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Obama Administration Comes Out Swinging Against Career College Association Lawsuit

Harris Miller, the president of the group formerly known as the Career College Association, likes to say 鈥  But apparently that rule applies to everyone but his own organization.

As we’ve reported, the Association of Private Sector Colleges and Universities, , has not been shy about twisting the facts in its battle to stop the Obama administration from putting into effect regulations that would increase federal oversight over the for-profit college sector. So it shouldn’t come as much of a surprise that that the association filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia earlier this year to block the Department from carrying out several of these rules was rife with misleading statements and outright errors.

At Higher Ed Watch, we ran in January responding to some of the most outlandish misstatements in the lawsuit. We focused particularly on arguments the group made to try and convince the court to strike down a regulation that that the Bush administration put in place in 2002 to help for-profit colleges skirt a long-standing federal law that prohibits schools from compensating recruiters based on their success in enrolling students. Now, in its , the Obama administration delivers some powerful blows of its own to the career college lobbyists鈥 arguments.

Today we are running excerpts from that answer the association鈥檚 claims about the incentive compensation rule and show why the court should throw out this misguided lawsuit. Here are the claims and the administration’s responses to them:

The lawsuit: In eliminating the 12 鈥榮afe harbors鈥 that the Bush Administration created in 2002 to the federal law banning colleges from providing incentive payments to their admissions employees, the Education Department acted 鈥渁rbitrarily and capriciously鈥 and did not provide 鈥渁 reasoned explanation鈥 for its decision. In addition, the Department 鈥渋gnored the factual findings and legal conclusions鈥 that had led the agency鈥檚 prior leaders to create the 12 safe harbors in the first place.

Administration鈥檚 response: 鈥淭he Department鈥檚 decision to eliminate the safe harbors was not made without great deliberation. After engaging in negotiated rulemaking and following notice-and-comment procedures, the Department promulgated regulations that it believes will 鈥榤ore accurately reflect congressional intent and protect students from abusive recruitment practices鈥 that resulted from institutions鈥 reliance on the safe harbors.鈥

Contrary to the plaintiff鈥檚 claims, 鈥渢he Department did not 鈥榗ompletely ignore鈥 the reasons the agency offered for promulgating the safe harbors in 2002. Instead, it acknowledged the prior reasoning and explained how the [prior administration鈥檚] prediction that the safe harbors would not create loopholes in the incentive compensation ban had, in the Department鈥檚 view, been proven wrong in the years since the safe harbors were promulgated.鈥

The lawsuit: The Department acted improperly by 鈥減urport[ing] to make illegal what it had previously determined eight years earlier to be legal and fully compliant with the HEA even though there has been no intervening statutory change, no directive from Congress to do, and no other identifiable basis for the change.鈥

Administration鈥檚 response: 鈥淭he compensation regulations are not due less deference merely because they represent a change from the prior 鈥榮afe harbor鈥 regulations. An agency is not 鈥榬equired to establish rules of conduct to last forever.鈥 Rather an agency, 鈥榯o engage in informed rulemaking, must consider varying interpretations and the wisdom of its policy on a continuing basis.鈥欌 In addition, 鈥渁n agency鈥檚 view of what is in the public interest may change, either with or without a change of circumstances鈥 and an agency 鈥榤ust be given ample latitude to adapt its rules and policies to those changes.鈥欌 In this case, the Department came to see over time that the safe harbors were 鈥渟ubject to abuse鈥 and 鈥渋nconsistent with congressional intent,鈥 and therefore decided to eliminate them. [Editor鈥檚 Note: Citations to other legal cases have been removed to make more readable.]    

The lawsuit:  The creation of the safe harbors in 2002 made it easier for federal officials to enforce the incentive compensation by establishing 鈥渂right-line rules.鈥 Their introduction 鈥渆nabled the Department and courts to quickly and easily distinguish between schools that improperly used commissioned salespeople to drive up enrollment and schools that properly paid their recruiting, admissions, and financial aid employees competitive salaries, appropriately adjusted to reflect their on-the-job performance.鈥

Administration鈥檚 response: To the contrary, the safe harbors have made the . Far from establishing 鈥渂right line rules,鈥 the safe harbors created major loopholes that made it easier for institutions to 鈥渃ircumvent congressional intent鈥 and 鈥渆vade agency enforcement actions.鈥

The most problematic has been the first safe harbor rule, which allows recruiters to receive incentive payments as long as they are not based solely on the individuals鈥 success in enrolling students [as opposed to the law which establishes a blanket prohibition against these practices]. The Department found that this loophole has 鈥渓ed institutions to establish compensation plans that, on paper, purported to evaluate recruiters based on factors other than the number of students enrolled, but in reality those other factors were ignored. This practice, which valued numbers over substance, encourage recruiters to 鈥榙eceive or misrepresent the manner in which a particular educational program [might meet] a student鈥檚 need [s],’ exactly contrary to what Congress intended and what the Department had in mind when it promulgated the safe harbors.鈥

 鈥淎lthough the Department expended vast resources in the years after the safe harbors went into effect to enforce the incentive compensation ban, the first safe harbor鈥檚 focus on the term 鈥榮olely鈥 made it very difficult for the Department to evaluate compliance and to successfully enforce the ban when violations occurred.鈥 

The lawsuit: A (GAO) shows that the Department鈥檚 concerns about widespread abuses are unfounded. The report found 鈥渢hat substantiated violations of statutory bonus prohibition — both before and after the adoption of the [safe harbors] — have been infrequent.鈥

Administration鈥檚 Response: Although the Plaintiff believes that the GAO report 鈥渄emonstrates that elimination of the safe harbors was not necessary because it shows there was no increase in the frequency or severity of incentive compensation violations after the safe harbors went into effect,鈥 it actually

鈥淲hen compared with the widespread allegations of improper incentive compensation practices found elsewhere in the administrative record, the limited number of 鈥榮ubstantiated violations鈥 identified in the GAO report supports the Department鈥檚 position that safe harbors made it difficult for it to substantiate violations of, and thereby enforce, the incentive compensation ban. Indeed, GAO recognized as much in a follow-up report issued in October 2010.鈥 In that report, the GAO stated that the change in the Department鈥檚 enforcement policy in 2002 鈥渞esulted in an increased burden on [the Department] to prove a violation鈥s a result, it became more difficult for [the Department] to prove a school violated the incentive compensation ban.鈥

The lawsuit: The Department鈥檚 incentive compensation regulations prohibit colleges from offering recruiters merit-based salary adjustments. 鈥淭o be merit-based, salaries must be based on employees鈥 on-the-job performance. Thus for a recruiter, merit-based salaries must reward recruiting performance. The Compensation regulations, however, forbid any payment that is 鈥榖ased in any part, directly or indirectly, upon success in securing enrollments or the award of financial aid.鈥欌

Administration鈥檚 Response: The claim that the regulation would forbid merit adjustments is simply not true, as the regulations 鈥渆xplicitly permit the payment of a fixed salary or wage that is not based on securing enrollments or the award of financial aid.鈥

While the 鈥減laintiff maintains that, because a recruiter鈥檚 job is to secure enrollments, any merit-based adjustments made to a recruiter鈥檚 salary will necessarily be based, either directly or indirectly, on success in activities securing enrollments,鈥 the Department disagrees. 鈥淎s numerous commenters 鈥 including associations representing admissions officers 鈥 explained, a recruiter鈥檚 job is not to enroll as many students as possible. Instead, these are counseling professions that should focus on the needs, interests, and abilities of prospective students and assist those students in determining whether a particular educational program is in their best interest.鈥

The lawsuit: The Department acted illegally by extending the incentive compensation ban to salaries. 鈥淭he HEA only prohibits 鈥榖onus[es]鈥 and 鈥榗ommissions鈥 鈥 neither of which are salaries 鈥 and the related category of 鈥榦ther incentive payments.鈥欌

Administration鈥檚 Response: On the contrary, any such limited interpretation of the statutory prohibition against incentive compensation would 鈥渄efeat the purpose鈥 of the law. For example, if salaries were exempted from the ban, nothing would stop 鈥渆ducational institutions from making commission-and-bonus-like payments and calling them salaries or salary adjustments.鈥 After all, 鈥渢he difference between providing a recruiter a $1,000 bonus for enrolling more than 100 students and adjusting that recruiter鈥檚 salary upward by $1,000 for the same performance is in name only.鈥

鈥淚n enacting the HEA, Congress sought to ban compensation that incentivized success in securing enrollments and financial aid, not merely compensation that was given a particular name.鈥

Conclusion

In summing up, the administration points out the career college group鈥檚 real motivation for trying to kill the incentive compensation regulation: 鈥淧laintiff鈥檚 preference for the safe harbors lies not in their clarity, but in their leniency.鈥 At Higher Ed Watch, we couldn’t agree more. For years, the giant for-profit higher education companies used the safe harbors . Now, as the rules are about to change, their lobbyists are willing to say just about anything to keep the gravy train rolling — even if it means making up their own “facts” to do so.

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Stephen Burd
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Stephen Burd

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Obama Administration Comes Out Swinging Against Career College Association Lawsuit