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A story of student loan forgiveness, 20 years in the making

Kurt Panton with his wife, Lizzy, and daughter, Pauline, at the Christmas market in Mannheim, Germany. He recently had his remaining student loans forgiven after 20 years in repayment.
Patrick Junker for NPR
Kurt Panton with his wife, Lizzy, and daughter, Pauline, at the Christmas market in Mannheim, Germany. He recently had his remaining student loans forgiven after 20 years in repayment.

Kurt Panton's laugh, surprising and unguarded, erupts when you expect it — after his baby daughter, Pauline, babbles adorably. But also when you don't — after he confesses frustration with the federal student loan system.

Kurt laughed a lot during our first Zoom conversation, in December of 2022, when he was worried about his $18,000 in outstanding loan debt, but also during our last conversation, just a few days ago, when he told me those debts had suddenly disappeared.

This is the story of what happened in between.

Kurt Panton is 43. He grew up in Miami with his brother and their mother, Barbara. After graduating from college in 2003, Kurt taught high school until 2016, when he moved to Germany, married Lizzy, who is German, and tried his hand at copywriting.

Through every step of his adult life, there have been a few constants: that laugh, his doting mom and Kurt's monthly federal student loan payment.

Kurt Panton was a high school teacher in Miami before moving to Germany.
/ Patrick Junker for NPR
/
Patrick Junker for NPR
Kurt Panton was a high school teacher in Miami before moving to Germany.

"I've been so loyal to my payments," Kurt told me in 2022. "I can't even explain the outrage I feel when I look at comments on social media [about debt relief], and it's like, 'Well, you took out loans, you repay them!' You know, this has been a serious financial debt to me. And I do everything within my power, within my income, to pay it back."

When we first met, last December, Kurt told me he had been repaying his loans consistently since late 2003, and he knew that if President Biden's big plan to erase hundreds of billions of dollars in federal student loans could survive a barrage of legal challenges, it would erase every penny of his remaining debts. (Pell Grant recipients like Kurt would have qualified for $20,000 in debt cancellation.)

"That's going to make an immediate effect," he told me back then, "and I don't have to sit here and think about whether I qualify under all these complicated formulas."

But I was thinking of complicated formulas, because Kurt and I both knew Biden's grand plan for debt relief was no sure thing. And I wondered if Kurt's loans might qualify for another, lesser-understood form of debt relief that did not have to survive the courts.

At the end of our chat, I asked Kurt to send me every record of every payment he'd ever made. The plan was to manually tally his payments, all 19 years' worth, to see if he qualified for this other kind of relief.

Some borrowers might have been daunted by having to excavate so many records from multiple loan servicers. Kurt agreed eagerly, with a laugh.

The sleeper debt relief that's helped thousands of borrowers

Before I met Kurt, in April 2022, NPR published the damning findings of a monthslong investigation into federal, income-driven repayment plans (IDR).

These IDR plans were meant to help lower-income borrowers by pegging their monthly payments to their income: The less they earn, the less they have to pay each month. They were meant to be an engine of good and to keep struggling borrowers from defaulting on their loans.

But NPR revealed a list of shocking problems that were hurting, not helping, borrowers. Though these plans promised loan forgiveness after 20 or 25 years, NPR found that some loan servicers weren't counting payments, meaning they had no idea if, or when, a borrower qualified for forgiveness. Servicers were also miscounting payments, not always giving borrowers credit.

On top of that, advocates had been sounding the alarm for millions of borrowers who could have benefited from these repayment plans — like Kurt — but were never told about them or, worse, were put into forbearance instead.

IDR had become a debacle of good intentions.

Two weeks after NPR released its investigation, the Biden administration committed to a sweeping IDR overhaul, promising to review the payment histories of millions of borrowers, find and fix these mistakes, and give borrowers retroactive credit toward IDR's promise of loan forgiveness.

Basically, a monumental do-over.

Which brings us full circle to Kurt Panton, who'd been repaying his loans for 19 years when we met. Under this do-over, he could technically qualify for loan forgiveness in one more year. Technically. But no one quite understood how or when this do-over would happen, and the U.S. Department of Education was still completely focused on the fate of Biden's larger debt relief plan.

After that first Zoom, last December, Kurt pulled together his entire payment history. We kept in touch through spring, as I plugged hundreds of his payments into a spreadsheet. In June, the Supreme Court struck down Biden's big relief plan. Kurt's Plan A was gone. It was time to put Plan B to the test.

Kurt and I hopped on Zoom again in August. This time, Pauline was about 10 months old, and she sat on his lap as I showed them the spreadsheet I'd made.

"We're having fun talking student loans! I hope you never have to pay student loans, little one," Kurt said to Pauline, laughing.

Kurt and his daughter, Pauline.
/ Patrick Junker for NPR
/
Patrick Junker for NPR
Kurt and his daughter, Pauline.

To qualify for forgiveness under the IDR do-over, a borrower needs to have been in repayment for 20 years, which is 240 monthly payments. By our count, Kurt had made 233, though that was a conservative estimate, ignoring a few months that had disappeared with servicers' poor record-keeping.

"You are so close," I told Kurt as we moved down the spreadsheet.

"I am so close!" he laughed back. "When you were scrolling down on the spreadsheet, I was like, 'Please get to 240, please.' And then I saw 233 and I was like, 'Nooo!'"

The good news for Kurt was that the Education Department had recently announced the first round of reviews under this IDR do-over and said it would be erasing the loans of more than 800,000 people — just like him (a number that would continue to grow). All he had to do was wait seven more months, at the most.

Turns out, it was a lot less than that.

"I think I'm done, Mom!"

In the middle of November, Kurt woke up early with Pauline, who had a cold. He fed her, changed her diaper, and lay down on the couch with her, hoping she'd fall back asleep.

"She's lying on my chest on the couch," Kurt says, "and I really can't go back to sleep that quickly. So I check my email, and as soon as I saw the subject I thought, 'Oh my God, this is it!'"

The email was from the Education Department, and it said that under that big IDR do-over, Kurt now qualifies to have his remaining $18,000 in loans forgiven — 20 years since his first payment.

When I ask Kurt how he'll celebrate, he calls his mom, Barbara.

"I am very, very proud of you," she says, suggesting maybe now Kurt will consider going back to school to work on a doctorate.

"I don't think so," Kurt says, laughing. "I think I'm done, Mom!"

After Kurt hangs up, his wife, Lizzy, grabs a small, twist-top bottle of bubbly from the fridge, and they toast the email that says Kurt's loans will soon be in his past — while his future sleeps quietly in the other room.

In early December, the Education Department announced it has now approved almost $44 billion in IDR-related debt relief for a total of more than 900,000 borrowers.

Copyright 2024 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Cory Turner reports and edits for the NPR Ed team. He's helped lead several of the team's signature reporting projects, including "The Truth About America's Graduation Rate" (2015), the groundbreaking "School Money" series (2016), "Raising Kings: A Year Of Love And Struggle At Ron Brown College Prep" (2017), and the NPR Life Kit parenting podcast with Sesame Workshop (2019). His year-long investigation with NPR's Chris Arnold, "The Trouble With TEACH Grants" (2018), led the U.S. Department of Education to change the rules of a troubled federal grant program that had unfairly hurt thousands of teachers.