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The FAFSA Form is Changing. Education Groups Want a Release Date

U.S. Dept. of Ed announced a December rollout for FAFSA, but no exact date.

This is a photo of a woman filling out paperwork with a laptop.

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Virginia students and schools are still waiting for the federal government to announce the release date for the new Free Application for Federal Student Aid, or FAFSA, a form that students must fill out to determine whether they can get federal financial aid for post-high school education.

The U.S. Department of Education on March 21 it will roll out the form in December, two months later than its usual Oct. 1 release.

Virginia universities, colleges and educational organizations said the delay and uncertainty about the exact launch date could delay students鈥 college applications and make it difficult for institutions to determine how much aid they need to offer.

Over the past three years, the federal government has been redesigning the FAFSA to make it less complex and allow more students to access financial aid.

According to the nonprofit Education Northwest, which has studied , students who might be eligible for aid have frequently not completed the form due to misconceptions that their parents made too much income or a lack of awareness and information about how financial aid works.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Congress passed the to streamline the financial aid process for students and families.

鈥淭he redesigned FAFSA form is the most ambitious and significant redesign of the federal student aid application and delivery in decades, and will significantly simplify how students, parents, and other educational stakeholders use the FAFSA form starting this year,鈥 the U.S. Department of Education said in .

Among the planned changes, the form will have fewer questions, a simplified process and revised eligibility formulas. In particular, the 鈥渆stimated family contribution鈥 factor, which estimated how much money a family might be able to pay, will be replaced by the new 鈥渟tudent aid index,鈥 which focuses on how much financial help a student might qualify for.

The new form will also provide expanded access to federal Pell Grants, which are awarded to undergraduate students in 鈥渆xceptional financial need,鈥 by linking eligibility to family size and the federal poverty level.

Research conducted by the Brookings Institution, a think tank that conducts policy research, the changes could have both positive and negative impacts, both making college more affordable for lower-income students and eliminating the discount students receive when they have siblings enrolled in college.

The institution provides for applicants to understand how the new form may impact their their eligibility.

Like their counterparts nationally, Virginia schools and education organizations are worried the delays will put scheduling pressures on students, counselors and college administrators.

On Oct. 13, several national education organizations that represent administrators from such states as Virginia, including the American Council on Education and Community Colleges, sent a letter to U.S. Education Secretary Miguel Cardona urging the federal government to announce the new FAFSA launch date.

鈥淲e understand that the Better FAFSA transition is complex, and that many security and other checks must take place before it can go live. We are not requesting that the form be released on an accelerated timeline that compromises any of the work that has to take place,鈥 the groups wrote. 鈥淏ut with less than three months before January 1, the latest date by which the FAFSA can be released under statute, the continued lack of a public release date risks 鈥 our members鈥 ability to do all they can to support a smooth rollout.鈥

In Virginia, several agencies also spoke positively about the FAFSA changes but worried about delays to the launch date.

鈥淲e know that people who attend Virginia鈥檚 Community Colleges will appreciate a more streamlined FAFSA experience,鈥 said Laurie Owens, financial aid director for Virginia鈥檚 Community Colleges, in a statement. 鈥淲e are eager to see the improved new FAFSA as soon as possible.鈥

Some Virginia schools, such as and have already made deadline adjustments for students to file financial aid requests.

The State Council of Higher Education for Virginia, the coordinating body for the state鈥檚 colleges and universities, said the delay could especially impact first-generation and low-income students.

鈥淔irst-time applicants will not have the usual level of support as they begin what to them is a foreign process,鈥 said SCHEV spokesman Bob Spieldenner in a statement. Returning students, he noted, will also have the added burden of 鈥渦nlearning鈥 an old process.

Others impacted by the delay also include access providers, which help students navigate the application process and must train staff in the new system, and financial aid offices charged with processing applications and creating aid packages.

Spieldenner advised students and parents to begin creating separate federal student aid accounts, as 鈥渉aving this ready in advance can smooth the actual FAFSA filing process.鈥

The U.S. Department of Education did not immediately respond to questions about the delay.

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