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Students who attended defunct CollegeAmerica in Colorado to receive $130M in federal student loan relief

The Biden administration will provide $130 million in student-loan relief to 7,400 students who attended CollegeAmerica’s three Colorado campuses after the U.S. Department of Education determined the defunct college’s parent company widely misrepresented the benefits of its education, state and federal officials announced Tuesday.

The relief, in the form of loan forgiveness and refunds of payments already made, will apply to people who were students at the Denver, Fort Collins and Colorado Springs campuses between 2006 and 2020, officials said.

The Colorado Attorney General’s Office aided in the Education Department’s multi-year investigation of the college, which closed its three Colorado campuses in 2020.

CollegeAmerica, which also had locations Arizona, offered associate degrees in business, computer technology and medical assisting, and bachelor’s degrees in business and computer science.

“CollegeAmerica knowingly took advantage of students by luring them into high-priced, low-quality programs with promises of high-earning potential and job placement that it knew were not attainable,” Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser said in a statement Tuesday. “Protecting borrowers from predatory lending and helping Coloradans navigate through student loan burdens will continue to be a priority for our office.”

Borrowers will receive the relief regardless of whether they filed a “borrower defense to repayment” application, officials said.

The relief wipes out all federal student debt acquired from CollegeAmerica brick-and-mortar campuses in Colorado during the specified time frame. The federal government also will refund payments eligible CollegeAmerica Colorado borrowers already have made toward their loans, although officials did not know how much that will amount to.

The Department of Education will begin notifying eligible borrowers in August about the debt relief. Borrowers will see any remaining loan balances zeroed out and credit trade lines deleted, officials said.

Total tuition costs at CollegeAmerica ranged from around $40,000 to complete an associate degree to $75,000 to earn a bachelor’s, according to school catalogs online.

Education Department investigators determined CollegeAmerica’s parent company, the Salt Lake City-based Center for Excellence in Higher Education, widely misrepresented graduates’ salaries and employment rates, the programs the college offered and the terms of a private loan the school offered.

For example, the investigation found the Center for Excellence in Higher Education prominently advertised to students that its graduates would earn high salaries when, in fact, the center’s data showed Colorado CollegeAmerica graduates earned just $25,000, on average, five years out of school — less than the salaries of high school graduates, officials said.

CollegeAmerica’s Colorado campuses also advertised inflated and falsified job placement rates of 70% when internal figures showed the real number was 40%.

“These are only two of the substantial misrepresentations CollegeAmerica made,” Federal Student Aid Chief Richard Cordray said in a call with reporters.

Weiser said CollegeAmerica graduates in Colorado were so ensnared in student debt — while often left without the training and education they were promised — that three years post-graduation, only 16% of students were able to pay back their student loan principal.

The Center for Excellence in Higher Education wrongfully told students its private loan was “affordable,” when it was aware that in some years as many as 70% of CollegeAmerica borrowers enrolled at the Colorado campuses defaulted, the department said.

The shuttered college was mired in years of investigations and litigation, beginning in 2012 when the Colorado attorney general probed the Center for Excellence in Higher Education and its leadership, culminating in a bench trial and, in 2020, a judgment favoring the state.

The Colorado Attorney General’s Office shared more than 300 trial exhibits with the Education Department, including internal policies, procedures and emails from the Center for Excellence in Higher Education. The department also reviewed trial testimony given under oath from 40 witnesses including experts, former students and center officials.

The department reached its conclusions based on its independent review of the Colorado evidence, as well as information from other borrower defense applications, the news release said.

Weiser said during a call with reporters Tuesday that litigation remains ongoing pertaining to Colorado CollegeAmerica borrowers who took out private loans, but that he could not discuss the pending case.

Since 2019, the Weiser-led Colorado Department of Law has secured more than $320 million in refunds or student debt relief for more than 23,400 Coloradans, the news release said.

Nationally, the Biden administration has approved $14.7 billion in relief for 1.1 million borrowers whose colleges took advantage of them or abruptly closed, the news release said.

“While my predecessor looked the other way when colleges defrauded students and borrowers — I promised to take this on directly, and provide borrowers with the relief they need and deserve,” Biden said in a Tuesday statement about the student loan relief in Colorado. “As long as I am president, we will never stop fighting to deliver relief to borrowers, hold bad actors accountable, and bring the promise of college to more Americans.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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