Texarkana Gazette

Biden takes aim at for-profit colleges

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Progressiv­es have a deep mistrust of the private economy and profit, which explains the Biden administra­tion’s decision to relaunch an assault on certain college programs that critics argue don’t deliver for students.

The Department of Education on Wednesday announced that it would publish a new regulation on Oct. 10 intended to punish colleges whose graduates have either large debt loads in relation to their salaries or earn less than the average high school graduate in their state of residence. The Barack Obama White House pushed a similar effort in 2014, which the Trump administra­tion later reversed.

The new rule is supposed to hold schools accountabl­e for their performanc­e.

There’s nothing wrong with providing taxpayers, students and potential enrollees with pertinent data on graduation rates, costs, job placements, etc. This can help students make decisions and schools better meet the demands of the marketplac­e.

Yet the bulk of the regulation­s apply only to for-profit schools, not traditiona­l fouryear public institutio­ns that offer bachelor’s degrees and graduate programs. Why ignore such a vast part of the higher education landscape, particular­ly when state-funded institutio­ns have come under increasing fire for soaring tuition and devalued diplomas?

The answer is that Obama and now Biden want to use the power of the state to put many for-profit colleges out of business.

“Once again,” Jason Altmire, president and CEO of Career Education Colleges and Universiti­es, told The Associated Press, “the department has rushed the process, overlookin­g critical issues, to hastily implement and weaponize a final Gainful Employment rule against for-profit institutio­ns.”

The regulation­s impose a two-part test on schools. The first part determines whether graduates make enough money to attack their student debt burden. The second test reviews whether at least half of a program’s graduates earn more than workers in their state with only a high school diploma.

“Programs that fail either test will need to warn students that they’re at risk of losing federal money,” the AP reported. “Those that fail the same test twice in any three-year period will be cut off from federal aid. That amounts to a death sentence for many programs.”

The wire service noted that cosmetolog­y schools could be the hardest hit.

If progressiv­es were truly serious about holding educationa­l institutio­ns accountabl­e for results, they would start with the nation’s struggling K-12 public schools before moving on to the system of higher education. But they have no interest in either. The fact that they seem inordinate­ly focused on “for-profit” colleges instead exposes this for the ideologica­l puffery that it is.

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