The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

ARGOSY UNIVERSITY LIKELY TO CLOSE TODAY

University’s Dunwoody campus has some 1,500 enrolled, officials say.

- By Eric Stirgus estirgus@ajc.com

Students at the metro Atlanta campus of one of the nation’s largest for-profit universiti­es scrambled Thursday to figure out their next steps after its administra­tors announced the school is likely to close today.

Administra­tors at cash-strapped Argosy University sent state offi- cials late Wednesday a seven-page “campus closure plan.” The documents say operations may end today unless a new owner emerges or Argosy finds a transfer partner. Argosy, which holds classes in an office building in Dunwoody, has about 1,500 students who take classes from its Georgia campus, according to state officials.

“I don’t know what’s going to happen,” said student Brian Santiago, who is one class short of completing his master’s degree in clinical mental health.

Argosy’s parent company, Dream Center Education Holdings (DCEH), agreed to a receiversh­ip plan in January after, court records show, being unable to pay

some vendors. Federal education officials gave DCEH a March 11 deadline to show why it should continue to participat­e in federal student aid programs.

“We are working with students, accreditor­s, state regulators and the U.S. Department of Education to provide as many options as possible for students, to include transfer to another higher education institutio­n or student loan discharge,” Mark Dottore, the court-appointed receiver, said in a three-sentence statement Thursday to The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on.

Argosy offers associate to doctoral degrees in courses such as clinical psychology, business, law and creative arts and design. It has 16 campuses in 11 states and online courses, and many of them could also close today. Federal officials say the situation has become so severe that some faculty members at one Argosy school in Phoenix were called out of their classrooms while teaching and told they were fired, documents show.

Federal education officials last week denied Argosy’s applicatio­n to become a nonprofit institutio­n. For-profit colleges close at higher percentage­s than nonprofits, experts say, because they spend more on advertisin­g and other tools to recruit students and less on classroom instructio­n.

With closure looming, Argosy held the first part of a two-day transfer fair Thursday in which at least five colleges and universiti­es sent representa­tives who shared informatio­n about their curricula. More than 100 students arrived, waiting in hallways to get details. Other students came or sent relatives to get their transcript­s.

Santiago and other students said the fair was disorganiz­ed and rushed. Argosy’s closure plan suggested one option for students is to finish their course requiremen­ts by today. Clinical mental health students Shelly Hampton-Huguley, Ashley Jones and Darlene Rosario left the fair doubtful they will get their financial aid this semester. They were unsure of their next steps.

“We’re trying to finish,” said Rosario, who’s taken courses there for four years, worried she won’t be able to transfer most of her credits to another school.

“It’s just a bunch of broken promises,” Jones said of the situation.

Nationally, Argosy students are waiting for an estimated $13 million in financial aid, according to one document. Instead of distributi­ng the money to students, Argosy used the funds for other expenses, including payroll and legal fees. Some Argosy students have started online fundraisin­g programs to raise money for classmates facing eviction because they haven’t received financial aid. Some students borrow money above tuition and school fees to pay for daily expenses like child care and rent.

Argosy wrote to the state it will hold informatio­n sessions for students if it closes. A federal provision allows students to seek loan forgivenes­s if they feel a college or university misled them or engaged in other misconduct. Georgia students, if they qualify, could seek tuition refunds from a state fund.

Some students are doubtful they will be reimbursed but left the school Thursday somewhat optimistic.

“We’re going to get through this,” Jones said as the three women walked to their cars.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Argosy University students wait Thursday at its metro Atlanta campus in Dunwoody to find out the school’s fate. Cash-strapped Argosy may close its local campus today.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Argosy University students wait Thursday at its metro Atlanta campus in Dunwoody to find out the school’s fate. Cash-strapped Argosy may close its local campus today.

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