- May 15, 2014
Senator Carper joins Colleagues Urging Education Dept. to Strengthen Protections for Students at Career Education Programs
WASHINGTON, D.C.— Today, U.S. Senator Tom Carper (D-Del.) joined U.S. Sens. Tom Harkin (D-IA), Dick Durbin (D-IL), Chris Murphy (D-CT), Brian Schatz (D-HI) and Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) in a letter to the U.S. Department of Education urging them to put in place stronger protections for students in career education programs—particularly those at for-profit colleges—who often take on significant debt and are frequently left with meager job prospects.
The Higher Education Act requires all career education programs to prepare students for “gainful employment in a recognized occupation” in order to be eligible to receive federal student aid. The senators are urging the Department of Education to strengthen and improve its recently proposed rule so that the rule better protects students and taxpayers. Harkin, as Chairman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee, released a report on the findings of a two-year investigation of the for-profit higher education industry, which would be subject to the “gainful employment” rule along with other career education programs. The 2012 report showed that between 2009 and 2010, more than half a million students at for-profit colleges left with debt but no diploma, despite a $32 billion annual investment by taxpayers in the schools.
“We applaud your continued leadership in protecting students, including veterans, service members and their families, from predatory career education programs and we appreciate the Department of Education’s ongoing efforts to enforce the statutory requirement that all career education programs which receive federal funding ‘prepare students for gainful employment’” the senators wrote. “However, we urge you to issue a stronger regulation than has recently been proposed. It is critically important that the Department of Education safeguard students and taxpayers from those career education programs that leave students saddled with exorbitant debt and poor job prospects.”
“For several years, the for-profit industry has sought to significantly weaken this rule. It is past time for this common-sense measure to be finalized immediately in a way that keeps the best interests of students in mind,” the letter continues. “Students should graduate with more opportunity – not a mountain of debt and inadequate career preparation.”
The senators specifically urged Secretary Duncan to establish a rule that would:
- Hold career education programs accountable when a large proportion of their students find themselves unable to repay their student debt.
- Better protect borrowers from poorly performing programs by creating enrollment caps to impose on all unsuccessful programs. Imposing enrollment caps would incentivize programs to make needed changes and protect other students from enrolling in these programs until they significantly improve.
- Give students borrower relief if they attended a failing career education program. Any students who took out loans to attend such programs should not be saddled with debt they cannot pay off and these loans should be assumed by the institution.
The full text of the letter is below and a signed copy is available here.
May 15, 2014
The Honorable Arne Duncan
Secretary of Education
U.S. Department of Education
c/o Ashley Higgins
1990 K Street, NW Room 8031
Washington, DC 20006-8502
Re: Docket ID ED-2014-0PE-0039
Dear Secretary Duncan:
We applaud your continued leadership in protecting students, including veterans, service members and their families, from predatory career education programs and we appreciate the Department of Education’s ongoing efforts to enforce the statutory requirement that all career education programs which receive federal funding “prepare students for gainful employment.” However, we urge you to issue a stronger regulation than has recently been proposed. It is critically important that the Department of Education safeguard students and taxpayers from those career education programs that leave students saddled with exorbitant debt and poor job prospects.
One of the important functions of this “gainful employment” rule will be to address alarming trends in for-profit higher education. As the Senate HELP Committee’s two-year investigation on for profit colleges showed, taxpayers have invested billions of dollars a year – over $32 billion in 2010 alone – in companies that operate for-profit colleges. Yet, more than half of the students who enrolled in those colleges in 2008-9 left within a median of 4 months and did so without a degree or diploma. In addition, for-profit institutions also have the highest average three-year cohort default rates at nearly 22 percent. The vast majority of their students – whether they get a degree or not – leave with loan debt that may follow them throughout their lives, often creating a financial burden that is extremely difficult to escape.
As you move forward with finalizing the rule, the following key principle should guide the way: students should not pay the price for programs that fail to deliver. Accordingly, we urge you to strengthen this critical rule in several important ways.
First, a strong and fair gainful employment rule must hold career education programs accountable when a large proportion of their students find themselves unable to repay their student debt. To do so, the rule must not only measure default rates, which the Senate HELP Committee’s investigation documented are easily subject to manipulation, but also properly assess student outcomes through the use of a repayment rate measure. Whether students can actually pay down their loans after leaving is a more accurate way to determine the economic value of a career program.
In addition to measuring outcomes, several steps should be taken to better protect borrowers from poorly performing programs. Specifically, there should be enrollment caps imposed on all unsuccessful programs to protect students until the programs markedly improve. Giving these programs the ability to increase their enrollment would allow even more students to be harmed. Students should also receive borrower relief if they attended a failing career education program. As a measure of both fairness and accountability, any loans students received to attend such programs should be assumed. by the institution.
As a separate matter, it is also important that the final rule does not unfairly punish low-cost programs that pose little risk to students. In programs where a majority of graduates do not borrow federal loans there should be an exception from the rule. Simply put, programs that neither profit at the expense of their students, nor leave them with enormous debt they cannot repay are not the problem. Any appeals process only adds more regulatory burden for programs that wish to deliver a low-cost alternative for students.
For several years, the for-profit industry has sought to significantly weaken this rule. It is past time for this common-sense measure to be finalized immediately in a way that keeps the best interests of students in mind. Students should graduate with more opportunity – not a mountain of debt and inadequate career preparation.
We strongly support your efforts to establish a stronger gainful employment regulation and we look forward to seeing these changes reflected in the final version.
Sincerely,