The Government Was Supposed To Simplify the FAFSA. Instead, They Created a Glitchy Fiasco.
Instead of making the FAFSA form easier for families, persistent technical issues have imperiled vital financial aid information for millions of students.

This year, the Department of Education unveiled an updated, streamlined version of the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) form. The financial aid application is used by millions of American students and is required for anyone seeking federal student loans or grants, as well as institutional financial aid at most colleges.
Good idea, right? Well, not exactly.
Instead of making the FAFSA easier to complete, the new form has been riddled with technical glitches and delays—imperiling access to accurate financial aid information for millions of students.
The origin of this year's blunder stems from the 2020 Consolidated Appropriations Act, which contains a provision requiring the Department of Education to create a simplified FAFSA form. The new form, launched earlier this year, is in fact significantly shorter than previous versions of the application. The new form cuts the number of questions by more than half, mostly by relying on financial information imported directly from the IRS.
However, there were signs of trouble even before the new form launched. Typically, the FAFSA goes live in October, with the deadline for completion in late June. However, this year's form wasn't released until December 31st—and just as a "soft launch," meaning the application was only periodically available. Yet the deadline to complete the FAFSA hasn't been extended.
From the earliest hours of the FAFSA's availability, persistent technical glitches have made completing the application agonizing for many students and their families. The FAFSA's own website details dozens of errors in the form that have made completing it nearly impossible for some students.
As a result of these issues, 40 percent fewer students had completed the FAFSA by March compared to the same period last year, with total submissions—including incomplete forms with errors—down 27 percent. At this rate, millions of students will miss out on federal grants or loans, and a significant portion of students won't have the complete information they need to decide where to attend college.
Most university financial aid departments rely on FAFSA data to determine how much financial aid to offer students. But persistent issues with the FAFSA have meant that many schools aren't receiving complete or accurate information about applicants—and even that information has been subject to lengthy delays.
Frustratingly, the Department of Education has now told colleges that they can use inaccurate or incomplete information from student FAFSA forms, as long as the end result is that students will receive more aid than they otherwise would.
"You're doing a disservice to students if you give them the illusion that they're eligible for more aid in one year, when really, they're not," Emmanual Guillory, the senior director of government relations at the American Council on Education (ACE) told The Hill. "It just puts our professionals or financial administrators on the ground in a very compromising position."
While making the FAFSA simpler to complete sounds like a great idea on paper, the Department of Education's latest bungle provides a perfect example of all that can go wrong when the government fumbles a seemingly simple task. There isn't any way to hold the Department of Education accountable for the chaos and confusion this year's FAFSA has caused for millions of American families—so there's not much incentive to prevent such a disaster from happening again in the future.
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It seems that there are a few resistance programmers in the federal government - - - - -
What’s the point? Turns out you can go to colleges for free as long as SleepyJoe needs votes.
my thoughts exactly
Of all the things Reason could cover, why have there been multiple articles on this? Reason should just say “Government loans bad, private loans good” or “You get what you pay for” and be done with it. It’s like they are just another grievance outlet or something.
FREE MINDS AND FREE MARKETS
It is right there in the masthead…
The article should just be to end FAFSA instead of crying how hard it is to get taxpayer money.
Exactly. Waaaah, the government is making it too hard to get everyone else to pay for my gender fluidentity affirmation studies degree! Waaaaaah!
Criminy.
Fire KMW.
Get out of DC.
Liberty first.
Why does Emma Camp write for an ostensibly Libertarian mag?
They probably gave the contract to the same company that designed the Obamacare websites.
It's kinda funny how the Reason writers fail to note the dejavualloveragain connection to the first day of and following months of Obamacare.
Why should we care about this?
Stealing as much money from taxpayers is apparently Reason's definition of libertarian. Well, that and sexualizing children when you're not pushing to lop off their genetalia.
Instead of making the FAFSA easier to complete, the new form has been riddled with technical glitches and delays—imperiling access to accurate financial aid information for millions of students.
Mission Accomplished!
Unfortunately, they'll probably still get gov loans and this mess probably cost taxpayers billions for the upgrade.
glitches and delays are cocaine to the G.
Thank goodness I went to college during the analog days where you filled out a paper form, turned it in to the aid office, and then waited a few weeks to find out how much debt you were eligible to take on. At least back then the worker bees were competent.
The department of education shouldn’t even exist.
"imperiled vital financial aid information for millions of students"
Government makes taking other people's money too hard!
#reasonlibertarians
Obviously, it isn't going to happen, nor is this chick self aware enough to realize how much of a clown she's making herself, but Camp needs to get herself a different hobby horse.
OK, we get it, the federal government is shit at software, and generally wasteful on projects.
We got it the first however many times this shit came up. We don't need to see it thrice weekly, we get it. Camp is about to go full Harrigan here, we'll start getting stories about how we should fix FAFSA so we can import Palestinian refugees or some shit when she runs out of ways to repeat the same story ad nauseam.
Sixth article by Ms. Camp on the failed FAFSA roll out and still no mention education and/or its funding is nowhere in the federal government's list of enumerated powers found in Article I Section 8 of The Constitution of The United States of America.
"You're doing a disservice to students if you give them the illusion that they're eligible for more aid in one year, when really, they're not," Emmanual Guillory, the senior director of government relations at the American Council on Education (ACE) told The Hill.
Better quote: "You're doing a disservice to the taxpayer, when the federal government is $34.6T in debt and spending money on an area that is not a power of the federal government", The Angry Hippopotamus told Emmanual Guillory.
The Government Was Supposed To Simplify the FAFSA.
First, get rid of the FAFSA. Then get rid of government. Simple.
There isn't any way to hold the Department of Education accountable for the chaos and confusion
There's a very easy way to hold them accountable. Abolish the Department of Education.
Fafsa is a way for schools and their actuaries to bilk parents and the government out of every cent possible.
My son got into schools ranging from 35k to 85k a year and miraculously, everyone of their aid packages determined that me and the wife (and the boy, to a lesser extent) would be ponying up exactly 25k out of pocket per year. Their aid packages also all included taking the maximum allowable federal loans. Funny that...
The system is a fucking scam.
Demonstrating once again everything the feds touch turns to shit very quickly.