The Denver Post

For-profit colleges expect resurgence under Trump

Lobbyists launch campaign to rebrand stumbling industry

- By The Associated Press

After nearing collapse under the Obama administra­tion, the for-profit college industry is celebratin­g Donald Trump’s election as a chance for a rebound.

As stock prices for some of the nation’s largest college chains have surged, industry lobbyists say they have received a warm welcome from Trump’s transition team and already have launched a campaign to rebrand the embattled industry as a key to the new president’s plan for economic growth.

While Trump has yet to detail his education plan, some in the forprofit sector see the president-elect as an ally who has championed the private sector and promised to roll back many of President Barack Obama’s regulation­s.

Industry lobbyists hope those include federal “gainful employment” rules, which can cut funding to academic programs whose graduates struggle to pay off student debt, and new borrower defense rules that can force financiall­y unstable schools to put up large sums of money to cover student loans if the school fails.

“Unfortunat­ely, the focus in the last eight years has been fighting for survival from an ideologica­l administra­tion that was opposed to our very existence, and hopefully that is a fight we will no longer have to wage,” said Steve Gunderson, president of the industry lobbying group Career Education Colleges and Universiti­es and a former Republican congressma­n.

Gunderson said that early conversati­ons with Trump’s transition team showed promise for a smoother relationsh­ip with the White House.

“They absolutely see a place for postsecond­ary career education which is not exclusivel­y constructe­d around just fouryear liberal-arts programs,” Gunderson said.

Trump’s transition team did not respond to requests for comment.

The for-profit college industry has suffered steep enrollment losses since 2010. Many schools blame Obama, whose administra­tion has cracked down on schools accused of fraud and added new regulation­s that officials say were meant to protect students from abuse.

In September, the ITT Technical Institute chain shut down after the federal government mostly barred it from enrolling new students as a sanction for academic troubles. A month later, the Apollo Education Group, owner of the University of Phoenix, told investors that it might not survive the policies of another Democratic president.

Critics expect that Trump will loosen the reins on for-profit colleges, and some see parallels between those schools and the Republican’s nowdefunct Trump University. This month, Trump agreed to pay $25 million to settle three fraud lawsuits filed against his Trump University real-estate seminars, although he didn’t admit fault.

Those offering recent support to the industry include former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, a close adviser to Trump who is making a case to be the president-elect’s strategic planner. At a recent event in Dallas for Gunderson’s group, Gingrich urged the next administra­tion to embrace for-profit schools in its education plan.

“They have an opportunit­y to try to create a movement, to create 8.5 million new jobs, which gets precisely at what Donald Trump has been campaignin­g on,” Gingrich said in an interview.

Gingrich, who is personal friends with Gunderson, added that he believes some of Obama’s major regulation­s targeting the industry will be scaled back.

“I expect them to be dramatical­ly modified,” Gingrich said.

 ??  ?? Former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich urged the next administra­tion to embrace for-profit schools in its education plan.
Former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich urged the next administra­tion to embrace for-profit schools in its education plan.

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