Oppose the Kline-Foxx Amendment to the FY 2011 Continuing Resolution
April 1, 2011
Contact: Iris Chavez, 202-833-6130
The Honorable Harry Reid
Majority Leader
United States Senate
S-221, Capitol Building
Washington, DC 20510-0001
RE: Oppose the Kline-Foxx Amendment to the FY 2011 Continuing Resolution
Dear Leader Reid:
Thank you for your leadership in making college affordable for more students, especially low-
income students. Your past efforts to increase the maximum Pell grant amount, strengthen the
federal student loan program, and enhance educational opportunities for members of the military
and veterans have gone a long way to ensuring access to post-secondary education for all
students. These steps are essential to reach the President’s goal of having the highest college
graduation rate in the world by 2020.
But, we do nothing for students or our nation if we just guarantee access to debt without a
serious opportunity for college completion. The Department of Education’s proposed gainful
employment regulation recognizes that some current career education programs are so toxic that
they doom students to a lifetime of debt burden and waste millions of precious taxpayer dollars.
The Kline-Foxx amendment to H.R. 1 would prohibit the Department of Education from doing
the minimum needed to protect students and taxpayers from the most toxic choices and would
allow the continued flow of federal dollars into programs that have been, at best, ineffective and,
at worst, routinely leaving students much worse off than when they enrolled. Specifically, the
amendment would eliminate funding to:
- Enforce existing regulations that ensure students receive the kind of basic consumer information they need to make an informed choice about a career education program; and
- Finalize or implement any gainful employment regulation to protect students and taxpayers from wasteful career education programs at any type of college.
Sincerely,
AFL-CIO
American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers
American Association of University Professors
American Association of University Women
American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees Local 3299
American Federation of Teachers
Americans for Financial Reform
Asian Pacific American Labor Alliance
Campaign for College Affordability
Campus Progress
Center for Law and Social Policy
Children’s Defense Fund
The Coalition of Labor Union Women
Consumer Action
Council for Opportunity in Education
Dēmos: A Network for Ideas and Action
The Education Trust
GLSEN
The Greenlining Institute
The Institute for College Access & Success and its Project on Student Debt
Labor Council for Latin American Advancement
The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights
League of United Latin American Citizens
Legal Momentum (formerly the Women’s Legal Defense and Education Fund)
National Association for Bilingual Education
National Consumer Law Center (on behalf of its low-income clients)
National Council of La Raza
National Education Association
National Organization for Women
Neighborhood Economic Development Advocacy Project
Pride at Work
Public Advocates Inc.
Public Citizen
Public Higher Education Network of Massachusetts
United States Hispanic Leadership Institute
U.S. PIRG
United States Student Association
VetJobs
Young Invincibles
cc:
The Honorable Arne Duncan, Secretary of Education
The Honorable Jacob “Jack” Lew, Director, Office of Management and Budget
Melody Barnes, Director, Domestic Policy Council
Valerie Jarrett, Senior White House Advisor
Gene Sperling, Director, National Economic Council
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