- AOA advocacy efforts return more than $7.5 million to members
- Optometry gets results and more work to do in Washington, DC
- Bolstered by courts, AOA demands VBM cease anti-doctor policies
- FTC issues new warnings on Contact Lens, Eyeglass rules
- Understanding the impact of Total Vision vs. VSP settlement for optometrists
- AOA priorities advance as U.S. House approves sweeping legislation
- U.S. senators introduce VBM reform bill amid growing plan scrutiny
- DOC Access Act reintroduced amid growing Capitol Hill vigor for VBM reform
- U.S. House, Senate approve VA OD physician-level recognition legislation
- Citing array of concerns and complaints, Congress ramps up scrutiny of vision benefit manager industry
- AOA-PAC Election Report: Optometry Has Outsized Impact on 2024 Elections
- How the AOA and affiliates are fighting for reimbursement and coverage fairness
- Are you ready for the Eyeglass Rule of 2024?
- NIH, NEI consolidation plan ‘jeopardizes’ vision research, draws AOA opposition
- Bill seeks better fix to Medicare Physician Fee Schedule cuts
- How Chevron ruling could impact optometry
- Takeaways from CMS’ proposed 2025 Physician Fee Schedule
- FTC issues 10-year Eyeglass Rule update as AOA renews demand for crackdown on medical device scammers
- AOA joins other groups seeking Supreme Court reversal of decision favoring ERISA authority
- AOA sees positives in federal children’s eye health legislation
- CMS heeds AOA recommendations on Medicare supplemental benefits
- 'All the advocacy firepower’ called up at AOA on Capitol Hill
- What optometry’s advocates are championing at AOA on Capitol Hill
- Capitol Hill inquiries into plan abuses are expanding
- Vision plan abuses top of mind? Register for AOA’s town hall on reimbursement, coverage fairness advocacy
- 15 advocacy highlights of 2023
- CMS takes aim at Medicare Advantage plans misrepresenting vision benefits
- Fighting for veterans, fighting for optometry
- AOA: No letting up on Eyeglass Rule advocacy
- AOA and AFOS: ‘Cut through the noise’ and empower licensed doctors of optometry to provide greater access to care to veterans
- A force to reckon with
- U.S. House investigative committee calls for scrutiny of vision plans
- Retail optical lobbying group name change allays AOA, affiliate concerns
- Doctors of optometry challenge reasoning behind proposed Eyeglass Rule changes at FTC workshop
- Contact lens safety legislation proposes banning robocalls
- Help voice optometry’s priorities at AOA on Capitol Hill: Here’s how
- Part of the solution: Optometry groups join AOA in submitting actionable solutions for workforce shortages
- Hatch Act permits issue advocacy by doctors of optometry
- AOA makes robust rebuttal to FTC over proposed changes to Eyeglass Rule
- DOC Access Act introduced amid growing patient calls for Congress to act
- bill seeks advancement for VA doctors of optometry
- Are you adhering to the Contact Lens Rule
- AOA decries misleading Medicare Advantage advertising
- Gaining access A win for veterans and doctors of optometry
- Congress heeds AOA’s call to stop Medicare pay cuts, but lawmakers’ plan falls short
- Proactive advocacy gets early eyeglass rule gains, notice of potential new burden
- AOA PAC plays outsized role in 2022 midterm elections
- Veterans notch win as VA rescinds restrictive language governing community ODs
- Supporting Medicare Providers Act
- Medicare Pay Cuts 2022
- 2022 Capitol Hill Recap
- AOA and South Carolina doctors expose and defeat retail lobby group’s influence scheme
- Medicare Pay Cuts March 2022
- Hold Medicare Advantage plans accountable
- Hubble Contacts slapped with 3.5 million penalties restrictions and supervision
- Medicare pay cuts, once delayed, looming without Congressional action
- Bipartisan AOA-backed bill targeting abusive discount plans gets boost from policy-expert report delivered to Congress
- Advocacy in optometry
- U.S. House, consumer groups mull federal action against DTC contact lens sales schemes
- Medicare Cuts Averted
- Medicare vision efforts fizzle 10 percent pay cuts still loom
- Optometry’s advocates going FAR beyond the call
- Lawmakers host AOA, patient and consumer advocates for VBM abuse briefing as Congress expands probes
- AOA-AFOS make case to Department of Veterans Affairs for access-boosting national practice standards
- Medicare expansion: The long road to here and now
- House pens Medicare vision benefits
- Congress sets deadline to ink Medicare vision expansion language
- White House extends student loan relief, AOA continues push for NHSC inclusion
- 4 questions about Medicare vision expansion answered
- AOA, AFOS work to ensure optometry well represented in formation of national practice standards by Veterans Affairs
- Medicare expansion
- Congress urges administration to fully implement provider nondiscrimination law
- Department of Veterans Affairs Optometry Service and doctors of optometry
- Medicare Vision Expansion
- AOA-backed DOC Access Act reintroduced to combat anti-competitive vision plans
- 2021 Virtual AOA on Capitol Hill Wrap-up
- Contact lens prescription verification failings targeted by new legislation
- Advocacy Bootcamp
- Medicare Telehealth Expansion
- 2 percent Medicare sequester delayed
- Doctors of optometry obtain 2.1 billion in federal relief
- CL rule takes effect
- Medicare Sequester
- Expanded COVID-19 vaccinator workforce includes doctors and students of optometry
- NBEO decisions provoke AOA-AOSA response
- Congress’ COVID-19 relief package HHS funds-ERC extension
- Why staff involvement is critical
- 2021 Virtual AOA on Capitol Hill
- Ohio activates eligible doctors for COVID-19 vaccine administration AOA focuses new relief efforts
- Congress President Biden asked to activate optometry for COVID-19 vaccination response
- AOA- AOSA-backed federal student loan relief extended through September
- AOA takes on anti-optometry lobbying group’s deceptions
- Contact Lens Rule implications key tax and Medicare pay fixes among AOA wins
- AOA and AOSA make appeal to extend suspension of student loan payments
- AOA-backed DOC Access Act gains U.S. Senate companion
- Contact Lens Rule bill gains backing
- Contact Lens Rule changes take effect Oct 16
- 1-800 Contacts notifies patients not to wear AquaSoft lenses due to lens defect
- Contact Lens Rule Modernization Act introduced in the U.S. Senate
- Virtual AOA on Capitol Hill Recap
- Championing paraoptometrics
- Virtual AOA on Capitol Hill 2020
- AOA doctors warn FTC of potential adverse impact of new amendment
- Concerns as optometry students prepare for boards
- Elevating optometry through media advocacy
- AOA finds allies in fight against new FTC contact lens prescription paperwork mandate
- Proposed payment model would have put burden solely on shoulders of doctors of optometry
- Optometry help divert emergent eye cases from ER COVID-19
- Medicaid CHIP relief funds
- AOA address increased cost personal protective equipment
- AOA and state affiliates put optometry's concerns front and center in Washington
- AOA petitions NAVCP member plans temporary relief during emergency
- Pandemic relief bill will help optometry practices nationwide
- AOA mobilizes for doctors in national response to pandemic
- AOA assembles industry leaders set future guidance telehealth services
- AOA secures legislative win provides direction Medicare telehealth services
- AOA calls for FDA investigation into retailers remote vision test
- How and why you should get involved in advocacy
- AOA ensures Medicare legislation recognizes eye exams
- reauthorization of higher education act
- Legislation targets contact lens prescription verification shortcomings
- DOC Access Act fights harmful vision plan abuses
- AOA on Capitol Hill 2019
- The big picture
- AOAs advocacy at top of their game
- Tusculum denied optometry program by institutional accreditor
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- Tusculum media campaign prompts AOA insistence on accreditation standards
- FTC offers revised Contact Lens Rule
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- FTC contact lens paperwork proposal update
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- Californias congressional delegation joins bi-partisan call to stop FTC paperwork proposal
- Every doc has their day—on the Hill
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- FTC proposes Contact Lens Rule changes
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- Bill seeks 90 day EHR reporting period
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- FTC issues warning letters related to Contact Lens Rule
- Recess over Congress considers AOA backed bills
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Federal student loan forgiveness latest: Application now available
October 19, 2022
As the Department of Education releases an official application for loan forgiveness, optometry’s advocates continue to emphasize that eligibility for debt relief programs should not exclude optometry and greater options should be available for debt forgiveness programs.
Tag(s): Advocacy, Federal Advocacy
While an appeals court stalled plans to cancel federal student loan debt just days after the government rolled out its application process, doctors of optometry should still be aware that a years-long loan payment freeze is lifting in several weeks.
On Oct. 21, the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals issued an administrative stay to temporarily block a process for federal student loan debt cancellation. Per the Associated Press, the stay orders the government not to move forward with its debt elimination program while the court considers a motion from six states. Only days earlier, President Joe Biden had announced an official application process for borrowers to apply for debt cancellation.
Prior to the court stay, eligible borrowers seeking federal loan debt cancellation could follow these steps:
- Visit the studentaid.gov site for the debt relief application.
- Input borrower information, including name, social security number, birthdate, phone number and email address. (The application does not require documentation of income or student loans).
- Review the eligibility rules and affirm your eligibility status.
Then, the U.S. Department of Education (DOE) will use existing records to ensure applicants’ eligibility, and some may be required to provide additional documentation to prove income levels. Once the form is submitted, the process is expected to take four to six weeks, reportedly, and applicants’ loan servicers will notify when fully processed.
Borrowers seeking relief were encouraged to apply before mid-November as the Biden administration plans to lift the federal student loan payment moratorium and restart payments on Jan. 1, 2023.
On Aug. 24, the administration announced a decision to forgive $10,000 in federal student loan debt for individuals with incomes below $125,000 a year, or households earning less than $250,000, as well as an additional $10,000 in forgiveness for federal Pell grantees. The cancellation applied to loans held by the DOE and used to attend undergraduate or graduate school. Current students are eligible if their loans were issued before July 1, 2022, and dependent students are eligible based on their parents’ income as opposed to their own.
Prepare now: Federal student loan payments resume Jan. 1
The administration’s August announcement also confirmed that the federal student loan payment freeze, initially brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, would be extended one final time with interest rates remaining at 0% until repayments start. The freeze was set to expire Aug. 31.
For the first time in two years, many doctors of optometry will be required to restart their student loan payments on Jan. 1, 2023. To help doctors navigate the federal student loan payment restart, as well as learn more about the Biden administration’s student loan action, AOAExcel and its student loan refinancing partner, Laurel Road, will host an interactive workshop to prepare doctors for the Jan. 1, 2023, restart. Workshop topics will include:
- How doctors of optometry can position their student loans during interest rate uncertainty.
- What the federal student loan payment and interest pause means for doctors of optometry.
- An explanation of the new federal student loan forgiveness as it pertains to doctors of optometry.
- What is student loan refinancing—are you eligible? Can you save by refinancing, and will it affect your credit score?
Register now for the AOA-member exclusive, “Navigating the Student Loan Payment Re-Start with Confidence” workshop, 8 p.m. ET, Wednesday, Nov. 2. Read more about what you need to know about student loan debt cancellation.
But larger questions still remain over how legal challenges might mire the forgiveness process or even reverse the decision altogether. While the debt relief plan is seen as long-awaited fulfillment of a campaign promise, federal student loans had been the center of attention dating back to the height of the COVID-19 pandemic—and even before—when the AOA and AOSA repeatedly advocated for a federal student loan payment moratorium under both the Biden and Trump administrations, as well as years of advocacy to reinstate optometry in the National Health Service Corps (NHSC).
Leveraging NHSC in debt relief, increased eye care access
Given how the average optometry student’s loan debt at graduation is close to $200,000, the AOA and American Optometric Student Association (AOSA) know debt relief is a concern for the profession. In collaboration with the National Optometric Association (NOA), the National Optometric Student Association (NOSA), and the Association of Schools and Colleges of Optometry (ASCO), the AOA and AOSA continue to advocate for a win-win solution that not only addresses optometry students’ loan debt but also delivers critical eye care to underserved communities while taking a step toward bolstering access and equity.
In a May 27 letter to U.S. Ambassador Susan Rice, assistant to President Biden for domestic policy, advocates once again called for the Department of Education to coordinate with the Health Resources & Services Administration (HRSA) to remedy optometry’s exclusion from the NHSC loan forgiveness program. As HRSA’s flagship health workforce program, NHSC offers doctors and clinicians the opportunity to work and have student loans repaid in exchange for providing two years of service in urban, rural or tribal communities with limited access to care.
“The NHSC is a powerful recruiting tool for health centers and have been shown to be successful in both recruiting and retaining providers to care for patients in underserved communities,” reads the letter, signed by the presidents of the AOA, AOSA, NOA, NOSA and ASCO. “If we are to build a more inclusive and accessible health care system that employs individuals with a wide range of socioeconomic and racial backgrounds, action must be taken to reduce student debt and increase loan forgiveness opportunities through the NHSC.”
Currently, optometry is not eligible for the NHSC loan forgiveness program despite originally being included at its inception. This omission is glaring, especially considering that optometry delivers up to 80% of all primary vision and eye health care through Medicaid, as well as medical eye care to over 6 million Medicare beneficiaries annually.
The letter continues by advocating against the exclusion of broad categories of professionals in various debt relief programs and proposals, as other factors, such as current income, are better indicators of those who would benefit most.
Reinstating optometry into the NHSC program has been among advocates’ top priorities for years with calls to initiate an immediate rulemaking process, clarifying 42 U.S. Code § 2541—1 to state the profession’s eligibility. In 2021, the same group of optometric stakeholders wrote to the Department of Education, reiterating policy briefs and statements from the National Rural Health Association (NRHA) and American Public Health Association that demonstrate optometry’s utility in rural and underserved communities. That year, the group also wrote to Ambassador Rice, joining alongside the NRHA and Association of Clinicians for the Underserved to encourage optometry’s inclusion in the NHSC.
But even prior to recent years, the NHSC issue has been one that doctors and optometry students champion to their members of Congress during AOA on Capitol Hill, the AOA’s largest annual federal advocacy event. The fly-in sees hundreds of advocates directly appeal for Congressional intervention to reinstate optometry.
Support the AOA’s advocacy
Help the AOA continue its advocacy on behalf of optometry students and new graduates by getting involved and helping advocates build momentum. Here’s how:
- Visit the AOA Action Center. Learn more about the NHSC issue and other federal priorities for optometry. Or text “NHSC” to 855.465.5124 to encourage optometry’s reinstatement in the NHSC.
- Become an AOA-PAC investor. This is one of the easiest, most effective ways to help make an impact in the AOA’s ongoing advocacy efforts. Use your eight-digit, AOA membership ID number and log in from your computer to make an immediate investment* to support the profession.
*Contributions to the AOA-PAC are for political purposes and are not tax deductible. Only AOA members and other eligible persons may contribute. Contributions will be screened and those from non-eligible persons will be returned. You have the right to refuse to contribute without fear of reprisal. You will not be advantaged or disadvantaged because of how much you give or because you do not give.