For years, grieving families in New Jersey received a bill they never expected. Their child had died, sometimes suddenly, sometimes after illness — and the state came calling for the money their child had borrowed for college. In 2016 C.E., New Jersey announced it would stop that practice for good.
What changed
- Student loan collections: New Jersey’s Higher Education Student Assistance Authority (HESAA) had been pursuing repayment of state-issued student loans from the parents and estates of borrowers who died before paying off their debt — even when families had no legal obligation to repay.
- Grieving families: Investigations revealed that some families had been hounded for payments while still in mourning, with collection efforts continuing for years after a student’s death — in some cases causing severe financial and emotional distress.
- Policy reform: Following a ProPublica and New York Times investigation, New Jersey officials announced the state would discharge outstanding loan balances upon a borrower’s death, aligning its policy with federal student loan standards.
How this practice existed in the first place
Unlike federal student loans, which are discharged when a borrower dies, state-level loan programs operate under their own rules. New Jersey’s HESAA program — designed to help students who couldn’t access other funding — had structured some loans as consumer debt, which could survive the borrower’s death and attach to co-signers or estates.
In some cases, parents who had co-signed loans found themselves personally liable. Families reported receiving collection calls and legal threats during some of the most difficult periods of their lives. The loans were often the last ones available to students who had exhausted all other options, meaning the borrowers and their families tended to be among the most financially vulnerable.
Investigative reporting brought individual stories into public view. One case involved a mother whose son died by suicide; she continued receiving collection demands for his student loans for years. That story, and others like it, helped shift public and political attention toward the policy’s human consequences.
Why the reform matters
The change New Jersey made in 2016 C.E. was straightforward in policy terms: discharge the debt when the borrower dies. But the significance ran deeper than the mechanics.
It established that state loan programs should be held to at least the same basic standards of decency as federal ones. It acknowledged that a loan designed to expand opportunity should not become a financial trap for families after tragedy. And it demonstrated that investigative journalism — the slow, careful work of documenting how policy affects real people — can move institutions to act.
For consumer advocates and student loan reform groups, the New Jersey decision also created a reference point. If a state can change this policy, other states can too. The question of how student debt interacts with death, disability, and financial hardship became harder to ignore.
Lasting impact
The New Jersey reform joined a wider conversation already underway about the structural failures of student lending in the United States. Federal law had long provided death discharge protections for federal borrowers, but millions of students relied on private and state-level loans with no such protections — and relatively few people knew it until stories like this one made the gap visible.
The reform also put pressure on private lenders. The contrast between federal and private loan protections became a recurring feature of public debate about student debt, contributing to legislative and regulatory efforts to extend discharge protections more broadly.
New Jersey’s decision reflected something that consumer protection advocates had long argued: that loan programs aimed at helping people should be designed with the full arc of human life in mind — including its most difficult moments. Grief is not a repayment schedule.
Blindspots and limits
The 2016 C.E. change applied to New Jersey’s state loan program, not to private lenders operating in the state — meaning families with privately issued loans remained exposed to similar practices. Nationally, the patchwork of rules governing student loan discharge on death and disability continued to leave many borrowers and co-signers without clear protection, and the burden fell disproportionately on lower-income families who had fewer options to begin with. Reform in one state, however welcome, did not close the broader gap.
It is also worth noting that the policy change came after years of harm to real families — families who had no recourse during the period when the practice was legal and active. Policy reform can end an injustice; it cannot undo it.
Read more
For more on this story, see: ProPublica
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Alzheimer’s risk cut in half by drug in landmark prevention trial
- Global suicide rate has fallen by 40% since 1995
- The Good News for Humankind archive on public policy
About this article
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