USA TODAY US Edition

18 states sue DeVos for rescinding rules

Education secretary didn’t seek public’s input, lawsuit says

- Roger Yu @ByRogerYu USA TODAY

A coalition of 18 states and the District of Columbia sued the Education Department and Secretary Betsy DeVos on Thursday for rescinding Obama-era rules aimed at protecting students from predatory colleges.

The “borrower defense” rule — scheduled to take effect July 1 — allowed student loan borrowers to apply for loan forgivenes­s if they were defrauded by for-profit schools. It also largely prohibited schools that participat­e in the federal student loan program from forcing students to use arbitratio­n to settle legal disputes and waive their class-action rights.

The states’ complaint alleges that the Education Department violated federal law by rescinding the rules, which were finalized by the Obama administra­tion in November. About 16,000 borrower defense claims are currently be- ing processed, the Education Department said last month.

The Education Department canceled the rule “without soliciting, receiving or responding to any comment from any stakeholde­r or member of the public, and without engaging in a public deliberati­ve process,” according to the states’ complaint.

In a statement, Education Department Press Secretary Liz Hill called the states’ complaint an “ideologica­lly driven suit.”

“The state attorneys general are saying to regulate first and ask the legal questions later,” she said.

DeVos’ move was partly based on a lawsuit filed in May by the California Associatio­n of Private Postsecond­ary Schools, which argued that the borrower defense rules exceeded the Education’s Department’s statutory authority and were devised with erroneous data. “The Department cannot simply dismiss these allegation­s,” Hill said.

The Trump administra­tion has been clear about wanting to eliminate what it considers to be burdensome regulation­s for the private sector. Since taking the helm at the Education Department earlier this year, DeVos, the daughter-in-law of Amway founder Richard DeVos and a strong proponent of charter schools, has been chipping away at the student protection rules enacted by the Obama administra­tion.

“Since Day One, Secretary DeVos has sided with for-profit school executives against students and families drowning in unaffordab­le student loans,” said Massachuse­tts Attorney General Maura Healey, who led the lawsuit.

Regulators in the Obama administra­tion particular­ly focused their enforcemen­t on fraudulent for-profit schools that charge thousands in tuition and fees while advertisin­g misleading or inaccurate statements about graduates’ prospects for finding jobs in their fields of study.

For-profit schools depend heavily on federal student loans and grants. In 2009, the 15 publicly traded for-profit education companies received 86% of their revenues from taxpayer-funded loans, according to the lawsuit.

Even though they make up a small percentage of all post-secondary schools in the country, students at for-profit colleges accounted for about one-third of loan defaults in the three-year period starting in 2013, according to the Department of Education. About 44 million people in the U.S. hold $1.34 trillion in student loan debt, data from the New York Fed Consumer Credit Panel/Equifax says. That’s more than all credit card or car loan debt held by American consumers.

Amid the crackdown, several for-profit schools, including Corinthian Colleges and ITT Technical Institute, have shut down, driving the industry to step up efforts for regulatory relief after Trump’s victory in November.

In enacting the borrower defense rule last year, the Obama administra­tion reviewed more than 10,000 comments from students, school officials and consumer advocates and gave schools more than six months to prepare for the implementa­tion.

 ?? WIN MCNAMEE, GETTY IMAGES ?? Education Secretary Betsy DeVos halted Obama-era rules aimed at protecting students from predatory colleges.
WIN MCNAMEE, GETTY IMAGES Education Secretary Betsy DeVos halted Obama-era rules aimed at protecting students from predatory colleges.

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