NEVER MIND that the higher education plans of tens of thousands of students will be disrupted.
Or that 8,000 people will lose their jobs. Or that American taxpayers
could be on the hook for hundreds of millions of dollars in forgiven
student loans. What is apparently of most importance to the Obama
administration is its ideological opposition to for-profit colleges and
universities. That’s a harsh conclusion, but it is otherwise hard to
explain why the Education Department has unabashedly used administrative
muscle to destroy another company in the beleaguered industry.
What is so troubling about the department’s aggressive move — which experts presciently called a death sentence — is that not a single allegation of wrongdoing has been proven against the school. Maybe the government is right about ITT’s weaknesses, but its unilateral action without any semblance of due process is simply wrong. “Inappropriate and unconstitutional,” said ITT officials.
Such unfairness sadly is a hallmark of the Obama administration policy toward higher education’s for-profit sector. It has singled out the industry for stringent employment and student loan rules and stepped up enforcement with stiff sanctions that, as The Post’s Danielle Douglas-Gabriel reported, have some companies on the brink of ruin.
There is no question that there are shady for-profit colleges and universities that take advantage of students by saddling them with debt and failing to give them marketable skills. They should not be in business. But then the same can be said for some public and private schools, whose wretched weaknesses the government seems glad to overlook.
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