Thursday, February 18, 2016

WTF Education Department Letting For-Profit Schools Off Because They’re ‘Too Big To Fail,’ Report Says

Education Department Letting For-Profit Schools Off Because They’re ‘Too Big To Fail,’ Report Says:

Education Department Letting For-Profit Schools Off Because They’re ‘Too Big To Fail,’ Report Says

Banks aren't the only "too big to fail" companies that put taxpayers at risk.



 Some giant for-profit colleges are ripping off students and squandering billions of taxpayer dollars, and the U.S. Department of Education is doing little about it because it considers them "too big to fail," a new report alleges.

Chris Hicks, a consultant to unions on student debt issues, argues that the Education Department's refusal to use its vast authority to penalize schools that violate state or federal rules amounts to an abdication of its responsibility to protect students and the integrity of the federal student aid program.
With college costs and student debt rising -- some 42 million Americans, or 1 in 8, collectively owe more than $1.3 trillion -- concerns are mounting that far too many households have been defrauded by colleges making unsupported claims about their students' career prospects while peddling credentials of questionable value and saddling students with unpayable debt.
State and federal authorities have ramped up their scrutiny of for-profit colleges that collectively enroll hundreds of thousands of students, probing their advertisements and claims to prospective students about their former students' graduation rates and success at landing jobs in their fields.
Already, the federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Federal Trade Commission and several state attorneys general have sued giant for-profit college chains such as DeVry Education GroupCorinthian Colleges Inc. and ITT Educational Services Inc. for allegedly misleading students by advertising false job placement rates. The FTC and California's attorney general are investigating the University of Phoenix and its owner, the Apollo Education Group. The companies have denied wrongdoing.
For-profit colleges say they enroll students shunned by traditional public and nonprofit colleges, and give them ample opportunity to obtain credentials that employers value.
These colleges largely depend on taxpayers' money for survival. Nearly all of their revenues can come from the federal government, via student loans and grants from the Education Department; GI Bill funds from the Department of Veterans Affairs; and cash from the Department of Defense's Tuition Assistance program.
Most of for-profit colleges' revenues come from the Education Department, which has final say over which schools can receive a slice of the nearly $130 billion in federal student aid the department doles out annually.
But the Education Department isn't supervising colleges closely enough to prevent dodgy ones from taking advantage of students or taxpayers, according to Hicks.
He identified a range of possible tools Education Department officials haven't fully utilized, such as the power to demand that at-risk colleges stump up substantial letters of credit in case schools abruptly close, or former students who borrowed to pay for school assert their federal right to debt cancellations in instances where their school lied to them.
Letters of credit are assurances that cash would be available to the Education Department upon demand. The department can require schools to obtain letters of credit equivalent to at least 10 percent of their previous year's total haul of student Education Department Letting For-Profit Schools Off Because They’re ‘Too Big To Fail,’ Report Says: