.
Unless you live in a cave, you know that we are living through an era of incompetence and corruption. It seemed to reach its peak (or nadir) during the Bush Administration, but don’t kid yourself. It’s still out there, dragging us all down into dire shittitude.
I’ve long believed that you only need to point your finger somewhere and just move forward (where, for whatever reason, no spotlight has shone for a while) and you’ll run into some sort of scandal or outrage or absurdity. It doesn’t matter where you point. Just point.
Right now, we’re all staring at the Gulf. It’s awful. Yeah, but don’t be an idiot. Shit is happening all over the place.
One such place is the for-profit colleges like the U of Phoenix and their scam on the American taxpayer. Lots of these places provide questionable instruction and degrees but get lots of comers. And students typically take out huge federal loans—that they’ll not be able to pay back.
There’ve been waves of scandal about these operations for twenty years. You can read about it. Do that.
Well, the feds are once again supposed to be on the case. The long awaited “stricter rules” for for-profits have just been released, and there’ll be more to come on Friday.
Education Dept. Will Release Stricter Rules for For-Profits but Delays One on 'Gainful Employment'
After an intense lobbying effort by for-profit colleges, the Education Department announced Tuesday that it will postpone the release of a rule that proprietary institutions said would shutter thousands of their programs.
The rule, which would cut off federal student aid to programs whose graduates carry high student-loan debt relative to their incomes, is one of 14 that the department and college stakeholders have been negotiating over the past eight months. The other regulations, including one that would tighten a ban on incentive compensation for college recruiters, will be made public Friday.
In a call with reporters Tuesday, an Education Department official said the agency still plans to hold for-profits accountable for preparing their graduates for "gainful employment," but needs more time to develop an appropriate measure of that outcome. The official said the proposal will be released later this summer, and will most likely be included in a package of final rules due out in November.
"We have many areas of agreement where we can move forward," Arne Duncan, the U.S. secretary of education, said in a statement. "But some key issues around gainful employment are complicated, and we want to get it right, so we will be coming back with that shortly."
The delay gives for-profit colleges more time to fight the department's proposal to bar aid for programs in which a majority of students' loan payments would exceed 8 percent of the lowest quarter of graduates' expected earnings, based on a 10-year repayment plan. The colleges have already spent hundreds of thousands of dollars pushing an alternative that would require programs to provide prospective students with more information about their graduates' debt levels and salaries….
The SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT — "[The] blog he developed was something that made the district better." - Tim Jemal, SOCCCD BoT President, 7/24/23
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You can be sure the "colleges" will get the best regulations that can be purchased.
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