Jamaica partners with US to track delinquent student loan borrowers

1 week ago 4

Jamaicans with outstanding student loans who migrate to the United States could encounter obstacles when updating or renewing their immigration status, due to a recent partnership between the Jamaican and U.S. governments aimed at tracking down borrowers with unpaid debts.

Cheryl Surjue, Manager of the Loan Servicing Department at Jamaica’s Students’ Loan Bureau (SLB), told JIS News that the new arrangement is designed to help identify Jamaican nationals in the U.S. who have outstanding student loan balances. Surjue explained that this partnership addresses cases where professionals migrate and default on their loans, leaving the SLB with no way to track them. “When they leave, we are not able to fully track their whereabouts, [and] those loans tend to go bad,” she said.

As part of this collaboration, U.S. immigration authorities will check with the SLB to verify whether Jamaicans applying for visa renewals have any outstanding student loans. “Persons who may have migrated on the J1 visa and want to renew their status with the U.S., before they can actually do that, there’s an arrangement where the U.S. government needs to find out from us (Jamaica) if this person is indebted to the Government,” Surjue added.

According to Surjue, updating one’s U.S. immigration status may require fully settling any outstanding loan, not just bringing payments up to date. “It is at this point that you’ll find most of these beneficiaries will actually start servicing their loans, because we did not know and they didn’t communicate with us that they migrated,” she explained.

She noted that this cross-border arrangement has already helped the SLB recover overdue loan payments but cautioned borrowers to act responsibly by notifying the SLB of their migration plans and making arrangements to repay their loans before they become delinquent.

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“Before you get to that point, we want persons to be responsible borrowers. This is why we’ve actually launched our Financial Literacy Programme, to know how we can assist and how the beneficiaries may go about repaying their loan and not wait until it gets to that point of the loan being bad or we have to solicit debt collectors to try and locate you,” Surjue emphasized.

Through this program and the U.S. partnership, the SLB aims to encourage Jamaican borrowers abroad to honor their debt obligations, ensuring that they are not caught off guard when renewing their immigration status.

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