The Department of Education and Secretary Betsy DeVos were hit with a lawsuit on Wednesday from the National Student Legal Defense Network (Student Defense) over the repeal of an Obama administration regulation that they say protects students at for-profit schools and career college programs.
Those in favor of the rule say it protects borrowers from unaffordable loans.
The Department of Education repealed the law in 2019, after previously pausing regulations that imposed requirements on for-profit higher education institutions.
Student Defense filed the legal action against the education department in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California. AFT and Student Defense are calling for a reverse of DeVos’s decision and reinstatement of the regulations for for-profit colleges.
Randi Weingarten, the President of AFT, criticized DeVos for siding “with profiteers, not borrowers.”
“Rather than simply sticking with a rule that protects students, she writes a new one on behalf of her for-profit college friends—and can’t even get the details right,“ she said in a Wednesday statement. ”This error-ridden repeal would be comical if the stakes weren’t so high, but for borrowers confronting a lifetime of debt and worthless degrees, their lives are literally on the line.”
“The current rules would unfairly and arbitrarily limit students’ ability to pursue certain types of higher education and career training programs. We need to expand, not limit, paths to higher education for students, while also continuing to hold accountable those institutions that do not serve students well.”
The lawsuit alleges that the department did not follow the law in repealing the Obama-era rule by misinterpreting “the evidence that supported the gainful employment rule.”
Department of Education press secretary Angela Morabito said in a statement to The Epoch Times that “the Department will vigorously defend its final regulation rescinding this deeply flawed rule.”