Policy & Legal: Page 43


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    Advocates call for reform of federal student loan default system

    With federal student loan payments set to resume in May, TICAS suggests changes like income-driven repayment expansion.

    By Feb. 24, 2022
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    Connecticut colleges oppose state bill to ban legacy admissions

    Institutions argued policymakers shouldn't dictate admissions decisions and that they might be tempted to exercise more control in the future.

    By Feb. 23, 2022
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    Texas lieutenant governor vows to end tenure at public colleges

    Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick attacked a UT-Austin faculty resolution affirming the right to teach racial topics. The university's president responded, defending tenure.

    By Feb. 22, 2022
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    Scott Olson via Getty Images
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    Ed Dept erases $415M in student loans, seeks to recoup money from DeVry

    Borrower defense to repayment discharges cover students who attended for-profits including DeVry, Westwood, ITT, and the Minnesota School of Business.

    By Feb. 16, 2022
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    Georgia system names former Trump official Sonny Perdue as new chancellor

    The former governor of the state endured withering criticism for his lack of higher education experience. He is set to start in April.

    By Updated March 1, 2022
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    5 state higher education budget proposals to watch

    Many governors are seeking heavy increases in spending on public colleges, enabled by federal coronavirus aid that helped cushion state finances.

    By Feb. 14, 2022
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    Opinion

    Biden's first year of higher ed policy was bittersweet at best

    Little love can be lost for a Biden-Harris administration yet to deliver on many campaign promises to colleges and students, argues a higher ed researcher.

    By Avery M. D. Davis • Feb. 14, 2022
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    Ed Department drops Title IX investigation of BYU's treatment of LGBTQ students

    The Office for Civil Rights lacks jurisdiction over allegations of discrimination against LGBTQ students because of religious exemptions to federal law.

    By Rick Seltzer • Feb. 11, 2022
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    Megan Quinn/Higher Ed Dive
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    US House passes bill to make Pell grants available for retraining programs

    The jobs crisis has been top of mind for employer-facing interest groups, particularly those with a voice at the federal level.

    By Kathryn Moody • Feb. 10, 2022
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    Indiana House speaker resigns as College Board executive

    Todd Huston left his six-figure position after being criticized for voting in favor of an anti-critical race theory bill that would affect K-12 schools.

    By Feb. 9, 2022
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    Higher Ed Dive’s 2022 Outlooks

    Here are the trends and questions facing higher education that we're watching, from enrollment pressures to key court cases and for-profit colleges' future.

    By Higher Ed Dive Staff • Feb. 8, 2022
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    The image by Farragutful is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0
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    Higher ed groups call for stricter oversight of accreditors

    Accreditors that manage low-performing colleges are seldom disciplined, 16 experts and advocacy groups wrote to the Education Department.

    By Feb. 7, 2022
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    Public colleges must change accreditors every 5 years, Florida bill proposes

    Lawmakers introduced legislation shortly after an accreditor inquired into political influence at two of the state's universities.

    By Feb. 4, 2022
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    The image by Ken Lund is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0
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    Federal Title IX probe into Brigham Young U unlikely to yield consequences

    It's another chapter in a long struggle over LGBTQ rights on campuses, but the Mormon institution has a religious exemption from anti-discrimination law.

    By Feb. 3, 2022
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    How does higher ed define a rural-serving college?

    The Alliance for Research on Regional Colleges created metrics for gauging an institution's rurality and wants policymakers to take note of its findings.

    By Feb. 1, 2022
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    Virginia AG elevates wife of GOP donor to George Mason's interim top legal post

    The pick comes weeks after new Republican AG Jason Miyares fired counsels at U of Virginia and George Mason, spurring concerns the move was political.

    By Jan. 28, 2022
  • U.S. Education Secretary Miguel Cardona speaks about his vision for education in America at an address Jan. 27, 2022 in Washington, D.C.
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    Cardona calls for 'reset' in US education system

    The U.S. secretary of education specifically urged schools to address pre-pandemic inequities and support students who are academically behind.

    By Kara Arundel • Jan. 27, 2022
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    SUNY stops withholding transcripts from students with debt

    The move by the nation's largest public comprehensive higher ed system represents a win in a campaign to end the practice.

    By Jan. 26, 2022
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    Supreme Court agrees to hear race-conscious admissions challenge against Harvard and UNC-Chapel Hill

    Court combines cases challenging race as one of several admissions factors, fueling speculation its conservative majority could strike down the practice.

    By Rick Seltzer • Jan. 24, 2022
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    U of Florida can't control professors' participation in lawsuits, judge rules

    A preliminary injunction means the institution currently can't enforce a controversial conflict-of-interest policy that spurred three academics to sue.

    By Jan. 21, 2022
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    Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will examine private student lending

    The CFPB will look at practices like colleges restricting enrollment for students behind on loan payments and accelerating payments for those who withdraw.

    By Rick Seltzer • Jan. 20, 2022
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    Former Kentucky State president sues financially embattled university for $270K severance

    M. Christopher Brown II alleges he was forced to resign, but the university argues he breached his contract by mismanaging the budget. 

    By Jan. 18, 2022
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    Student loan giant Navient inks $1.85B settlement over fraud claims

    The company will cancel the student loan debt of about 66,000 borrowers in an agreement with 39 state attorneys general.

    By Jan. 13, 2022
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    SCOTUS upholds stay on OSHA’s vaccine mandate

    The justices opted to dissolve injunctions placed on a separate vaccination mandate for healthcare workers.

    By Ryan Golden • Jan. 13, 2022
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    6 higher education lawsuits to watch in 2022

    We're keeping an eye on cases including a challenge to affirmative action that could reach the Supreme Court and alleged price fixing by wealthy colleges.

    By Jan. 11, 2022