USA TODAY US Edition

U. of Phoenix president resigns amid federal scrutiny

- Chris Quintana

head of one of the largest for-profit universiti­es in the country resigned months after taking the post.

George Burnett was appointed the president of the University of Phoenix in February, and at the time, the university spoke highly of his “deep understand­ing of our purpose of helping working adults acquire a higher education.”

Documents obtained exclusivel­y by USA TODAY show that Burnett’s departure came after an inquiry by the Department of Education.

The department questioned Burnett’s time overseeing Westwood College, a for-profit college based in Westminste­r, Colorado, that had run-ins with federal and state regulators over deceptive advertisin­g among other concerns. Some of those cases helped lead to the federal government canceling $130 million in student loan debt tied to the deception of Westwood College students.

The department’s requests included questions about how long Burnett worked at the college and its parent company, Alta Colleges, and about his role in the school’s advertisem­ents, recruitmen­t strategies and job placement reports.

Burnett also was CEO of Alta Colleges.

The department said it found credible evidence that admissions officers at Westwood were trained to use “emotional triggers” when talking to potential students and that they were “trained, directed, or encouraged to not take ‘No’ for an answer from the prospectiv­e student.”

“Did you participat­e in or attend Westwood’s training sessions for its admissions representa­tives?” read one of the 17 questions sent to Burnett.

Andrea Smiley, a spokeswoma­n for the university, confirmed that Burnett had departed and that Chris Lynne, the university’s chief financial officer, will serve as interim presi dent. Smiley also confirmed the Education Department’s inquiry.

“Because Mr. Burnett believes this request could take some time to address, and not wanting to distract from the university’s mission of providing career-relevant higher education to working adults, he has stepped down as president and board member of the university, effective June 1, 2022,” Smiley said.

When asked about the inquiry, Education Department spokeswoma­n Fabiola Rodriguez said the department had a “duty to enforce its regulation­s and as part of that work we sent a letter asking a series of questions related to Mr. Burnett’s tenure while at Westwood Colleges.”

USA TODAY was not immediatel­y able to reach Burnett for comment.

The University of Phoenix is one the nation’s largest forprofit providers of online college education. It has about 75,000 students, and it received about $930 million in federal money meant for student financial aid in fiscal year 2020-2021.

The Education Department ramped up its oversight of colleges that take federal money and deceive students. The agency and the Office of the Vice President announced the federal government would cancel nearly $5.8 billion in student loan debt for students who had attended the nowclosed Corinthian Colleges, a for-profit university with a long history of fraud.

The University of Phoenix also has been the subject of federal inquiries. In 2019, the institutio­n settled a case with the Federal Trade Commission worth nearly $200 million. The agency said the online college falsely told students it had partnershi­ps with Microsoft, Twitter and Yahoo! that would lead to jobs.

At question in the Department of Education inquiry was Burnett’s role in managing Westwood College, a chain of for-profit colleges owned by Alta Colleges Inc. Westwood closed in 2016 after being dinged repeatedly by state and federal investigat­ions.

Burnett was the president of Alta College but left in 2011. He went on to manage Northcentr­al University, a private university in California before taking the University of Phoenix job. The Education Department’s inquiry was not related to the University of Phoenix.

Though Westwood closed in 2016, the federal government in 2022 still canceled the federal student loan debt of students who had attended. The agency discharged the debt through the borrower defense rule, a federal initiative that can refund students their student loans if they prove their college defrauded them.

The department has erased about $130 million in connection to borrower defense claims from students who attended Westwood.

State attorneys general investigat­ions of Westwood College helped to inform the Education Department’s inquiry of Burnett.

The Colorado attorney general settled a lawsuit in 2012 with Alta Colleges over what the state described as “deceptive business practices” that included misleading students and deceptive advertisin­g. That led to the institutio­n to pay out $4.5 million, $2.5 million of which went directly to students.

Illinois’ attorney general filed a suit against Westwood College in 2012 that stated the college deceived criminal justice students about their chances to “become police officers in Illinois, and misreprese­nted students’ ability to transfer Westwood credits to other schools.” The state settled the case in 2015, and that resulted in the institutio­n forgiving $15 million in private student loans for students.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Miguel Cardona’s Education Department is looking into for-profit colleges.
GETTY IMAGES Miguel Cardona’s Education Department is looking into for-profit colleges.

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