97-10530. Request For Comments Concerning Guides For Private Vocational Schools  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 78 (Wednesday, April 23, 1997)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 19703-19704]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-10530]
    
    
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    FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
    
    16 CFR PART 254
    
    
    Request For Comments Concerning Guides For Private Vocational 
    Schools
    
    AGENCY: Federal Trade Commission.
    
    ACTION: Supplemental request for public comments.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Federal Trade Commission (``Commission'') is requesting 
    public comments on a proposal to amend its Guides for Private 
    Vocational Schools to add a provision addressing deceptive express or 
    implied claims of job placement success.
    
    DATES: Written comments will be accepted until June 23, 1997.
    
    ADDRESSES: Comments should be directed to: Secretary, Federal Trade 
    Commission, Room H-159, Sixth Street and Pennsylvania Ave., NW., 
    Washington, DC 20580. Comments about the Guides for Private Vocational 
    Schools should be identified as ``16 CFR Part 254--Comment.''
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
    Joseph J. Koman, Jr., (202) 326-3014, or Walter Gross III, (202) 326-
    3319, Federal Trade Commission, Bureau of Consumer Protection, Sixth 
    Street and Pennsylvania Ave., NW., Washington, DC 20580.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Background
    
        As part of the Commission's systematic review of all of its rules 
    and guides to assess their continued need and usefulness, the Guides 
    for Private Vocational Schools were scheduled for review in 1996 (61 FR 
    1538 (Jan. 22, 1996)). These reviews seek information about the costs 
    and benefits of the Commission's rules and guides and their regulatory 
    and economic impact. The information obtained assists the Commission in 
    identifying rules and guides that warrant modification or recision. On 
    April 3, 1996, the Commission published a notice in the Federal 
    Register requesting public comments on the Vocational Schools Guides 
    (61 FR 14685). The comment period, originally scheduled to end on May 
    3, 1996, was subsequently extended to July 1, 1996 (61 FR 19869 (May 3, 
    1996)). Nine comments were filed in response to the notice. The 
    comments indicate that there is support in all sectors (including other 
    government agencies, consumer groups and the vocational schools 
    industry) for retaining the Guides, although some industry commenters 
    recommended repealing them.
    
    II. Description of the Guides
    
        The Guides were originally issued in May, 1972, and became 
    effective August 4, 1972. The are intended to advise proprietary 
    businesses offering vocational training courses, either on the school's 
    premises or through correspondence, how to avoid unfair or deceptive 
    advertising and promotional claims when recruiting students. 
    Specifically, the Guides address claims that are descriptive of the 
    school, such as potentially deceptive trade or business names, and 
    claims about accreditation, content of curricula, teachers' 
    qualifications, teaching methods, affiliations with other private or 
    public institutions, and approval by other agencies or institutions. 
    The Guides also address misleading representations regarding financial 
    assistance, program costs, and savings. Schools are cautioned to avoid 
    using the help-wanted sections of newspaper classified advertising for 
    lead generation or misleading prospective students about such matters 
    as opportunities for employment while undergoing training. Finally, the 
    Guides address appropriate disclosures as to the nature of courses or 
    training programs available, misleading pictorial representations, and 
    sales and debt collection practices.
        These Guides, like other industry guides issued by the Commission, 
    ``are administrative interpretations of laws administered by the 
    Commission for the guidance of the public in conducting its affairs in 
    conformity with legal requirements.'' 16 CFR 1.5. Conduct inconsistent 
    with the Guides may result in corrective action by the Commission under 
    applicable statutory provisions.
    
    III. The Review of the Guides
    
        Based upon the comments received in this review, as well as its own 
    independent assessment of the need for these Guides, the Commission has 
    determined to retain the Guides for Private Vocational Schools. The 
    Commission recognizes that there is some overlap between its Guides and 
    regulations of the Department of Education. Because the Department of 
    Education administers student loan and grant money for vocational 
    training, it plays the primary role in addressing abuses in this 
    industry. There is a concurrent role for the Commission, however, in 
    monitoring and addressing deceptive promotional practices.\1\ State 
    licensing agencies also regulate vocational training. Increasingly, 
    however, vocational schools are owned by national or regional chains; 
    thus, maintaining a federal enforcement presence remains important.
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        \1\ It is the Commission's understanding that the Department of 
    Education must use its investigative and enforcement resources to 
    address practices primarily occurring after a student has signed up 
    for training, rather than advertising and promotional practices that 
    take place during recruitment of students.
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        The Commission proposes certain modifications to its Guides for 
    Private Vocational Schools. Some of these changes are an effort to 
    streamline the Guides and eliminate redundancy, while others are 
    substantive.
        In particular, the Commission solicits written public comments 
    regarding its proposal to amend the Guides to add a provision 
    addressing misrepresentations about a school's placement success 
    following training. Currently, the Guides address claims about 
    placement assistance offered to graduates of a school. They do not, 
    however, address false or deceptive claims about the availability of 
    employment after graduation from a course of training or the success 
    that a school's graduates have realized in obtaining employment related 
    to the training. The Commission believes that such claims are important 
    to prospective students of vocational training and are likely to become 
    even more important in the future.
        At the same time, in order to streamline the Guides, the Commission 
    has preliminary determined to delete certain provisions that do not 
    offer specific guidance concerning vocational schools and merely 
    duplicate other provisions of law. These include Guide provisions that 
    address deceptive pricing (Secs. 254.8(a) and (b)); use of the word 
    ``free'' (Sec. 254.8(c)); deceptive debt collection practices 
    (Sec. 254.9(a)); and assignment of contracts deceptively obtained 
    (Sec. 254.9(b)). For example the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, 15 
    U.S.C. 1692, and the Commission's Trade Regulation Rule pertaining to 
    the Preservation of Consumers' Claims and Defense (the ``Holder-in-Due-
    Course Rule''), 16 CFR 433, have superseded the provisions in the 
    Vocational Schools Guides that pertain to those areas.
        In order to further streamline the Guides, the Commission also has
    
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    preliminarily determined to delete section 254.10, ``Affirmative 
    disclosures prior to enrollment.'' Subsections (a) through (d) of this 
    section address school policy concerning attendance, lateness, and 
    make-up work; additional costs a student might incur; the school's 
    physical facilities and equipment; and placement assistance offered by 
    the school. To the extent they are needed, discussion of these issues 
    can be folded into prior sections of the Guides dealing with 
    misrepresentations and deceptive practices, possibly as examples of 
    suggested disclosures that might prevent deception. Finally, section 
    254.10(e) of the Guides advises affirmative disclosure of any 
    ``material facts [other than those specifically addressed in 
    subsections (a)-(d) of this section] concerning the school and the 
    program of instruction or course which are reasonably likely to affect 
    the decision of the student to enroll therein.'' Such a general 
    admonishment adds little to the more specific advice set out in the 
    remainder of the Guides. This provision merely amounts to a statement 
    of the law concerning failure to disclose material facts and therefore 
    appears unnecessary.
    
    IV. Request for Comment
    
        The Commission solicits public comments on the following questions:
        1. Should the Guides be amended to add the following provision to 
    Sec. 254.4? (e) An industry member, in promoting any course of training 
    in its advertising, promotional materials or in any other manner, 
    should not misrepresent, directly or by implication, whether through 
    the use of text, images, endorsements,* or other means, the 
    availability of employment after graduation from a course of training, 
    or the success that the member's graduates have realized in obtaining 
    such employment.
    
        *Note: The Commission's Guides Concerning Use of Endorsements 
    and Testimonials in Advertising (part 255 of this chapter) provide 
    further guidance in this area.
    
        2. Are there currently problems in the vocational schools industry 
    with use of the kinds of claims addressed in the proposed addition to 
    the Guides? If yes, please describe.
        3. Are there other issues, relevant to a prospective student's 
    decision to enroll in a vocational school or course of training, that 
    are not already covered by the Guides but should be addressed? Please 
    explain.
    
        Authority: 15 U.S.C. 41-58.
    
    List of Subjects in 16 CFR Part 254
    
        Advertising, Trade practices.
    
        By direction of the Commission.
    Donald S. Clark,
    Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 97-10530 Filed 4-22-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6750-01-M
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
04/23/1997
Department:
Federal Trade Commission
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Supplemental request for public comments.
Document Number:
97-10530
Dates:
Written comments will be accepted until June 23, 1997.
Pages:
19703-19704 (2 pages)
PDF File:
97-10530.pdf
CFR: (1)
16 CFR 254.4?