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State Update Steven Brooks State Education Assistance Authority Asheville, North Carolina November 2014

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State Update. Steven Brooks State Education Assistance Authority Asheville, North Carolina November 2014. CFNC and General Assembly. End of FFELP loans pinches SEAA’s budget for outreach Recurring appropriation for CFNC - $1,000,000 Funding goes to offset operations and marketing of CFNC - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: State Update

State Update

Steven BrooksState Education Assistance Authority

Asheville, North CarolinaNovember 2014

Page 2: State Update

CFNC and General Assembly

• End of FFELP loans pinches SEAA’s budget for outreach• Recurring appropriation for CFNC - $1,000,000

– Funding goes to offset operations and marketing of CFNC

• Required report on sustainability due December 1– Re-examination of all aspects of CFNC services

• Find and consolidate duplicative efforts• Eliminate items that are no longer needed• Reduction of expenses – budget cut by 20.63%

– Marketing down - use of social media hope will work

• Use of net revenue from out of state School Services• Seeking corporate sponsorship for new services

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Page 3: State Update

You already know Plan, Apply, Pay

But there are also many services you may find surprising (or just need reminding of)

5.4 million accounts

3.8 million admissions applications 1.5 million

high schooltranscripts

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Page 4: State Update

Seven CFNC regional representatives cover all 100 counties• Offer free programs, workshops and training for students,

families, adult learners, educators, employers, employees, and others through outreach in:

• Schools (K-12 and colleges/universities); civic organizations; churches; libraries, community events; businesses

• Presentations tailored to intended audience’s age and interests, focus on educational opportunities and resources

• Comprehensive information on topics such as:• Career exploration • Planning for college • Financial literacy • Choosing and applying to college • Saving for college • Paying for college

CFNC Regional RepresentativesStatewide outreach in local communities

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Page 5: State Update

CFNC representatives also participate in individual projects and special events serving students and supported by CFNC such as:

• Increasing awareness of CFNC tools & services for military and returning veterans

• Creation of a Special Point of Contact (SPOC) list of NC college/university contacts for homeless and foster students to get support during their college experience

• Educational Opportunities Programs – Over 150 “college fairs” sponsored by Carolinas Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers in all North Carolina LEAs

• College Application Week • FAFSA Day (Free Application for Federal Student Aid)

CFNC Call Center (toll-free line, 866-866-CFNC)

Special projects and events

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Page 6: State Update

Supporting college admissions

College Application Week (CAW)Offered annually statewide one week in November and sponsored by CFNC and CACRAO. 2013 CAW: 73,269 applications; 27,564 students; 571 NC high schools

Annual Filing of College Applications on CFNC.orgMost recent full year: 2013: 478,336NC colleges and universities save significant sums using this service

Electronic Submission of High School Transcripts to CollegesOnline application system also makes electronic high school transcript system available for North Carolina’s public high school students Calendar year 2013: 319,295

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Page 7: State Update

Other service areas promoting access

Financial LiteracyOnline, interactive, free modules/materials available for high school studentsUsage 2012-2013: 23,545 studentsEducator guides for each moduleOnline videos and games Publications

Test Prep CourseFree online help to assist students in preparing for standardized college tests, SAT, ACT and GRE, and to improve vocabulary for better performance on each. Assist over 5,000 students each year.Helps level the playing field for students whose families cannot afford to pay for such services. 7

Page 8: State Update

• Let Me Tell You, an online platform currently providing over 3,000 free videos for North Carolina high school students and their families.

• DPI transition to PowerSchool –Work to mitigate impact on electronic transcripts for students from high schools across the state.

• Discussions with Department of Commerce about ways to collaborate and save them expense on the development of a jobs web site.

• Mock College App Week—To help high school juniors prepare for the application process

Recent additions/observations

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Page 9: State Update

Winds of Change are Blowing

Coming August 2015: built on backbone of CFNC

• CrossRoads – enhanced application for admission

• Grant Re-write – coming August 2015

• Centralized Residency determination for purposes of tuition and state grant consideration

While these are three separate processes, they are planned to reinforce each other

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Page 10: State Update

CrossRoadsWork underway - enhanced admissions application for colleges

• Listening tour last spring and additional feedback since– 71 campuses; 131 people participated– On-Going communications– CFNC end users, including counselors and admissions professionals

• Plan is to enhance usefulness in recruitment and ability to integrate with other campus systems – “Person-specific data packages” to include admissions, transcripts, and

residency determination

• Enhancements in these specific areas– Application Hub (Admission Apps and e-Transcripts) – Campus Search – CFNC Profile – Postsecondary Plans

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Page 11: State Update

Grant System Re-write

• Goals are:– Flexibility –current requirements and future-ready– Better reporting and communications with schools– Better technical performance– Better prediction of expenditures and control over disbursement processes

Launched in phases:– First quarter 2015 – enhanced award download, new view customization

ability

– Second quarter 2015 – enhanced certification certification process (students by term rather than by grant type) and improved display for grant awards

– Early third quarter 2015 enhanced disbursements, adjustments, and reconciliation

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Page 12: State Update

Coordinated and Centralized Residency Determination

• Legislative mandate to UNC, Community Colleges, and SEAA

• Recommendations of a working group UNC, CC, NCICU, SEAA

• Process for undergraduates unfolds over the next 20 months

• Positive implications for financial aid processing

• After all, in-state tuition subsidy is the BIGGEST FINANCIAL AID PROGRAM OF ALL!

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Page 13: State Update

Common residency manual for all, but ...

• Campuses do not currently obtain information for residency determinations from a common set of questions; questions vary by admissions application

• Some campuses use an electronic process, some campuses review residency determinations manually

• Students applying to multiple campuses complete multiple forms, which are not identical for residency

• Student responses to differently worded questions can vary

• Students sometimes receive different decisions from different campuses

• Result: confusion legislative mandate for change

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Page 14: State Update

Working Group’s Recommendations

Phase One – Current (Spring 2014 – March 2015)Continue building consensus across sectors, including

advice from campus experts, on a set of common questions all students must answer to determine residency

Conduct statewide residency verification training Build consensus across sectors on the structure/calculation

algorithm to utilize for a residency determination– Build final specification for the revised/enhanced CFNC

residency verification admissions application process

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Page 15: State Update

Residency Phase 1, continued

July 2014 – March 2015– Programming enhanced CFNC admissions process for

residency verification;– Embed standardized questions and common algorithm

• Conversational interview technique• Simpler for students; more accurate and consistent for State

– Collaborate with campus and system officials to ensure that the process readily integrates into campus admissions and records management systems

– Testing and Quality Control– Final training of campus officials

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Page 16: State Update

Centralized Residency – Project Update

• Initial residency determinations will be made centrally via CFI (beginning late summer 2015 for Spring 2016 & subsequent terms)

• Review of certain documents to be done by SEAA staff to verify information as necessary – many data matches to automate this

• “Residency Certification Number” provided to students for use with non-CFNC college applications – in the same “Person-specific” data transmission as admissions applications and transcripts

Student aid implications– Grants pre-screened for residency at system level– Reduced workload for financial aid administrators

• Phase two will be to automate the “appeals” or “reclassification” process, also through CFI/SEAA

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Page 17: State Update

Details on Residency System• Amortized costs of development plus estimates of annual maintenance

and staffing costs of centralized initial classification to be paid by systems based on volume per semester

• Reclassification will likely be a student fee, not a college fee, again based upon amortized development of that portion plus annual maintenance and staffing costs

• We plan for reclassification will be ready by summer of 2016 for use in fall 2016

• Thus we will have fully centralized all undergraduate residency determinations by Fall 2016!

• Graduate determinations continue on campus until after full centralization of undergraduate process

• Lots of training and information sharing over next several months. Please be paying attention!

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Page 18: State Update

Other legislative mattersRequired Study re: State Grants

Study and report on “ways to structure SEAA financial aid payment schedules to encourage students to complete an average of 30 credit hours per academic year”

Only affects grant recipients but “on time” is an issue for ALL students

SEAA will:Consult with UNC, CC System, NCICU

Very complex issue that sounds simplePreviously* reported difficulties but General Assembly remains interested Elizabeth McDuffie will take lead role

*4-30-2014

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Page 19: State Update

Legislative Issues: Limits on grant receipt

• Program Maximum Time of Receipt– UNC NBG, NC NBS, ELS 10 semesters– Community College Grant 6 semesters

• Coordination among programs required – 6 full time semesters used at Community College, 4 semesters eligibility left– Transfer from UNC to private with 5 semesters used, 5 semesters left

• Exceptions– Part time students get equivalent number of semesters (20 of half time)– Officially designated 5-year programs 12 semesters– Institutional waivers - (see next slide)

Reminder

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Page 20: State Update

Institutional Waivers

• “Upon application by a student, the appropriate postsecondary institution may grant a waiver to the student who may then receive a scholarship for the equivalent of one additional full-time academic semester if the student demonstrates that any of the following have substantially disrupted or interrupted the student's pursuit of a degree, diploma, or certificate: (i) a military service obligation, (ii) serious medical debilitation, (iii) a short-term or long-term disability, or (iv) other extraordinary hardship. “

• What is an “other extraordinary hardship?” We want to issue guidance but we want to hear from the community as we develop that guidance.

• Can/should SEAA develop a list of hardships that will qualify? (suggest to BOG and SBCC)

• Can/should SEAA specify the documentation required?

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Page 21: State Update

Legislative Matters

• Teaching Fellows Program (TFP) will be transferred to SEAA effective February 1– TFP will make spring disbursements to seniors before transfer– A few students may receive disbursements from SEAA fall 2015– Working with TFP staff to obtain electronic records – law requires a

format acceptable to SEAA– TFP is very cooperative – However, transfer will require manual intervention

• SEAA currently collects cash while TFP tracks service• SEAA must compare TFP records to ours on this subset• Most borrowers will be NEW records

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Page 22: State Update

School Services Updates

• Goal of school services:– Help colleges comply with regulations– Help colleges help their students

– Priced at cost in North Carolina– Priced higher out of state net proceeds: CFNC outreach

ISIR Verification and C-Code ResolutionEX$EL: Financial Education and Repayment Success

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Page 23: State Update

Shared Services: Efficient. Compliant. Effective.

Federal verification can create negative impact on• Student enrollment

– Aid delayed is aid denied – defer/reduce enrollment, withdraw– Verification delays also slow down entire pipeline

• Customer service– Offices with telephone backlogs, closed for processing, long lines– Financial aid office seen as police rather than offering access

• Campus cash flow and budgets– Greater costs to fill seats– Lower tuition revenue– Burdens of emergency loans, etc.

• Compliance and liabilities– Verification is among the top items causing required repayment to USED

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Page 24: State Update

ISIR Verification Service Results

Experience from schools in our verification program• Student enrollment

– Verification done in less than one-third of national average time– Students with real issues can get through pipeline and get enrolled

• Customer service– Notable reduction in office visits and phone traffic– Aid administrators concentrate on those actually needing more help

• Campus cash flow and budgets– Report 50% more aid ready to disburse at beginning of term versus in

house– At NASFAA a large Northern Virginia community college reported having

packaged 2,500 more students by early July than before using this service• Compliance and liabilities

– Fully compliant system and insurance to cover liabilities if errors occur

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Page 25: State Update

2015-2016 ISIR Verification Processing

Time to sign up for next year

• An early start is most beneficial

• We expect to serve 25 – 30 colleges

• Expect 75,000 verifications or more

• We do have the ability to scale up as needed

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Page 26: State Update
Page 27: State Update

EX$EL update: Challenges for colleges in a Post FFELP World

• More students borrowing more; confusing repayment options

• Default rates rising

• Schools getting blame although not in control

• Negative press about price and borrowing

• Staff lacks time/resources to manage defaults effectively

• But must help students succeed

• Must maintain reputation for administrative capability

• Need a “default management plan” that really works

• Boost repayment success of all borrowers, not just to prevent some from defaulting

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Page 28: State Update

Currently Planning an EX$EL Enhancement

For Borrowers in older cohorts

Details Soon!

• You asked that we offer this service for older cohorts in addition to the most recent cohort

• We will do this very soon, with the focus on phone calls to bring them back to “on-time” status

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Page 29: State Update

Program Updates – Outreach and Training

FAFSA Day:• FAFSA submissions 3,280• Volunteers 1,622• Sites in all 100 counties

New Financial Aid Administrator Training:• December 3-5, 2013 40 participants• March 25-27, 2014 33 participants• October 28-30, 2014 43 participants

Total FAA Training participants > 850

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Page 30: State Update

Change over time … since my arrival in 1997

• SEAA Board Chairman Dick Roberts asked that I be entrepreneurial and assertive to do good things for NC

• Soon the Board gave me three major tasks1. Be sure our technology was second to none 2. Provide borrowers with lowest possible costs for loans3. Invest in outreach to those who would otherwise not be able to

attend college• Staff at SEAA and at CFI, with your support, accomplished all

three tasks and more• Period of rapid growth and change, some planned, some not;

mostly good (with notable exception of end of FFELP)• Let’s take a look at how we have changed …

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Page 31: State Update

Then and Now – SEAA Administered Grants(State and Private)

Item 6/30/1997 6/30/2014 Change High Point

Annual Number of Recipients

38,659 142,286 + 268% 209,7112009-2010

Annual Dollars $48,456,777 $272,900,787 + 463% $350,108,5752009-2010

Need Based Dollars

$19,645,799 $264,133,633 + 1,246% NA

Non Need Based Dollars

$28,812,978 $8,767,154 - 70% NA

Percent Need Based

41% 97%

Percent Non-Need Based

59% 3%

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Page 32: State Update

Then and Now - Forgivable Loans for Service

Item 6/30/1997 6/30/2014 Change

Annual Number of Recipients

2,432 2,783 + 14%

Annual Dollars $9,793,744 $20,637,162 + 111%

Portfolio $37,042,038 $107,015,803 + 189%

More than a dozen programs now consolidated as FELS – Forgivable Loans for Education Service.

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Page 33: State Update

New Initiatives/Programs since 1997

Item 6/30/2014 Totals Annual (2013-2014)

Alternative Loans (EXTRA; CCL)

$192,147,438 0

529 College Savings Accounts Dollars

128,208$1,549,087,849

9,455 (+ 8%)$323,080,528 (+26.4%)

College Foundation of North Carolina (CFNC)

Accounts 5,273,918 Applications 3,771,983Transcripts 1,460,675

Accounts 457,492Applications 462,574Transcripts 247,089 Daily Visitors 11,015Yearly Visitors 4,020,779

Total Programs Administered

27 53 (+96%)

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Page 34: State Update

Thank you

• 37 years ago I joined NCASFAA• This is the place where I learned financial aid• It is the place where I had colleagues who actually

understood what I was doing (unlike on campus)• I wish you every success in the years ahead• I am so pleased that Elizabeth McDuffie will be taking

my place in December!• I ask that you give her the same support you have

unfailingly given to me over all these years, and I know that you will.

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