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Ileana Ros-Lehtinen of Florida with
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Ed Pastor of Arizona and
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Hispanic Lawmakers Ileana
Ros-Lehtinen and Ed Pastor Sacrifice
Hispanic Students to Profit School
University of Phoenix
.
WASHINGTON
(By
Julianne Hing, Colorlines) October
8, 2010
— The Department of Education
has been trying to institute
stricter regulations of for-profit
schools all summer long, but has run
into unexpected roadblocks from
Congress’ black and Hispanic
caucuses, as well as other black
political leaders. Politico’s Kendra
Marr did a round-up this week of the
push back the DOE has gotten from
the CBC and CHC since they’ve been
recruited by for-profit schools to
stave off regulation.
The proposed regulations would set
new standards for accessing Pell
Grants meant for students from
low-income families. For-profit
schools could lose their Pell Grant
eligibility if they send graduates
out into the world with crushing
debt they’re unable to repay, or if
graduates cannot find gainful
employment with the degrees they’ve
obtained from for-profit schools.
Under the proposed rule, at least 35
percent of for-profit students, both
graduates and dropouts, have to be
paying down their loans, and be
making enough money so that their
loans amount to no more than 12
percent of their income.
According to the Career College
Association, which represents
for-profit schools, 43 percent of
students are people of color; in the
United States, 23 percent of blacks
and 18 percent of Hispanics with
associate degrees went to for-profit
schools.
Most notably, for-profit schools
teach 12 percent of the nation’s
post-secondary students — and
counting — but receive 23 percent of
the nation’s federal student aid
money. This alone is not a bad thing
— students deserve an education and
help to make their education
affordable. But 40 percent of
students from for-profit schools
eventually default on their loans;
the national average for all higher
education institutions is 20
percent. And the dropout rate from
for-profit schools is also
alarmingly high — a whopping 57
percent never graduate.
You could argue that these
statistics are symptoms of the
depressed circumstances of the
underserved populations for-profit
schools reach. Except that this
summer the Government Accountability
Office sent investigators to
for-profit schools to pose as
prospective students and found
schools engaging in fraud to lure
students in the door and even
helping them falsify financial aid
forms to get federal money. In 2008,
for-profit schools raked in $3.2
billion in Pell Grants.
What many don’t know is that once
students are enrolled in for-profit
school programs for at least 14
days, the schools get to keep their
students’ loan money, even if
students eventually leave. The money
is neither transferrable nor open
for cancellation. And student loan
debt is a financial trap that’s
notoriously impossible to get out
of. People who default on their
student loans have to die to get rid
of their outstanding debt. Loan
companies can even dip into people’s
Social Security decades down the
line.
None of this appears to matter to
the black and Hispanic politicians
who’ve gotten mighty cozy with
for-profit schools lately. Marr
reports:
The colleges - schools with on-line
campuses, such as Strayer
University, and the University of
Phoenix, as well as programs that
train in forensics, truck driving or
computer repair - have recruited
African American leaders like Jesse
Jackson, hired lobbying firms, and
set up an aggressive letter-writing
campaign to make their case
“If you have a school whose
clientele is basically low-income
minority - first generation going to
college - the economic reality is
that their opportunities after
college are not going to be as good
as someone who comes from
upper-income family with a lot of
social contacts and not subject to
discrimination as a minority,” said
Rep. Bobby Scott (D-Va.), who signed
one of the letters. If Duncan’s
proposal goes through, they will be
less likely to enroll students from
disadvantaged backgrounds, said
Scott, who questioned why other
nonprofit and state colleges aren’t
held to the same standard.
Scott joined with 11 other voting
members of the Congressional Black
Caucus (there are 39 total),
including Democratic Reps. Donald
Payne of New Jersey and Yvette
Clarke of New York, to sign a letter
to Secretary of Education Arne
Duncan opposing regulation. Four of
the 23 voting members of the
Congressional Hispanic Caucus signed
on too, including Ed Pastor of
Arizona and Ileana Ros-Lehtinen of
Florida.
This summer, National Black Chamber
of Commerce president Harry Alford
penned an op-ed in The Root calling
for-profit schools a “success story
when it comes to minority students,”
because of their high enrollment of
people of color, and dismissed
corruption in the for-profit
industry is a matter of “bad
apples.”
Alford wrote:
However, because minority students
as a group tend to need more student
aid to meet their college expenses,
they are far more likely to fall
short of the “gainful employment”
guidelines. This rule is aimed at
career-oriented schools, but if the
same test were run on students at
traditionally not-for-profit black
colleges and universities, 93
percent would fail the “gainful
employment” test because of
unacceptable repayment rates.
According to figures from the Bureau
of Labor Statistics, black
unemployment in August was 16.3
percent, compared with 9.6 percent
for the general population. Worse
yet, the unemployment rate for black
males was 17.3 percent, and the
unemployment rate for black teens
ages 16 to 19 was 45.4 percent.
We should be looking for every
conceivable pathway to get black
teens off the unemployment line and
into a classroom. Obviously, not
every teenager is a candidate for
post-secondary education. But for
those who are, the Department of
Education is throwing up roadblocks
at the worst possible time.
Alford, it should be noted, also
opposes the Employee Free Choice
Act, climate change legislation and
net neutrality. Unsurprisingly, his
outfit has been bankrolled by both
oil and telecom corporations. Alford
— and the political leaders who’ve
sent angry letters to Duncan
opposing for-profit school
regulation — may represent a black
and Hispanic constituency, but
unfortunately not their interests.
People who criticize regulation of
an industry that preys on people of
color and the poor as “elitist, if
not racist,” are abusing the charge.
Blocking regulation of the
for-profit schools industry is like
opposing regulation of the subprime
mortgage industry, which also preyed
on communities of color. Black and
Hispanic students make up a hefty
percentage of for-profit schools’
customer base because they’re
disproportionately blocked out of
other higher education
opportunities. In many cases
students have been targeted by false
ads and bloated promises of future
income and job prospects.
And it’s inaccurate to blame the
economy on for-profit schools
graduates’ job woes. The real issue
is that many for-profit schools lack
the accreditation to allow their
graduates to transfer to other
schools or to even be employed in
the industries they’ve supposedly
been trained in. And yet schools
continue to print diplomas and issue
degrees in the medical and
engineering fields for jobs their
graduates will not be able to
access. Congressional leaders make
the mistake of conflating access
with affordability and quality;
for-profit schools’ admissions
officers are really just sales
representatives.
The differences between being locked
into student loan debt from a
non-profit school or a for-profit
one start to pale when the checks
end up being written to the same
place every month, but taxpayers and
students both should not be
funneling money into publicly traded
school-corporations that produce so
little for the populations they
serve.
The for-profit schools industry is
not a system that needs protection.
It’s a system that needs oversight
and regulation. Instead of defending
the for-profit schools industry, the
CHC and CBC’s energies would be
better spent defending and
strengthening community colleges and
other public institutions of higher
education, and helping students gain
access to those schools.