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Our Biggest Disappointments (With Final Higher Ed Bill)

July 31, 2008 - 4:23pm

By Ben Miller, Stephen Burd, and Sara Mead

Yesterday, Higher Ed Watch highlighted our favorite provisions in the final version of legislation to reauthorize the Higher Education Act. With Congress poised to approve the bill today and send it to President Bush for his signature, we take a critical look at the parts of the legislation that fail to close loopholes, open new areas for potential exploitation, and weaken existing accountability frameworks.

  • Easing Restrictions on Trade Schools

For-profit colleges' lobbyists are exuberant about the reauthorization legislation. And who can blame them? Congress has gutted a key consumer protection provision that the career college lobbyists have been trying to kill since it was first introduced in 1992. The provision, which is known as the "90-10 rule," was intended to crack down on unscrupulous trade schools. It requires proprietary institutions to receive at least 10 percent of their revenue from sources other than federal student aid in order to participate in the aid programs. Congress' legislation would keep the requirement in place, but takes all the teeth out of it.

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