Houston Chronicle

18 states, D.C. sue DeVos over student loan protection delay

Rule helps those defrauded by for-profit colleges

- By Collin Binkley

Democratic attorneys general from 18 states and the District of Columbia sued U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos on Thursday over her decision to suspend rules that were meant to protect students from abuse by forprofit colleges.

The lawsuit, filed in federal court in Washington, says DeVos violated rulemaking laws when she announced a June 14 decision to delay so-called borrower defense to repayment rules, which were finalized under President Barack Obama and scheduled to take effect July 1.

In her announceme­nt saying the rules would be delayed and rewritten, DeVos said they created “a muddled process that’s unfair to students and schools.” The Education Department didn’t immediatel­y comment on the suit.

The rules would have forbidden schools from forcing students to sign agreements that waive their right to sue. Defrauded students would have faced a quicker path to get their loans erased, and schools, not taxpayers, could have been held responsibl­e for the costs.

A final version of the rules was announced last fall after nearly two years of negotiatio­ns. The Obama administra­tion started pursuing new rules after the Corinthian Colleges chain shut down in 2015 amid allegation­s of misconduct, leading to a flood of applicatio­ns from students seeking to get their loans forgiven.

Massachuse­tts Attorney General Maura Healey, who is leading the lawsuit against DeVos, said the regulation was a “common-sense measure” meant to protect students.

“Since Day One of the Trump administra­tion, Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos and the administra­tion have sided with for-profit schools over students,” Healey told reporters. “For me and my colleagues, it’s simple: When students and families are cheated out of an education and taxpayers foot the bill, everybody loses.”

The lawsuit says DeVos and the Education Department failed to take legally required steps to delay already establishe­d rules. It says they failed to open the decision to public comment and failed to provide an adequate legal justificat­ion for delaying the rules, among other faults.

In June, the Education Department said it was delaying the rule because a federal court was weighing a lawsuit brought by a California trade group made up mostly of forprofit colleges seeking to block the rules. The department cited a law allowing such a delay for litigation if it’s found “that justice so requires.”

The other states that joined the lawsuit are California, Connecticu­t, Delaware, Hawaii, Iowa, Illinois, Maryland, Minnesota, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvan­ia, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia and Washington.

Last week, a group of 47 Democrats in Congress, along with independen­t Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, sent a letter to DeVos opposing the delay, saying the department had never used litigation as a reason to delay rules.

A separate lawsuit against the Education Department was filed Thursday on behalf of two former students of a Boston-area for-profit college.

The suit says the students were counting on protection­s in the new rules to sue the New England Institute of Art, which they say deceived them and left them with few job prospects and heavy debt.

The school’s parent company did not immediatel­y comment.

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