or lower by California State Lottery Retailers pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 8880.321.(b) (1) Notwithstanding any other law, for taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2025, the Controller shall not offset any amount due to a postsecondary institution from a current or former student, that was incurred in their capacity as a student, against any amount owing to that current or former student by a state agency. agency, until 730 days after the amount was incurred.(2) For purpose of this subdivision, postsecondary institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations, or distance education, and includes each community college district, the California State University, and, upon agreement by the Regents of the University of California, the University of California.
348385
349-12419.5. (a) (1) The Controller may, in the Controllers discretion, offset any amount due a state agency from a person or entity, against any amount owing that person or entity by any state agency. The Controller may deduct from the claim, and draw the Controllers warrants for the amounts offset in favor of the respective state agencies to which due, and, for any balance, in favor of the claimant. Whenever insufficient to offset all amounts due state agencies, the amount available shall be applied in the manner as the Controller, in the Controllers discretion, shall determine. If, in the discretion of the Controller, the person or entity refuses or neglects to file a claim within a reasonable time, the head of the state agency owing the amount shall file the claim on behalf of that person or entity. If approved by the Controller, the claim shall have the same force and effect as though filed by that person or entity. The amount due any person or entity from the state or any agency thereof is the net amount otherwise owing that person or entity after any offset as provided in this section.(2) For purposes of this section, an amount owing to a person or entity by any state agency shall include any tax refund.(3) This subdivision shall not apply to payment of online game prizes of ninety-nine dollars ($99) or lower by California State Lottery Retailers pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 8880.321.(b) (1) Notwithstanding any other law, for taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2025, the Controller shall not offset any amount due to a postsecondary institution from a current or former student, that was incurred in their capacity as a student, against any amount owing to that current or former student by a state agency, until 730 days after the amount was incurred.(2) For purpose of this subdivision, postsecondary institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations, or distance education, and includes each community college district, the California State University, and, upon agreement by the Regents of the University of California, the University of California.
386+12419.5. (a) (1) The Controller may, in the Controllers discretion, offset any amount due a state agency from a person or entity, against any amount owing that person or entity by any state agency. The Controller may deduct from the claim, and draw the Controllers warrants for the amounts offset in favor of the respective state agencies to which due, and, for any balance, in favor of the claimant. Whenever insufficient to offset all amounts due state agencies, the amount available shall be applied in the manner as the Controller, in the Controllers discretion, shall determine. If, in the discretion of the Controller, the person or entity refuses or neglects to file a claim within a reasonable time, the head of the state agency owing the amount shall file the claim on behalf of that person or entity. If approved by the Controller, the claim shall have the same force and effect as though filed by that person or entity. The amount due any person or entity from the state or any agency thereof is the net amount otherwise owing that person or entity after any offset as provided in this section.(2) For purposes of this section, an amount owing to a person or entity by any state agency shall include any tax refund.(3) This subdivision shall not apply to payment of online game prizes of ninety-nine dollars ($99) or lower by California State Lottery Retailers pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 8880.321.(b) (1) Notwithstanding any other law, for taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2025, the Controller shall not offset any amount due to a postsecondary institution from a current or former student, that was incurred in their capacity as a student, against any amount owing to that current or former student by a state agency. agency, until 730 days after the amount was incurred.(2) For purpose of this subdivision, postsecondary institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations, or distance education, and includes each community college district, the California State University, and, upon agreement by the Regents of the University of California, the University of California.
350387
351-12419.5. (a) (1) The Controller may, in the Controllers discretion, offset any amount due a state agency from a person or entity, against any amount owing that person or entity by any state agency. The Controller may deduct from the claim, and draw the Controllers warrants for the amounts offset in favor of the respective state agencies to which due, and, for any balance, in favor of the claimant. Whenever insufficient to offset all amounts due state agencies, the amount available shall be applied in the manner as the Controller, in the Controllers discretion, shall determine. If, in the discretion of the Controller, the person or entity refuses or neglects to file a claim within a reasonable time, the head of the state agency owing the amount shall file the claim on behalf of that person or entity. If approved by the Controller, the claim shall have the same force and effect as though filed by that person or entity. The amount due any person or entity from the state or any agency thereof is the net amount otherwise owing that person or entity after any offset as provided in this section.(2) For purposes of this section, an amount owing to a person or entity by any state agency shall include any tax refund.(3) This subdivision shall not apply to payment of online game prizes of ninety-nine dollars ($99) or lower by California State Lottery Retailers pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 8880.321.(b) (1) Notwithstanding any other law, for taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2025, the Controller shall not offset any amount due to a postsecondary institution from a current or former student, that was incurred in their capacity as a student, against any amount owing to that current or former student by a state agency, until 730 days after the amount was incurred.(2) For purpose of this subdivision, postsecondary institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations, or distance education, and includes each community college district, the California State University, and, upon agreement by the Regents of the University of California, the University of California.
388+12419.5. (a) (1) The Controller may, in the Controllers discretion, offset any amount due a state agency from a person or entity, against any amount owing that person or entity by any state agency. The Controller may deduct from the claim, and draw the Controllers warrants for the amounts offset in favor of the respective state agencies to which due, and, for any balance, in favor of the claimant. Whenever insufficient to offset all amounts due state agencies, the amount available shall be applied in the manner as the Controller, in the Controllers discretion, shall determine. If, in the discretion of the Controller, the person or entity refuses or neglects to file a claim within a reasonable time, the head of the state agency owing the amount shall file the claim on behalf of that person or entity. If approved by the Controller, the claim shall have the same force and effect as though filed by that person or entity. The amount due any person or entity from the state or any agency thereof is the net amount otherwise owing that person or entity after any offset as provided in this section.(2) For purposes of this section, an amount owing to a person or entity by any state agency shall include any tax refund.(3) This subdivision shall not apply to payment of online game prizes of ninety-nine dollars ($99) or lower by California State Lottery Retailers pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 8880.321.(b) (1) Notwithstanding any other law, for taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2025, the Controller shall not offset any amount due to a postsecondary institution from a current or former student, that was incurred in their capacity as a student, against any amount owing to that current or former student by a state agency. agency, until 730 days after the amount was incurred.(2) For purpose of this subdivision, postsecondary institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations, or distance education, and includes each community college district, the California State University, and, upon agreement by the Regents of the University of California, the University of California.
352389
353390
354391
355392 12419.5. (a) (1) The Controller may, in the Controllers discretion, offset any amount due a state agency from a person or entity, against any amount owing that person or entity by any state agency. The Controller may deduct from the claim, and draw the Controllers warrants for the amounts offset in favor of the respective state agencies to which due, and, for any balance, in favor of the claimant. Whenever insufficient to offset all amounts due state agencies, the amount available shall be applied in the manner as the Controller, in the Controllers discretion, shall determine. If, in the discretion of the Controller, the person or entity refuses or neglects to file a claim within a reasonable time, the head of the state agency owing the amount shall file the claim on behalf of that person or entity. If approved by the Controller, the claim shall have the same force and effect as though filed by that person or entity. The amount due any person or entity from the state or any agency thereof is the net amount otherwise owing that person or entity after any offset as provided in this section.
356393
357394 (2) For purposes of this section, an amount owing to a person or entity by any state agency shall include any tax refund.
358395
359396 (3) This subdivision shall not apply to payment of online game prizes of ninety-nine dollars ($99) or lower by California State Lottery Retailers pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 8880.321.
360397
361-(b) (1) Notwithstanding any other law, for taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2025, the Controller shall not offset any amount due to a postsecondary institution from a current or former student, that was incurred in their capacity as a student, against any amount owing to that current or former student by a state agency, until 730 days after the amount was incurred.
398+(b) (1) Notwithstanding any other law, for taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2025, the Controller shall not offset any amount due to a postsecondary institution from a current or former student, that was incurred in their capacity as a student, against any amount owing to that current or former student by a state agency. agency, until 730 days after the amount was incurred.
362399
363400 (2) For purpose of this subdivision, postsecondary institution means any public or private postsecondary educational institution operating in the state, including its branch campuses and satellite locations, or distance education, and includes each community college district, the California State University, and, upon agreement by the Regents of the University of California, the University of California.
364401
365402 SEC. 8. The provisions of this act are severable. If any provision of this act or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
366403
367404 SEC. 8. The provisions of this act are severable. If any provision of this act or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
368405
369406 SEC. 8. The provisions of this act are severable. If any provision of this act or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
370407
371408 ### SEC. 8.
372409
373410 SEC. 9. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
374411
375412 SEC. 9. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
376413
377414 SEC. 9. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
378415
379416 ### SEC. 9.