Sunday, June 13, 2010

Lobbyists aid for-profit college student group - Boston.com

Lobbyists aid for-profit college student group - Boston.com

Lobbyists aid for-profit college student group

FILE - In this Dec. 22,2009 file photo Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee Chairman Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa gestures during a news conference on Capitol Hill, in Washington. Harkin last week announced plans to hold hearings starting June 24 to examine federal education spending at for-profit colleges.FILE - In this Dec. 22,2009 file photo Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee Chairman Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa gestures during a news conference on Capitol Hill, in Washington. Harkin last week announced plans to hold hearings starting June 24 to examine federal education spending at for-profit colleges. (AP Photo/Haraz N. Ghanbari, File)
By Eric Gorski
AP Education Writer / June 13, 2010
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A few months ago, Dawn Connor was just another college student, attending night courses to become a veterinary technician and practicing her trade by spaying and neutering dogs and cats from a local shelter.
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These days, the 33-year-old from Eau Claire, Wis., is shaking hands on Capitol Hill and speaking at news conferences in Las Vegas, the new public face of the satisfied for-profit college student.
Standing closely behind her is the Career College Association, a lobbying group for for-profit schools that provided the organizational muscle to launch the grassroots-sounding Students for Academic Choice at a time when for-profit colleges are under fire.
The Career College Association helped the students establish a website, draft bylaws and set up an online election that resulted in Connor being elected the group's president -- all at a time when for-profit colleges are intensifying lobbying efforts against tougher federal regulations expected to be proposed in the coming days.
"I'm skeptical of the organic nature of the group given that it is completely towing the association's line," said Christine Lindstrom, higher education program director at the U.S. Public Interest Research Group.
Harris Miller, president of the Career College Association, said his group extended a helping hand to busy nontraditional students who otherwise wouldn't have a voice -- and says the new group stands on its own.
"This will be, I think, as this organization grows and gets legs, an effective antidote to those people who hang on a few disgruntled students or former