South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Sale of DeVry chain raises red flags

DeVos critics decry deal to venture capitalist

- By Collin Binkley and Richard Lardner Associated Press

WASHINGTON — A little-known venture capitalist is on the verge of acquiring one of the biggest for-profit colleges in the country, a transactio­n that would put him in control of a troubled national chain that’s more than 60 times the size of the tiny California school he currently owns.

The Trump administra­tion has given a tentative green light to the sale of DeVry University to Bradley Palmer, chairman of Connecticu­tbased Palm Ventures, even as critics warn the deal raises red flags. Chief among them is the challenge of taking over such a large institutio­n.

DeVry, which has an annual enrollment of about 46,000, also faces thousands of fraud complaints filed by students.

The DeVry acquisitio­n is the inverse of how Washington typically works. Often companies spend heavily to influence a government decision or policy in their favor. But there’s no sign that any of the parties employed lobbyists or made significan­t political contributi­ons to push the sale forward.

Like most transactio­ns in the for-profit world, the DeVry deal has received little public scrutiny even though millions of dollars in federal financial aid are at stake. And the change in ownership is moving along at the same time Education Secretary Betsy DeVos works to dismantle Obamaera regulation­s designed to better police the industry and increase protection­s for students.

If the DeVry deal is finalized, it would be another in a series of recent sales meant to breathe new life into troubled for-profit colleges.

Purdue University recently bought the for-profit Kaplan University chain and converted it into a nonprofit to lead the school’s online programs. Kaplan agreed to a $1.3 million settlement in 2015 after it was accused of hiring unqualifie­d instructor­s. Last year the Dream Center Foundation, a religious charity, purchased three chains from Education Management Corporatio­n, which in 2015 agreed to nearly $200 million in settlement­s over allegation­s that it used illegal recruiting tactics.

Under the terms of the DeVry sale, the chain’s stock will be acquired at no cost by Cogswell Education LLC, a holding company registered in Delaware and run by Palmer. Cogswell Education currently owns the for-profit Cogswell College in San Jose, Calif.

It has yet to be seen what the deal means for students. The Education Department said DeVry must keep promises it previously made to its students, including a commitment to disclose a variety of informatio­n about costs and student debt.

A spokeswoma­n for Cogswell Education added that Palmer has no plan to sell DeVry in any timeframe.

“We are going into the DeVry investment with a long-term view focused on impact, quality and student outcomes,” spokeswoma­n Natalie Berkey said.

For DeVos’ detractors, the sale is more evidence she’s putting corporate profits over the interests of consumers. A little more than a decade ago, Palmer’s firm acquired the nonprofit Heald College chain. In the span of a few years, Heald was converted into a forprofit school and then sold for $395 million to the Corinthian Colleges chain, which collapsed in 2015.

Bob Shireman, a former Education Department official during President Barack Obama’s first term and a frequent critic of for-profit colleges, questioned whether a similar fate awaits DeVry.

“Based on the way private equity firms have behaved generally, it would be reasonable to conclude that things are going to get worse for students and taxpayers,” Shireman said. “Not every lion kills its tamer, it’s not an absolute, but certainly it’s a reason for concern.”

Palmer declined to comment for this story.

Berkey said that if the transactio­n secures all nec- essary approvals, DeVry will be operated and governed by its own independen­t board of trustees, separate from Cogswell College.

Ernie Gibble, a spokesman for Adtalem Global Education, declined to respond to questions about the deal, and said only that “the transactio­n is still tracking according to expectatio­ns.”

The sale is awaiting final review by the Education Department but has cleared several key hurdles, despite reservatio­ns voiced by regulators.

In an SEC filing this week, Adtalem said DeVry’s accreditor, the Higher Learning Commission, had approved a transfer of the school’s accreditat­ion to the new owner.

The Education Department gave preliminar­y approval for the deal in a June 19 “pre-acquisitio­n review,” although it noted concerns about combining two institutio­ns of “vastly different size.”

The Illinois Board of Higher Education voted over the summer to grant DeVry the authority to operate and grant degrees in Illinois under Cogswell Education. The state board’s approval came after a coalition of student and taxpayer advocacy groups raised numerous concerns about the transactio­n, including Palm Ventures’ history with Heald.

In a June 1 letter to the Illinois board, Palmer declared that the objections the groups raised were “replete with errors.”

Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., a critic of DeVry who had urged DeVos and the board to scrutinize the deal, said students should be wary of signing up at the new institutio­n.

DeVry agreed in 2016 to a $100 million settlement to resolve a Federal Trade Commission lawsuit alleging the school misled students through deceptive ads.

“I’ve raised my concerns about this transactio­n from the get-go,” Durbin said in a statement. “DeVry has a proven track record of misconduct and Cogswell is ill-equipped, even unlikely, to turn it around.”

Although Palm Ventures isn’t typically seen as a major player in the forprofit realm, it has quietly bought and sold several chains over the past three decades.

It also owns Nightingal­e College, a small for-profit nursing school in Utah, and has a stake in Post University, a for-profit in Connecticu­t that’s fighting two federal lawsuits from former employees who say it uses unethical recruiting practices.

Cogswell College had 740 students throughout the 2016-17 school year, according to Education Department. Most of its students are California residents, taught by 19 full-time faculty members.

 ?? J PAT CARTER/AP 2009 ?? Bradley Palmer, chairman of Palm Ventures, is close to acquiring DeVry University, one of the biggest for-profit colleges.
J PAT CARTER/AP 2009 Bradley Palmer, chairman of Palm Ventures, is close to acquiring DeVry University, one of the biggest for-profit colleges.
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