Trevor Williams | Digitalvision | Getty Images
By librarian Katy Punch’s reckoning, she became eligible for Public Service Loan Forgiveness in November 2024. At that point, she submitted an application to the U.S. Department of Education for a program that would allow her to make her last qualifying payments and wipe out her roughly $30,000 balance.
More than 14 months later, she is still waiting for an answer.
“I am trying to save more just in case I don’t receive the forgiveness I have earned and should have received in November 2024,” Punch, 38, said.
Under the Trump administration, more than 83,000 federal student loan borrowers — including Punch — are waiting in a backlog of PSLF Buyback applications, court records show.
PSLF,…

