Student Loans for Homeless People?

Let’s hope law schools don’t figure out this trick pioneered by a New Jersey college. Bloomberg Businessweek reports:

Drake College of Business, a for- profit higher education company based in New Jersey, suspended its recruiting of students from homeless shelters while accreditors scrutinize the practice.

For those who keep telling me that discharging student loans through bankruptcy would make banks more cautious before giving out student loans, I say “good!” I’m worried about equal access to education. But I’m somewhat confident a bank can distinguish between a low income student that gets into a T-14 law school, and a homeless person that gets recruited to Drake College of Fleecing Business.

I’m mean, taking in student loan money is the school’s only business model for God’s sake…

The economic model of Drake College of Business makes me cry:

Closely held Drake, which trains medical and dental assistants, relied on taxpayers for 87 percent of revenue in 2007 through federal financial aid programs. Almost 5 percent of the student body at its Newark, New Jersey, branch is homeless, said Jean Aoun, director of admissions and student services. In 2008, Drake began offering a $350 biweekly stipend to students who showed up for 80 percent of classes and received “Cs” for their work,

How is this legal? I mean, we all see what is going on here, right? Drake is going up to homeless people, offering them $700 a month, and in exchange Drake gets tens of thousands of dollars from the taxpayers in the form of tuition assistance to the needy. Here’s how much they charge:

How is this not a scam?

“We do not believe that recruiting at shelters is either illegal, unethical or immoral so long as the recruitment of students from shelters is above board, which it has been,” Ziad Fadel, Drake’s president, said in an e-mail today. The school is halting the practice “for the time being” because of “adverse publicity” and a regulatory inquiry, he said.

“Notwithstanding, we would accept a qualified applicant who lives at a homeless shelter who is referred to Drake,” he said.

Don’t get me wrong, I want homeless people to have the opportunity to better themselves through education. But I refuse to accept that false choice that either Drake is allowed to fleece taxpayers by recruiting homeless people with the promise of $350 and a hot meal, or homeless people will be shut out from educational opportunities.

If Drake really wants to do homeless people outreach, how about letting them go to school for free, with a requirement that they pay Drake some nominal fee should the education ever lead to a freaking job. Right now, all Drake is doing is trying to see how many homeless people it can jump on its skateboard.

For-Profit N.J. College Halts Recruiting of Homeless [Bloomberg Businessweek]

Earlier: Supreme Court Tackles Student Loan Debt

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