QUOTE(moriah @ Jan 1 2006, 05:29 PM)

Hurh.
I must have *really* misread this:
"You may also be interested in participating in the loan rehabilitation program. After you have made 12 consecutive monthly payments that are both reasonable and affordable, we will agree to reinsure the loan. You will then be eligible to have the loan purchased by a lending institution. Once a loan is rehabilitated, it will be taken out of default, the credit bureau reports made by the servicing agency will be deleted, you will be able to repay the loan over a 9 year period, and you will again be eligible for additional Title IV student financial aid funds."
That's from
http://www.ed.gov/offices/OSFAP/DCS/rehabilitation.htmlI saw the "servicing agency" as the servicer of the loan, not the guarantor.
Oh well. If that really was the way it worked, I was going to be very, very unhappy.
Yup, it's just the guarantor. What can make it even worse is that in some cases (I don't know if this is the case with every guarantor, but it was with mine), the guarantor may only put one TL on your report, while your lender can have MANY and none of those are the ones that are necessarily changed. So, you could have 16 majorly negative TLs on your report and one slightly more positive TL (and even that only HAS to have the default notation removed) -- and because the default penalties and fees are on your account while you're paying during rehab, you can end up paying A LOT more than if you hadn't defaulted. I know that rehab sounds like a good deal (and it really is if you default), it's a lot better never to default in the first place. In a manual review, I would imagine that some lenders (the ones that know about SLs anyway, and that's not all of them by any means) know perfectly well what it means when your lender shows a whole bunch of lates and then you have a guarantor TL on your report, even if it doesn't say "default" anymore.
You may want to do a search here and see if anyone has had any luck with getting lates removed by the CRAs after getting a retroactive forebearance with SM. It can't hurt to try. SM is pretty notorious for not listening to goodwill requests, although, again, some have had luck with them -- it's pretty hit or miss, though. How bad were your lates? While that's obviously never a good thing to have lates on your reports, their effect drops after a couple of years, although how much depends on any other "baddies" on your report.
Like Lynn says, the retro forebearances are pretty worthless (and I fell for it, too). You're limited in how much forebearance time you have and if you're already late, it does NOTHING except sound like it's going to help. I really don't understand what they're for at all.

Hope this helps!! Good luck!!