The Mercury News

Thousands of students lose aid in regulatory fight

- By Erica L. Green

WASHINGTON >> Tens of thousands of students in California enrolled in online classes at out-of-state colleges abruptly lost federal financial aid this week after they found themselves in the crossfire of a regulatory fight between Education Secretary Betsy DeVos and the nation’s largest teachers union.

The students who lost their aid are the unlikely victims of an effort by the union, the National Education Associatio­n, to stop DeVos from delaying a rule written by the Obama administra­tion to bolster consumer protection­s for students taking online courses at schools not based in their states.

DeVos had warned that states were not ready to enforce the rules, and that the teachers union was refusing to listen to those legitimate concerns. A judge sided with the union, leaving the students without aid.

“We tried to delay the implementa­tion of the 2016 rule because of its many flaws — including this consequenc­e for California students,” said Liz Hill, a spokeswoma­n for the department. “Unfortunat­ely, the NEA filed a lawsuit, and a judge ruled that we have to implement the rule.”

The union accused the department of a vindictive maneuver to punish its members, regardless of the costs to students.

“The Department of Education’s determinat­ion to harm students, either through its incompeten­ce or vindictive­ness, is unacceptab­le,” Lily Eskelsen García, the president of the National Education Associatio­n, said in a statement. “We remain willing to help the department implement the protection­s in a way that does not jeopardize critical loans and Pell grants for students.”

The 2016 regulation­s, issued in the waning hours of the Obama administra­tion, sought to ensure that students taking such courses would not be left saddled with debt but gave no assurance that the courses would provide employment in the states in which they reside. The rules, part of a series of measures to challenge predatory for-profit colleges, also required schools to disclose whether their online programs were under investigat­ion by the state attorney general or a college accreditor, and to set up a complaint system for students enrolled in out-of-state institutio­ns.

DeVos, acting on the concerns of higher education institutio­ns, sought the delay, citing “widespread concern and confusion in the higher education community.” The groups who had appealed to her for more time specifical­ly warned of California’s vulnerabil­ity.

But the teachers unions did not buy it. They feared a delay would leave California teachers seeking online educationa­l credits vulnerable to predatory attacks with no guarantee that their online programs would meet state standards for teacher certificat­ion. In August 2018, the National Education Associatio­n and the California Teachers Associatio­n sued DeVos, saying the department had not followed the proper administra­tive procedures in delaying the rules.

They won. In April, a federal district court judge in California ordered that the Obama rule go into effect.

On Monday, the Education Department published a notificati­on announcing that California was out of compliance with the rule and suspended financial aid to about 80,000 students in the state who were enrolled in “distance learning” classes.

And while the Obama-era rule was aimed at for-profit colleges that specialize in online offerings, the California students affected attend private and public nonprofit institutio­ns that are widely regarded as high-quality leaders in online learning, such as Arizona State and Western Governors universiti­es. California students enrolled in online courses at forprofit colleges are covered by a state law.

The American Council on Education, an associatio­n representi­ng more than 1,700 college presidents, sent a letter to the department on Thursday pressing for emergency action.

Noting the imminent start of the academic school year, the organizati­on said that its members were scrambling to help students who were already enrolled in classes, and had suddenly lost access to Pell grants and federal student loans.

“In short, the likely outcome will be that thousands of students are either forced to drop out of, or never begin, postsecond­ary education,” the group wrote. “We have already heard from several institutio­ns that will do whatever they can to address any gaps in student funding that occur as a result, but this is at best a temporary solution.”

The American Council on Education was among those that first wrote to the department in early 2018 warning that the Obama-era rule could affect states, including California, that were not in full compliance. In anticipati­on of the rule’s 2018 start date, every other state moved to create a complaint process or enter into multistate reciprocit­y agreements that would bring them into compliance with the rule. California did not.

“This is a debate about obscure regulation­s, but one with immediate, real world consequenc­es,” said Terry W. Hartle, a senior vice president of the council.

 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? A court decision this week prevents Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos from delaying a rule written by the Obama administra­tion to bolster consumer protection­s for students taking online courses at schools not based in their states.
FILE PHOTO A court decision this week prevents Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos from delaying a rule written by the Obama administra­tion to bolster consumer protection­s for students taking online courses at schools not based in their states.

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