Stephen Burd
Senior Writer & Editor, Higher Education
Today, the U.S. Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions held the first in what promises to be examining allegations of fraud, waste, and abuse in the for-profit higher education sector. In a , Sen. Tom Harkin, the Iowa Democrat in charge of the committee, said the purpose of the hearings would be to ensure that “for-profit colleges are working well to meet the needs of students and not just shareholders.”
At Higher Ed Watch, we very much welcome these hearings, as they are long overdue.
In recent years, some of the largest publicly traded and privately-held for-profit higher education companies have come under intense scrutiny from federal and state regulators and have faced numerous lawsuits by former employees, shareholders, and students over allegations that they have engaged in misleading recruitment and admissions tactics to inflate their enrollment numbers (see , , and ). Some of these companies have been accused of deliberately recruiting and enrolling unqualified students and sticking them with huge amounts of debt for training from which these individuals are unlikely to benefit.
Yet, time and time again, federal policymakers have , and, in fact, have made it even easier for unscrupulous schools to take advantage of vulnerable students and taxpayers. When the Republicans controlled both the White House and Congress, they and . But they are not the only ones to blame.
After all, it was a Democratic-led Congress that approved legislation in 2008 that , known as , that aims to ensure that for-profit colleges receive at least a limited share of their revenues from sources other than federal student aid. In fact, only last summer, the House Committee on Education and Labor, under the leadership of Rep. George Miller (D-CA), overwhelmingly approved to its version of the student loan reform legislation that would have . Thankfully, this proposal didn’t make it into the final bill, and Representative Miller has recently taken .
Predictably, for-profit college lobbyists and leaders have already started . But in reality, it’s a much-needed and long-overdue examination of an industry that all too often puts the interests of shareholders above the students they are supposed to be serving.
In the weeks and months ahead, we will report on the substance of these hearings, and continue our longstanding work in this area. But for now, we want to give credit to Senator Harkin for promising to provide the type of oversight that has for too long been sorely lacking.
To read all of our past coverage on for-profit higher education,