FAFSA delays stress Bay Area students as college deadline nears

Alexis Catalan, a high school senior in San Jose, was one of the lucky ones. She submitted her Free Application for Federal Student Aid a few weeks after the application launched in December and only experienced a handful of glitches with the online form.

Catalan applied to 16 schools, and her preferred option is the University of San Francisco to pursue a degree in medicine. But three months later, she’s still waiting to find out how much financial aid she’ll receive. And as the college decision deadline rapidly approaches, Catalan might have to decide which school she’ll attend in the fall, before she’ll truly know if she can afford it.

Alexis Catalan, 17, left, and Lilia Rodriguez Vargas, 17, right, talk about their experience applying for FAFSA, Federal Association of Financial Services, at Lincoln High School in San Jose, Calif., on Thursday, April 18, 2024. (Shae Hammond/Bay Area News Group) 

“Even though (schools) have received my FAFSA, they’re not able to tell me much about what my financial aid will look like,” said Catalan, who is graduating from Abraham Lincoln High School. “It’s difficult to try and figure out how I would be able to go to the university based off the unknowns from the FAFSA. … Financial aid is a big question mark for me.”

Catalan is one of thousands of students in the Bay Area still waiting to receive financial aid packages thanks to this year’s botched revamp of the federal financial aid process. The number of completed applications has dropped by 36% across the country, compared to last year, not long before schools’ enrollment deadlines.

When the Department of Education released an overhaul of the federal aid application for the first time in more than 40 years, the hope was that it would make it easier for students to apply and qualify for college financial aid.

What followed was a bureaucratic nightmare. Colleges and universities didn’t begin receiving students’ FAFSA information from the Department of Education until late March. And additional errors in calculations meant hundreds of thousands of already-submitted forms would need to be reprocessed.

Since January, more than 30 issues have been reported with the new application. And less than a month before students are expected to declare which schools they plan on attending, more than a dozen problems remain. What’s more, many students have still not been able to submit their applications.

Bellarmine College Preparatory senior Joshua Hernandez-Alvarado at his school on Friday, April, 26, 2024, in San Jose, Calif. While the FAFSA delay continues, he is still waiting for financial aid offers from five other universities. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group)
Bellarmine College Preparatory senior Joshua Hernandez-Alvarado at his school on Friday, April, 26, 2024, in San Jose, Calif. While the FAFSA delay continues, he is still waiting for financial aid offers from five other universities. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group) 

Joshua Hernandez-Alvarado, a senior at Bellarmine College Preparatory in San Jose, opened his FAFSA application in early January with the expectation it would take him a little over an hour to complete.

But when it came time to wrap up his application and choose which schools to send his financial aid information to, he hit an error. A glitch in the system had submitted his FAFSA before he had completed it.

Panicked about how the delay would impact his financial aid packages from potential schools, Hernandez-Alvarado called the FAFSA helpline only to be left on hold for hours at a time. He said when he was finally able to speak with a representative, they told him they were working to fix the glitch and he would be able to edit his application “soon.”

“It just almost felt like being ghosted,” Hernandez-Alvarado said. “There was a lot of mystery in what would happen next week. Would we ever be able to edit it? Would we need to do a different application? So for a long, long period of time, students — including myself — were wondering what was going to happen next.”

Bellarmine College Preparatory senior Joshua Hernandez-Alvarado holds letters of acceptance that he received without full financial aid offers due to the delay in FAFSA processing on Friday, April 26, 2024. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group)
Bellarmine College Preparatory senior Joshua Hernandez-Alvarado holds letters of acceptance that he received without full financial aid offers due to the delay in FAFSA processing on Friday, April 26, 2024. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group) 

The high volume of technical errors and weeks-long delay meant Hernandez-Alvarado wasn’t able to correct and submit his application until last week.

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