HR 1635 · 115th Congress · Education

Empowering Students Through Enhanced Financial Counseling Act

Introduced 2017-03-20· Sponsored by Rep. Guthrie, Brett [R-KY-2]· House

Bill Progress

1
Introduced
Committee
House Vote
4
Senate
5
Enacted
Latest: Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions.(2018-09-06)

Recorded Votes

PassedHouse · 2018-09-05
Roll #385
Yea 406Nay 4
Democrats
184 Yea·0 Nay
Republicans
222 Yea·4 Nay
PassedHouse · 2018-09-05
Roll #385
Yea 406Nay 4
Democrats
184 Yea·0 Nay
Republicans
222 Yea·4 Nay
FailedHouse · 2018-09-05
Roll #384
Yea 187Nay 224
Democrats
185 Yea·0 Nay
Republicans
2 Yea·224 Nay

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Plain Language Summary

[AI summary unavailable — showing source text] Empowering Students Through Enhanced Financial Counseling Act This bill amends title IV (Student Assistance) of the Higher Education Act of 1965 to modify loan counseling requirements for an institution of higher education (IHE) that participates in federal student aid programs. Currently, an IHE must provide entrance counseling to a student who is a first-time federal student loan borrower. This bill replaces required entrance counseling with required annual counseling. Also, it expands the required recipients of such annual counseling to include, in addition to student borrowers, Federal Pell Grant recipients and parent PLUS Loan borrowers. Each annual counseling recipient must receive comprehensive information on the terms, conditions, and responsibilities with respect to a grant or loan and general information on a typical student budget, the right to request an annual credit report, average income and employment data, and financial management resources. Additionally, the bill revises, expands, or establishes specific annual counseling information requirements for student borrowers, Pell Grant recipients, or parent PLUS Loan borrowers. The bill revises and expands exit counseli…

Summarized by Claude AI · Non-partisan · For informational purposes only

Cosponsors (20)

5 Democrats15 Republicans