Sen Harkin To Propose Legislative Changes To For-Profit Colleges
September 30 2010 - 2:15PM
Dow Jones News
Sen. Tom Harkin (D., Iowa) said he will propose legislative
changes to curb abuses at for-profit colleges, though he won't
introduce anything to the Senate Committee on Health, Education,
Labor and Pensions until after the mid-term election.
Harkin, speaking at a HELP committee hearing entitled, "The
Federal Investment in For-Profit Education: Are Students
Succeeding?" said the committee would hold another hearing in early
December and will propose legislation in the new year.
"There is irrefutable evidence that something has gone wrong
with this industry," Harkin said, outlining a system in which
schools take money from taxpayers via federal loans and grants and
funnel it through "poor kids" on which they prey with aggressive
marketing campaigns, ultimately pocketing the profits.
Harkin released a report Thursday morning showing that
for-profit schools have high dropout rates and their students take
out loans at rates higher than their counterparts in non-profit and
public schools. He had commissioned data from 30 for-profit schools
after the U.S. Government Accountability Office last month released
the results of an undercover investigation showing representatives
at all 15 schools that agency visited had offered misleading or
even fraudulent information to boost enrollment.
Schools' stocks traded higher Thursday afternoon as the hearing
exposed tension within the committee over whether future
discussions should focus just on the for-profit sector or be opened
up to criticism of student outcomes at non-profit and public
institutions, too.
Sen. Mike Enzi (R., Wyo.) walked out in protest after issuing
his opening statement, and Sen. John McCain (R,. Ariz.) only
appeared to read his prepared remarks. McCain said he hoped the
hearings would have a different tenor in January.
Shares of ITT Educational Services Inc. (ESI) were recently
trading up 7% to $70.25, while Bridgepoint Education Inc. (BPI) was
up 4.7% to $15.49 and Corinthian Colleges (COCO) gained 8% to
$7.07.
The U.S. Department of Education this summer proposed a series
of new rules governing a number of topics in higher education,
including recruiter compensation and the measure of a credit hour.
The department is also planning to issue a rule that would penalize
programs for graduating students with high debt loads, an attempt
to measure how well programs prepare students for gainful
employment in a recognized occupation. The department will issue
final rules for 13 of the 14 topics in November, waiting until
early 2011 to publish the "gainful employment" rule. A number of
programs could lose access to federal student aid, from which they
derive much of their revenue, if the rule is implemented as
proposed.
-By Melissa Korn, Dow Jones Newswires; 212-416-2271;
melissa.korn@dowjones.com
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