[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 39 (Tuesday, March 15, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1615-S1617]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
WESTWOOD COLLEGE AND THE GI BILL
Mr. DURBIN. Madam President, I have come to the Senate floor a number
of times over the past year to speak about my concerns about the rapid
growth of for-profit colleges. I believe some for-profit colleges are
quality institutions, but I also believe many are taking advantage of
Federal taxpayer dollars and doing more harm than good for unsuspecting
students. In no area is this issue more important than when it comes to
our veterans.
A few years ago, I proudly joined Senator James Webb of Virginia, who
said to me when he came to the Senate 5 years ago: I want to pass a new
GI bill. It is my No. 1 priority. And he did it. Thank goodness, he
did. This is a man--a veteran of the Vietnam conflict who served in the
U.S. Marines and later as Secretary of the Navy--who knows what he is
talking about when it comes to veterans. He helped put together the
modern GI bill, and I am proud to have voted for it, as many of us did.
When we passed that bill, we provided veterans with improved benefits
to go to college. Veterans can receive up to $17,000 a year to cover
the cost of tuition, fees, housing, and supplies at the college of
their choice. Veterans can also access private schools through the
Yellow Ribbon Program, which allows the VA to pay a portion of private
school tuition under agreements with these schools.
A lot of students are using the GI bill to attend for-profit colleges
which are far more expensive than their public counterparts and even
more expensive than many private not-for-profit universities. There is
a rapid growth in veteran enrollment in these for-profit schools. For-
profit schools cost an average of $14,000 a year compared to $2,500 a
year at public 2-year colleges and $7,000 at public 4-year
universities.
In the first year of the post-9/11 GI bill implementation, the
Veterans' Administration spent $697 million on students attending
public schools and $640 million on students attending for-profit
schools--almost the same. But we educated far more students for our
money in public schools--203,000 students at public schools compared to
76,000 at for-profit schools, which charge two or three times as much
for tuition and obviously educate one-half to one-third of what the
public schools educated.
The top five for-profit recipients of the post-9/11 dollars received
over $320 million from the Department of Veterans Affairs last year:
ITT received $79 million; Apollo, which is the University of Phoenix,
$76.9 million; Education Management Corporation, $60.5 million; Career
Education Corporation, $58.2 million; and DeVry, $47.9 million.
There are reports of for-profit colleges aggressively targeting
military servicemembers and veterans with expensive ad campaigns and
hundreds of recruiters. One prominent for-profit college has 452
recruiters focusing on recruiting veterans out of the military. Another
employs 300. Why do they want these students? Because when they bring
the students in under the GI bill, they get compensated at higher
levels by the Federal Government. We have a limit that says that none
of these for-profit schools can take more than 90 percent of their
revenue out of the Federal Treasury. That is money that comes in
through Pell grants and Federal college loans. When it comes to the GI
bill, we raised the 90 percent. So these schools that argue: We are
just in the private sector, just little businesses, get more than 90
percent of their revenue from the Federal Government. They are the most
heavily subsidized private businesses in America. It is time for us to
ask, Are the taxpayers getting their money's worth? Are the veterans
getting their money's worth?
It is troublesome when these schools spend so much money on
recruiting students instead of educating them. I am concerned. The
current system allows for-profit colleges to earn millions of dollars
from taxpayer-funded programs while providing a low-quality education
to students. We need to put the brakes on for-profit colleges that are
targeting veterans to reap profits from taxpayers' dollars.
Last week, the Department of Veterans Affairs announced that it and
the Texas Veterans Commission had disqualified three Texas campuses of
Westwood College. They could no longer receive GI bill benefits.
Westwood College is a for-profit college based out of Colorado, with 17
locations in 6 States--several in Illinois.
When I drive to O'Hare, I am on the Kennedy Expressway, and I look up
and there is this office building and a big, huge sign, ``Westwood
College.'' Wow, the campus of Westwood College.
I know one of the students who went to Westwood College. This is a
young lady who decided she needed to improve her life after high school
and wanted to get into law enforcement. She enrolled at Westwood
College to get a bachelor's degree in law enforcement. Five years
later, they handed her a diploma at Westwood College. She went to the
Chicago police department, and they said: We don't recognize that
college; that is not a real college. All of the law enforcement in the
region said to her: Westwood is not a real college; this is not a real
diploma. She learned that to her disappointment, and she also learned
to her disappointment that she had incurred
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$90,000 in college student loans for this worthless Westwood College
diploma.
Now the Veterans' Administration has disqualified three Westwood
College campuses in Texas for their recruiting tactics when it comes to
our veterans--a lesson learned and a word of warning. This action
against Westwood was in response to findings of erroneous, deceptive,
misleading advertising and enrollment practices at the Houston South,
Dallas, and Fort Worth campuses.
The Department of Veterans Affairs began its investigation after the
GAO report on recruiting practices at for-profit colleges. They sent
undercover applicants to 15 of these for-profit colleges. They found
that all 15 made deceptive or otherwise questionable statements to
potential applicants, including Westwood. Investigators found
admissions representatives at Westwood misstating the cost of programs,
failing to disclose graduation rates, and even suggesting that
applicants falsify Federal financial aid forms.
When asked about the cost of the program by the undercover
investigator, the recruiter replied:
It depends on the program. Usually a bachelor's program,
coming in with no college credits, this could be--it could
range from $50,000 to $75,000. Most schools, more traditional
schools, you're looking at about $100,000 to $150,000 to
$200,000.
That isn't true. To obtain the same degree from a public university
in Texas would cost the student $36,000.
Another financial aid counselor told a student with $250,000 in the
bank that he should not report that money on his Federal financial aid
forms, counter to Department of Education requirements.
The Westwood representative said, ``Frankly, in my opinion, they
don't need to know how much cash you have.''
In December, the Texas Workforce Commission fined Westwood College
$41,000 and put its Texas campuses on probation for the high-pressure
recruiting practices that GAO discovered. And Westwood's online
operation was put out of business in Texas for operating without a
certificate of approval. Wisconsin has also banned Westwood from
enrolling its students online.
These are not the only problems that have arisen at Westwood College.
Former recruiters have spoken out about the high-pressure sales tactics
they were encouraged to use at Westwood. Recruiters talk about how they
were given a script and told to make prospective students ``feel their
pain.''
Joshua Pruyn testified before the Senate HELP Committee as an
admissions officer for Westwood College. He testified about how he was
taught that enrolling a student was a psychological game.
Recruiters told students that they could only be accepted into
Westwood by interviewing with and securing a recommendation from an
admissions representative. But in reality there was no standard for
enrollment.
Joshua testified:
A student only needed a high school diploma or GED and $100
for the application fee. This fake interview would allow the
representative to ask students questions to uncover a
student's motivators and pain points--their hopes, fears, and
insecurities--all of which would later be used to pressure a
student to enroll.
And I have heard from a number of former students of Westwood College
in my State. They tell me of being lied to by recruiters and being
buried under a mountain of debt for a degree that they are afraid will
be worthless.
Westwood College is accredited by a national accrediting agency.
Because Westwood lacks regional accreditation, some employers such as
the Illinois State Police will not consider graduates for employment.
It also means that credits from Westwood College will not be accepted
by most traditional public and non-profit colleges.
Westwood admits this on its Web site, which states:
Credits earned at Westwood College are typically not
transferable to other colleges or universities.
How do they explain this to prospective students on the Web site?
As a career-focused college, we offer a hands-on approach
to learning that's different--though, we believe, no less
valuable--than approaches students may experience at other
colleges and universities.
But the real story is that traditional colleges do not view credits
earned at Westwood as equivalent to their courses.
Jason Longmore is a Navy veteran from Colorado who spent 6 months at
Westwood College. His story was recently highlighted in a New York
Times article. About his experience, Jason says ``I felt like I made a
horrible, horrible decision.'' After 6 months, he left and had to
repeat classes elsewhere because his Westwood credits wouldn't
transfer.
I have heard similar stories from my constituents. Bret, from
Rockford, attended Westwood for a year and a half. He told me that his
education was very low in quality and that his credits weren't accepted
at any traditional schools. He says, ``I now have a mountain of debt
and literally a degree that means absolutely nothing.''
When I met with a former Westwood College student named Michelle in
Chicago, she told me that Westwood repeatedly promised that regional
accreditation was right around the corner.
That never happened. Westwood College was pursuing accreditation from
the Higher Learning Commission, a regional accrediting agency. The
Higher Learning Commission declined to accredit Westwood and its
application was withdrawn last November.
And at least one Westwood campus is in trouble with its national
accreditor as well.
The Accrediting Commission of Career Schools and Colleges placed
Westwood's Denver North campus on probation in September. The
accreditor's notice states that Westwood ``has not demonstrated
compliance with the Commission's requirements relative to student
achievement outcomes'' and that it ``is gravely concerned about the
recruiting activities of the system of Westwood affiliated
institutions.''
Many students who enroll at Westwood aren't sticking around long
enough to graduate.
The Senate HELP Committee made official information requests of 30
for-profit companies, including the company that owns Westwood.
According to that information, 2,500 students were enrolled as
associate's degree students in 2008-2009. By September 2010, 57.6
percent of those students had withdrawn from the school.
One of the Westwood campuses in Illinois has a graduation rate of
just 32 percent.
The evidence suggests that Westwood may be more focused on enrolling
students than supporting their academic success. I am glad to see the
VA take action to address this issue.
Congress gave the VA additional tools to do so at the end of our last
session with the Post-9/11 GI Bill Improvements Act of 2010.
The VA will soon have greater flexibility to act on its own to
disapprove courses at schools that abuse student-veterans.
We also gave the State approving agencies, which work hand-in-hand
with the VA to monitor course quality, authority to disapprove courses
provided at schools that fail to follow the rules, regardless of the
State in which the school is located.
These are important changes to VA's oversight authority at a time
when distance learning takes on greater significance and for-profit
schools are recruiting nationwide from call centers in various
locations.
I am glad that the VA has taken action to identify colleges like
Westwood using abusive practices and end their participation in the VA
education benefits program. But we have to do more for our veterans and
all our students.
I don't think Westwood will be the only college facing scrutiny under
the G.I. bill program. I met with Secretary Shinseki this week and
asked him to take more aggressive steps to identify colleges misusing
the G.I. bill program. Veterans deserve to know that they have real
support at their school and that their education will be meaningful
when they are considering college or enrolled in college.
I will continue to work with my colleagues, including Chairman Harkin
and Senator Webb, to address this important issue.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Missouri.
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