The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s acting director Mick Mulvaney plans to consolidate its student support unit with another department in the bureau and that is angering consumer advocacy groups.

Mulvaney sent his staff a memo on staffing updates and some changes to the structure. One excerpt read, “The office of ‘Students and Young Consumers’ … will be folded into the office of ‘Financial Education.’”

“This is a very modest organizational chart change to keep the bureau in line with the statute, but the office is still operating within the same division,” said the CFPB in a statement. “The bottom line is there is no functional or even practical change.”

Consumer groups like the Consumer Federation of America (CFA) say Mulvaney aims to dismantle a unit that returned more than $750 million to student loan borrowers victimized by predatory practices.

“This action actively promotes greater profits for a handful of debt collection businesses at the expense of mistakes, neglect, and confusion for millions of student loan borrowers,” said the CFA’s financial services director Christopher Peterson in a statement.

The CFPB was created in 2010 by the Obama administration to defend consumers from predatory practices. It is funded through the Federal Reserve and Bloomberg reported Mulvaney stating that he is legally barred from shutting the CFPB down.

Bloomberg also reported that Mulvaney, who moonlights as a budget director for the Trump administration, has tried to crack down on CFPB’s spending since his appointment as the bureau’s acting director in November 2017. Mulvaney requested nothing from the Fed in January because he reportedly said the leftover funds from his predecessor, Democrat Richard Cordray, could cover costs, forcing the bureau to cut its expenses.

“Shuttering the CFPB’s student lending office is an appalling step in a longer march toward the elimination of meaningful American consumer protection law,” said Peterson.

The CFPB has sued companies like student-loan servicing company Navient after it allegedly cheated borrowers out of repayment rights. The bureau has also gone after educational institutions like ITT Tech, Corinthian Colleges and Bridgepoint Education. It’s also taken on banks like Wells Fargo and Citibank over issues with their student loan practices.