With increasing scrutiny of the for-profit school industry, the 90–10 rule has again become controversial. Many groups are advocating modification of the rule.
Including military and veteran benefits Military and veteran benefits, such as the
GI Bill and
Department of Defense Tuition Assistance Program, are not subject to the 90–10 cap. Many for-profit colleges sought to take advantage of this exclusion and focused their recruiting on troops and veterans. In 2012, the
Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pension Committee investigation revealed the deceptive practices some for-profit colleges use to recruit troops and veterans. Recruiters faced significant pressure to attract military veterans; some recruiters were found to falsely promise that veterans and military benefits would cover the full cost of school. Others published military-themed websites, such as GIBill.com, to push troops and veterans toward for-profit colleges. This report helped jumpstart an effort among some Congressional lawmakers and military and veterans' groups to have military and veteran benefits included in the 90–10 cap. Many members of Congress, including Representative
Jackie Speier and Senators
Dick Durbin,
Tom Carper, and
Richard Blumenthal introduced legislation to close this "loophole". None of these efforts succeeded.
Career Education Colleges and Universities, previously known as the Association of Private Sector Colleges and Universities. Many proprietary colleges receive more than 90% of their revenue from federal sources if military and veteran benefits are included in the calculation. A 2014 report from
the Center for Investigative Reporting showed that more than 133 schools would fail the 90–10 rule if military and veteran benefits were included. Efforts to make this change continue. In 2015, Durbin introduced legislation to include military and veteran benefits in the 90–10 cap. The bill remains stuck in the
Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pension Committee. President
Barack Obama expressed support for the bill shortly after its introduction. In 2015, Secretary
Hillary Clinton expressed support for including military and veteran education benefits in the 90% cap.
Reducing the cap to 85–15 Some lawmakers are also trying to lower the percentage of revenue a for-profit school can receive from federal funds from 90% to 85%. If military and veteran benefits were included in this lower cap, the Center for Investigative Reporting found that an additional 292 schools would fail the standard. ==References==