99-27313. The Secretary's Recognition of Accrediting Agencies  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 202 (Wednesday, October 20, 1999)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 56612-56626]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-27313]
    
    
    
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    Part III
    
    
    
    
    
    Department of Education
    
    
    
    
    
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    34 CFR Part 602
    
    
    
    The Secretary's Recognition of Accrediting Agencies; Final Rule
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 64, No. 202 / Wednesday, October 20, 1999 / 
    Rules and Regulations
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
    
    34 CFR Part 602
    
    RIN 1845-AA09
    
    
    The Secretary's Recognition of Accrediting Agencies
    
    AGENCY: Department of Education.
    
    ACTION: Final regulations.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Secretary amends the regulations governing the Secretary's 
    recognition of accrediting agencies to implement provisions added to 
    the Higher Education Act of 1965, as amended (HEA), by the Higher 
    Education Amendments of 1998. The Secretary recognizes accrediting 
    agencies to assure that those agencies are, for HEA and other Federal 
    purposes, reliable authorities regarding the quality of education or 
    training offered by the institutions or programs they accredit.
    
    DATES: These regulations are effective July 1, 2000.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Karen W. Kershenstein, U.S. Department 
    of Education, 400 Maryland Avenue, SW., room 3012, ROB-3, Washington, 
    DC 20202-5244. If you use a telecommunications device for the deaf 
    (TDD), you may call the Federal Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 1-
    800-877-8339.
        Individuals with disabilities may obtain this document in an 
    alternate format (e.g., Braille, large print, audiotape, or computer 
    diskette) on request to the contact person listed in the preceding 
    paragraph.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The regulations in this document were 
    developed through the use of negotiated rulemaking. Section 492 of the 
    Higher Education Act requires that, before publishing any proposed 
    regulations to implement programs under Title IV of the Act, the 
    Secretary obtain public involvement in the development of the proposed 
    regulations. After obtaining advice and recommendations, the Secretary 
    must conduct a negotiated rulemaking process to develop the proposed 
    regulations. All proposed regulations must conform to agreements 
    resulting from the negotiated rulemaking process unless the Secretary 
    reopens that process or explains any departure from the agreements to 
    the negotiated rulemaking participants.
        These regulations were published in proposed form in the Federal 
    Register on June 25, 1999 (64 FR 34466) in conformance with the 
    consensus of the negotiated rulemaking committee. Under the committee's 
    protocols, consensus meant that no member of the committee dissented 
    from the agreed-upon language. The Secretary invited comments on the 
    proposed regulations by August 24, 1999, and several comments were 
    received. An analysis of the comments and of the changes in the 
    proposed regulations follows.
        In the preamble to the notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM), we 
    discussed the changes we proposed to improve the accrediting agency 
    recognition process. The major changes included the following:
         Revising and reordering the standards accrediting agencies 
    must have.
         Providing a maximum timeframe for agencies to come into 
    compliance with the criteria for recognition (called the ``12-month 
    rule'').
         Including distance education in the scope of an agency's 
    recognition.
        Other proposed changes included in the NPRM were the result of 
    discussion and subsequent consensus among negotiators about how to 
    improve the current regulations by clarifying existing regulatory 
    language and eliminating redundancies.
        These final regulations contain several changes resulting from the 
    26 public comments we received. Most of the changes are clarifications 
    of the regulatory language rather than substantive changes.
        We discuss substantive changes under the sections of the 
    regulations to which they pertain. We discuss major issues according to 
    subject, with appropriate sections of the regulations referenced in 
    parentheses. Generally, we do not address technical and other minor 
    changes in the proposed regulations, and do not respond to comments 
    suggesting changes that the Secretary is not authorized by law to make, 
    e.g., requiring accrediting agencies to conduct unannounced 
    inspections. Finally, we do not address comments directed at our 
    processes, such as a comment that the regulations should be revised to 
    say that we will evaluate the consistency of an accrediting agency's 
    application of standards on the basis of ``actual fact.''
    
    Analysis of Comments and Changes
    
    Required Accreditation Standards (Sec. 602.16)
    
        Comments: One commenter believed that the regulations needed to 
    include a definition of ``effectively,'' which appears in 602.16(a)(1). 
    This commenter suggested that the definition state that ``input demands 
    cannot override student learning.'' Another commenter asked what data, 
    factors, or other elements we will use to determine if an agency's 
    standards effectively address each area for which the agency is 
    required to have a standard.
        Discussion: We disagree with the alternative language suggested by 
    the first commenter. ``Student learning'' is extremely important, but 
    it is difficult to assess comprehensively. Furthermore, success with 
    respect to student achievement is only one of the areas for which 
    Congress has mandated that agencies have standards.
        While we appreciate the desire for some type of benchmark in the 
    regulations by which to measure the effectiveness of an agency's 
    standards, we believe the issue is quite complex, and any attempt to 
    define the issue thoroughly would be over-regulation at best. Aspects 
    of effectiveness are found in the agency's standards themselves, in the 
    agency's efforts to conduct a systematic program of review that 
    demonstrates that its standards are adequate to evaluate educational 
    quality and relevant to the education and training needs of students, 
    and in the agency's application of its standards, policies, and 
    procedures. As desirable as it might be to try to define 
    ``effectiveness'' in a manner that encompasses and quantifies all of 
    these perspectives, we believe a more reasoned approach is one of 
    seeking patterns of evidence that, taken collectively, demonstrate 
    effectiveness.
        Change: None.
    
    Success With Respect to Student Achievement (Sec. 602.16(a)(1))
    
        Comments: While several commenters expressed satisfaction with our 
    overall approach to the requirement that agencies have a standard that 
    assesses success with respect to student achievement, one commenter 
    expressed concern that the regulations failed to make student 
    achievement the ``touchstone'' of accreditation. To remedy this 
    situation, the commenter suggested that this section include a 
    statement that an accrediting agency will not be considered to be a 
    reliable authority regarding educational quality if it denies 
    accreditation to an institution because the institution does not adhere 
    to the agency's input standards even though the institution achieves 
    success with respect to student achievement in relation to its mission. 
    Another commenter felt the regulations needed to make it clear that 
    agencies are not required to measure success with respect to student 
    achievement using a particular assessment strategy.
        Discussion: As we explained previously, we believe requiring 
    success with respect to student achievement to
    
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    override all other areas for which Congress requires agencies to have 
    standards would conflict with the intent of Congress. We agree that 
    agencies should be permitted flexibility in selecting strategies for 
    measuring success with respect to student achievement. We recognize 
    that assessing success with respect to student achievement is a 
    complex, multi-dimensional problem. For this reason, we discussed in 
    the preamble to the NPRM a number of measures that an agency could use, 
    or could require its institutions or programs to use, in the assessment 
    of student achievement. The key, we believe, is the measurement of 
    success with respect to student achievement in relation to 
    institutional mission. Different institutional missions may dictate 
    different measures, and agencies should be free to choose the measure 
    or measures they believe to be best suited to the types of institutions 
    or programs they accredit, provided they can demonstrate that those 
    measures are effective.
        Change: None.
    
    The ``12-Month'' Rule (Secs. 602.32 and 602.35)
    
        Comments: We received numerous comments about these sections of the 
    regulations that deal with the provision in the 1998 Amendments to the 
    HEA requiring the Secretary to limit, suspend, or terminate the 
    recognition of an agency if the agency either does not meet the 
    criteria for recognition or is ineffective in its performance with 
    respect to the criteria. Alternatively, the statute permits the 
    Secretary to grant an agency a period of no more than 12 months during 
    which it must come into compliance or demonstrate effectiveness in its 
    performance. If it fails to do so within the specified timeframe, then 
    the statute requires the Secretary to limit, suspend, or terminate the 
    agency's recognition.
        Many commenters felt the regulations needed to specify when the 12-
    month period begins. They also felt that it should begin on the date of 
    the Secretary's decision.
        One commenter felt that the regulations needed to define what 
    constitutes good cause. The commenter felt that the regulations should 
    make it clear that the Secretary is expected to grant extensions only 
    for demonstrable exigency and lack of fault and that extensions of the 
    timeframe should be rare and brief.
        Many commenters raised questions about how we will review agencies 
    under this provision. In particular, they questioned how some of our 
    previous citations of agencies as being ``in need of strengthening'' 
    compliance will be handled under the 12-month rule.
        Finally, several commenters expressed the opinion that the 
    regulations should give the National Advisory Committee or the 
    Secretary some latitude in implementing the 12-month rule, either for 
    the benefit of agencies that are trying to improve their processes or 
    to allow agencies to continue to be recognized despite their 
    noncompliance with some of the criteria.
        One commenter thought the regulations needed to make it clear that 
    recognized agencies maintain their status as recognized agencies even 
    if they are under a deferral or until a decision on their application 
    for continued recognition has been reached.
        Discussion: We understand and appreciate the many concerns that 
    commenters, most of whom were affiliated with recognized accrediting 
    agencies, expressed about this new, statutorily mandated provision. We 
    note that some of the concerns are directed toward process, i.e., how 
    we will implement this provision, rather than toward the provision 
    itself, and we generally do not address process in the regulations.
        With regard to the issue of when the 12-month period begins, we 
    note that some of the commenters appear to assume that the Secretary 
    must always give agencies 12 months to correct whatever problem caused 
    the Secretary to decide to defer a decision on the agency's application 
    for recognition. That is incorrect. Nevertheless, we believe it would 
    be useful for the regulations to establish clearly that whatever 
    deferral period the Secretary grants, that period begins on the date of 
    the Secretary's deferral decision.
        On the issue of defining good cause in the regulations, we note 
    that negotiators carefully considered whether the regulations should 
    define ``good cause'' and in the end concluded that it was best not to 
    define this term. Instead, the burden rests with an agency that has 
    failed to meet the statutory deadline to demonstrate that good cause 
    exists for the Secretary to grant a request for an extension of time.
        With regard to the call for greater flexibility to continue to 
    recognize agencies that are not in full compliance, no change can be 
    made because the statute does not allow for greater flexibility.
        Finally, the proposed regulations were intended to convey that a 
    recognized agency maintains its status as a recognized agency even if 
    action on its continued recognition has been deferred or a decision on 
    recognition has not been reached. Deferral is not a final decision.
        Changes: We have changed 602.35(b)(3)(iii) to state that the 
    deferral period begins on the date of the Secretary's decision. We have 
    also changed 602.35(d) to clarify that recognition of a recognized 
    agency continues until the Secretary reaches a final decision to 
    approve or deny recognition.
    
    Distance Education and Scope of Recognition (Sec. 602.3)
    
        Comments: Several commenters expressed concerns about the inclusion 
    of distance education in the scope of an agency's recognition. Most of 
    their comments focused on whether agencies would have to go through a 
    separate review process before distance education would be included in 
    their scope of recognition, although one commenter asked why distance 
    education, which the commenter described as ``just one particular type 
    of instructional methodology,'' should be included in an agency's scope 
    of recognition.
        Discussion: The 1998 amendments to the Higher Education Act clearly 
    require us to evaluate distance education accrediting activities as 
    part of the recognition process and to include distance education as a 
    component in determining the scope of an agency's recognition. We do 
    not envision implementing this provision by requiring agencies to go 
    through a separate review process to have distance education included 
    in their scope. Rather, we will observe and evaluate, as part of our 
    regular review of an agency for initial or continued recognition, the 
    agency's compliance with the criteria for recognition, including the 
    agency's compliance in accrediting distance education programs and 
    institutions.
        Change: None.
    
    Section 602.3 Definitions
    
    Adverse action
        Comments: One commenter felt that show cause and probation should 
    be considered adverse actions to allow accrediting agencies to work 
    more effectively with institutions that need more time to improve. In 
    raising this issue, the commenter noted that students are the ones who 
    are hurt most if schools have to close if they lose their 
    accreditation. Another commenter, however, supported the change we 
    proposed that excludes show cause and probation from the term ``adverse 
    action.''
        Discussion: We continue to believe that including interim actions 
    such as
    
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    probation and show cause as adverse actions would permit a noncompliant 
    institution or program to retain accreditation or preaccreditation well 
    beyond the maximum timeframes the regulations prescribe. It would also 
    put students at risk because the quality of education provided by the 
    institution or program might suffer as a result of the institution's or 
    program's noncompliance with the agency's standards. We believe that 
    the provision in 602.20(b), allowing an agency to extend the timeframe 
    for coming into compliance for good cause, gives the agency the 
    flexibility it needs on a case-by-case basis to deal with situations in 
    which the agency believes there is justification for giving the 
    institution or program more time.
        Change: None.
    
    Representative of the public
    
        Comment: One commenter expressed concern that the proposed 
    definition does not state that a student may serve as a representative 
    of the public.
        Discussion: We continue to believe, as we stated in the preamble to 
    the final regulations previously amending this part 602, published 
    April 29, 1994 (59 FR 22250) (the 1994 regulations), that it is useful 
    for agencies to include students and members of their families as 
    representatives of the public. The students are the consumers in this 
    context. However, the definition we proposed in the NPRM, which is the 
    same as the definition in the 1994 regulations, does not preclude 
    selection of students or their family members for this purpose. 
    Therefore, there is no need to change the definition.
        Change: None.
    
    Vocational Education
    
        Comment: One commenter requested that we add a definition of 
    ``vocational education'' to 602.3, noting that we mentioned the term in 
    the discussion of success with respect to student achievement in the 
    preamble to the NPRM.
        Discussion: The term is not used in the regulations. Therefore, 
    there is no need to define it.
        Change: None.
    
    Section 602.14 Purpose and Organization
    
        Comments: One commenter suggested that recognized agencies be 
    exempt from demonstrating compliance with this section when they apply 
    for continued recognition if they were found to be in compliance the 
    last time they were reviewed and their structure has not changed since 
    then. Another commenter believed that the provisions related to the 
    waiver of the ``separate and independent'' requirement nullify the 
    availability of the waiver and are not consistent with the statute.
        Discussion: We believe the suggestion that recognized agencies not 
    be required to demonstrate compliance with 602.14 when they apply for 
    continued recognition has merit. However, we do not think a regulatory 
    change is needed to implement it. We expect to develop new guidelines 
    for agencies on how to submit petitions for recognition under these 
    regulations, and we will implement this suggestion in those materials.
        With respect to the waiver of the ``separate and independent'' 
    requirement, we disagree with the commenter's conclusion that the 
    regulations are inconsistent with the statute and nullify the 
    availability of the waiver. We note that the regulations on this point 
    remain unchanged from those issued in 1994.
        Change: None.
    
    Section 602.15 Administrative and Fiscal Responsibilities
    
        Comment: One commenter suggested that the composition of on-site 
    evaluation teams should be reconsidered but offered no specific 
    suggestions for change.
        Discussion: Even though the commenter provided no specific 
    suggestions, we reconsidered the proposed language in 602.15(a)(3) and 
    (4) governing the composition of an agency's evaluation, policy, and 
    decision-making bodies. We found that the language allowed an agency 
    that accredited a single-purpose institution, such as a freestanding 
    law school, to satisfy the regulations by simply having educators, 
    i.e., academic and administrative personnel, on these bodies and not 
    any practitioners. While we know that most agencies that accredit 
    single-purpose institutions include practitioners on their evaluation 
    teams, we felt it was important that the regulations require this 
    practice.
        Change: We have modified 602.15(a)(4) to require an agency to have 
    educators and practitioners on its evaluation, policy, and decision-
    making bodies if it accredits programs or single-purpose institutions 
    that prepare students for a specific profession.
    
    Section 602.19 Monitoring and Reevaluation of Accredited Institutions 
    and Programs
    
        Comment: Two commenters expressed concern about the discussion in 
    the preamble of the NPRM about agencies' responsibilities for 
    monitoring accredited institutions and programs throughout the 
    accreditation period. Specifically, they objected to the statement that 
    an agency's monitoring procedures must provide for prompt and 
    appropriate action by an agency whenever it receives substantial, 
    credible evidence from any reliable source, including the courts, that 
    indicates a systemic problem that calls into question the ability of an 
    institution or program to meet the agency's standards. They also 
    objected to the statement in the preamble that we find it unacceptable 
    for an agency to have as its policy that it will not look at, or take 
    appropriate action based upon, information that comes to its attention 
    through pending third-party litigation. The commenters felt that our 
    position would place the agency in the middle of the litigation.
        Discussion: The comments are directed to preamble, rather than 
    regulatory, language, so there is no need to make any changes to the 
    regulations. Agencies, under the regulations, have a responsibility to 
    monitor institutions and programs throughout their accreditation period 
    to ensure that educational quality is maintained and to take 
    appropriate action whenever they receive substantial, credible evidence 
    from any reliable source that calls into question the quality of the 
    education or training provided by the institution or program. That 
    obligation applies with respect to information the agency obtains as a 
    result of litigation, just as it applies to information obtained from 
    other sources.
        Change: None.
    
    Section 602.21 Review of Standards
    
        Comments: Most commenters liked the proposed regulations, which 
    require agencies to maintain a systematic program of review that 
    demonstrates their standards are adequate to evaluate the quality of 
    education or training provided by the institutions and programs they 
    accredit and relevant to the needs of students. Two commenters, 
    however, preferred the language in the 1994 regulations, which required 
    agencies to maintain a systematic program of review that demonstrated 
    their standards were valid and reliable indicators of educational 
    quality. One commenter thought the phrase ``relevant to the needs of 
    students'' in the proposed regulations should be replaced by the phrase 
    from the 1994 regulations, ``relevant to the education and training 
    needs of students,'' which the commenter believed was more appropriate. 
    Finally, one commenter stated that an agency's standards should not be 
    deemed adequate to evaluate the quality of education or relevant to the
    
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    needs of students if they resulted in the denial of accreditation to 
    schools that achieve student success in learning.
        Discussion: The issue of the validation of standards through the 
    systematic review of an agency's standards was discussed at length 
    during negotiated rulemaking. The ultimate consensus that was reached 
    reflects negotiators' belief that the language in the proposed 
    regulations strikes a balance between overly prescriptive regulation of 
    agencies' standards and processes and a requirement that looks only at 
    an agency's review process and not at the substance of the standards. 
    It also avoids some of the problems encountered with the language in 
    the 1994 regulations that uses the terms ``validity'' and 
    ``reliability,'' the interpretations of which, when applied in the 
    context of agencies' standards, were often misunderstood and misused.
        We believe the comment about the need for agencies to demonstrate 
    that their standards are relevant to the education and training needs 
    of students, not simply the needs of students, has merit. However, we 
    disagree that an agency's standards should not be deemed adequate to 
    evaluate the quality of education or relevant to the needs of students 
    if its standards resulted in the denial of accreditation to schools 
    that achieve student success in learning. Demonstrating success with 
    respect to student achievement is certainly necessary to establishing 
    the adequacy of an agency's standards. By itself, however, such a 
    demonstration is by no means sufficient to ensure the adequacy of those 
    standards.
        Change: We have changed 602.21(a) to require agencies to maintain a 
    systematic program of review that demonstrates their standards are 
    relevant to the education and training needs of students.
    
    Section 602.21(c) Process for Changing Standards
    
        Comment: Several commenters raised concerns that the proposed 
    regulations require an agency to provide notice about proposed changes 
    to standards only to its relevant constituencies but not to other 
    interested parties. One commenter felt regional accreditors should be 
    required to notify all institutions in their region, while specialized 
    accreditors should be required to provide notice to all institutions 
    that provide education in the field. Another commenter felt the 
    regulations should require agencies to give institutions opportunity 
    and adequate time to respond, with the knowledge that their comments 
    will be considered. Finally, one commenter felt the requirement for 
    agencies to complete an action to change a standard ``within a 
    reasonable period of time'' after a problem is found was too vague. The 
    commenter suggested as an alternative that agencies could demonstrate 
    that they have a formal process that allows changes to the standards to 
    occur in a systematic manner.
        Discussion: During negotiated rulemaking, accreditors readily 
    acknowledged their responsibility to notify persons they knew to be 
    interested, but expressed concern about the burden and cost of 
    providing timely and effective notice to a large number of entities to 
    see if they might have an interest in commenting on proposed changes to 
    their standards. The language negotiators agreed upon was an attempt to 
    find a reasonable solution to the problem. Based on the comments we 
    received, we have reconsidered the matter. We believe the concept of 
    requiring a regional accreditor to notify all institutions in its 
    region of proposed changes to its standards has some merit, but that it 
    imposes a greater burden than necessary to address the concern. A more 
    reasonable approach, we believe, is to require an accrediting agency to 
    provide notice of proposed changes to its standards to all parties who 
    have made their interest known to the agency. This will ensure that all 
    who want notice will get it.
        With regard to the comment that the regulations should require 
    agencies to give institutions opportunity and adequate time to respond, 
    we believe the regulations, by stating that agencies must give 
    ``adequate opportunity to comment on the proposed changes,'' already do 
    this.
        Finally, we do not believe the phrase ``within a reasonable period 
    of time'' is too vague. Rather, we believe it provides a degree of 
    flexibility to agencies in establishing schedules for meetings, within 
    a reasonable range.
        Change: We have added the phrase ``and other parties who have made 
    their interest known to the agency'' to 602.21(c)(1).
    
    Section 602.22(a)(vii) Substantive Change Procedures for Additional 
    Locations
    
        Comments: Most commenters welcomed the changes to the requirement 
    for mandatory site visits to new sites within 6 months. One commenter, 
    however, wanted us to remove the requirement for a site visit to any 
    additional locations a school establishes.
        Discussion: We continue to believe that there is need for an 
    accrediting agency to monitor an institution very closely as it begins 
    to operate more than just the main campus. While the need for that 
    close monitoring may diminish once the institution has gained 
    experience in establishing effective systems for the administration of 
    multiple sites, we do not believe that, in general, the addition of a 
    single additional site is sufficient for an institution to be able to 
    demonstrate that it has in place effective mechanisms to administer 
    multiple sites.
        Change: None.
    
    Section 602.24(b) Change in Ownership
    
        Comment: One commenter stated that the proposed regulations did not 
    address a problem that existed with the 1994 regulations, namely that 
    an agency cannot conduct a site visit unless it is notified of the 
    change in ownership. The commenter suggested requiring agencies to 
    conduct the site visit within 6 months following the change, or 
    notification of the change, whichever comes later.
        Discussion: The regulations require an agency's definition of 
    substantive change to include any change in the legal status, form of 
    control, or ownership of the institution. The agency's procedures for 
    handling substantive change must also require an institution to obtain 
    the agency's approval before the change is included in its scope of 
    accreditation of the institution. Thus, the situation the commenter 
    describes represents a failure by the school to follow the agency's 
    required procedures and should be dealt with by the agency. No 
    regulatory change is needed. Obviously, an agency can only conduct a 
    site visit if it knows about the change in ownership, and we would not 
    regard the agency as being in violation of the criteria for recognition 
    if it failed to conduct a visit within 6 months of the change solely 
    because it was not informed of the change at the time it occurred.
        Change: None.
    
    Section 602.24(c)(ii) Teach-outs
    
        Comment: One commenter noted that the location of the closing 
    institution may not be very near other institutions that offer similar 
    programs and suggested that the regulations require the teach-out 
    institution to be as geographically proximate to the closing 
    institution as possible.
        Discussion: We believe that this provision in the regulations must 
    balance the goal of achieving the most geographically proximate teach-
    out with
    
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    the goal of ensuring, to the extent possible, that a teach-out is 
    offered. Sometimes there is no institution that is as close to the 
    closing institution as we might wish. In other instances, the most 
    geographically proximate institution does not want to provide the 
    teach-out, but another institution is willing to do so even if it is 
    not as close to the closing institution.
        We believe the regulations contain the flexibility necessary to 
    best protect students. They address the proximity issue by requiring 
    the teach-out institution to demonstrate that it can provide students 
    access to the program without requiring them to move or travel 
    substantial distances.
        Change: None.
    
    Section 602.26 Notification of Accrediting Decisions
    
        Comments: One commenter stated that the 24-hour rule for notifying 
    the public of final decisions to place an institution or program on 
    probation or an equivalent status or to deny, withdraw, suspend, 
    revoke, or terminate the accreditation or preaccreditation of an 
    institution or program was unclear. The commenter asked whether this 
    provision meant notifying the public in general, for example, by 
    posting the notice to the agency's web site, or whether it meant 
    telling anyone who happened to call the agency to inquire about the 
    institution or program.
        Another commenter suggested that guaranty agencies be included in 
    the notification.
        Discussion: With respect to the first commenter, we believe the 
    principal issue here is providing effective notice to the public. We 
    believe one way to do this is to post the information to the agency's 
    web site within 24 hours of notifying the institution or program, but 
    there may be other ways. The agency should have the flexibility to 
    decide the approach that suits it best. Certainly the agency should 
    give the information out to anyone who happens to call the agency 
    inquiring about the institution or program after the 24-hour timeframe.
        We agree with the commenter who suggested that guaranty agencies 
    should receive notification about accrediting decisions. However, an 
    accrediting agency may not know which guaranty agencies service a 
    particular institution. Accordingly, the Department will establish a 
    process for forwarding this information, upon receipt, to guaranty 
    agencies.
        Change: None.
    
    Section 602.33 Appeal of an Advisory Committee Recommendation
    
        Comments: One commenter thought that the 10-day timeframe for an 
    agency to file its intent to appeal an Advisory Committee 
    recommendation was too short. The commenter also questioned whether the 
    10-day timeframe meant 10 calendar days or 10 business days.
        Discussion: We do not believe the 10-day timeframe to file an 
    intent to appeal an Advisory Committee recommendation is too short. An 
    agency knows the Advisory Committee's recommendation as soon as it is 
    made, and it need only submit a simple declaration of intent to appeal, 
    without any documentation, to meet the 10-day requirement. The 
    regulations permit the agency 30 days to submit the actual appeal, 
    along with any supporting documentation that agency may wish the 
    Secretary to consider.
        On the issue of whether the timeframe refers to calendar or 
    business days, we note that all timeframes specified in these 
    regulations follow the same convention as in the previous regulations; 
    namely, they refer to calendar days, not business days.
        Change: None.
    
    Section 602.42 Appeal of the Subcommittee's Recommendation
    
        Comments: One commenter thought that the selection of a 
    subcommittee of the Advisory Committee to conduct a hearing on whether 
    an agency's recognition should be limited, suspended, or terminated 
    should be done randomly.
        Discussion: With regard to the composition of the subcommittee, the 
    principal issue is the availability of members to serve. The 
    subcommittee is only convened if Department staff has concluded that an 
    agency fails to comply with the criteria for recognition or is 
    ineffective with respect to those criteria, either of which is a very 
    serious situation and must be dealt with as quickly as possible. 
    Requiring that subcommittee members be selected on a completely random 
    basis, or even on a rotating basis, could jeopardize the Department's 
    ability to convene the subcommittee quickly.
        Change: None.
    
    Executive Order 12866
    
        We have reviewed these final regulations in accordance with 
    Executive Order 12866. Under the terms of the order, we have assessed 
    the potential costs and benefits of this regulatory action.
        The potential costs associated with these final regulations are 
    those resulting from statutory requirements and those we have 
    determined to be necessary for a determination that an accrediting 
    agency that seeks recognition is in fact a reliable authority regarding 
    the quality of education or training provided by the institutions or 
    programs it accredits.
        In assessing the potential costs and benefits--both quantitative 
    and qualitative--of these final regulations, we have determined that 
    the benefits of the regulations justify the costs.
        We have also determined that this regulatory action does not unduly 
    interfere with State, local, and tribal governments in the exercise of 
    their governmental functions.
        We discussed the potential costs and benefits of these final 
    regulations in the preamble to the NPRM under the headings: Changes 
    From Existing Regulations (64 FR 34467-34473), Paperwork Reduction Act 
    of 1995 (64 FR 34474), and Regulatory Flexibility Act Certification (64 
    FR 34474).
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
    
        The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 does not require accrediting 
    agencies to respond to a collection of information unless it displays a 
    valid Office of Management and Budget (OMB) control number. We display 
    the valid OMB control number assigned to the collection of information 
    in these final regulations at the end of the affected sections of the 
    regulations.
    
    Assessment of Educational Impact
    
        In the NPRM we requested comments on whether the proposed 
    regulations would require transmission of information that any other 
    agency or authority of the United States gathers or makes available.
        Based on the response to the NPRM and on our review, we have 
    determined that these final regulations do not require transmission of 
    information that any other agency or authority of the United States 
    gathers or makes available.
    
    Electronic Access to This Document
    
        You may view this document in text or Adobe Portable Document 
    Format (PDF) on the Internet at the following sites:
    
    http://ocfo.ed.gov/fedreg.htm
    http://ifap.ed.gov/csb____html/fedlreg.htm
    http://www.ed.gov/legislation/HEA/rulemaking/
    
    To use the PDF, you must have the Adobe Acrobat Reader Program with 
    Search, which is available free at the first of the previous sites. If 
    you have questions about using the PDF, call the
    
    [[Page 56617]]
    
    U.S. Government Printing Office (GPO), toll free, at 1-888-293-6498; or 
    in the Washington, DC, area at (202) 512-1530.
    
        Note: The official version of this document is the document 
    published in the Federal Register. Free Internet access to the 
    official edition of the Federal Register and the Code of Federal 
    Regulations is available on GPO Access at:
    
        http://www.access.gpo.gov/nara/index.html
    
    (Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Number does not apply.)
    
    List of Subjects in 34 CFR Part 602
    
        Colleges and universities, Education, Reporting and recordkeeping 
    requirements.
    
        Dated: October 4, 1999.
    Richard W. Riley,
    Secretary of Education.
        For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Secretary amends 
    title 34 of the Code of Federal Regulations by revising part 602 to 
    read as follows:
    
    PART 602--THE SECRETARY'S RECOGNITION OF ACCREDITING AGENCIES
    
    Subpart A--General
    
    Sec.
    602.1  Why does the Secretary recognize accrediting agencies?
    602.2  How do I know which agencies the Secretary recognizes?
    602.3  What definitions apply to this part?
    
    Subpart B--The Criteria for Recognition
    
    Basic Eligibility Requirements
    
    602.10  Link to Federal programs.
    602.11  Geographic scope of accrediting activities.
    602.12  Accrediting experience.
    602.13  Acceptance of the agency by others.
    
    Organizational and Administrative Requirements
    
    602.14  Purpose and organization.
    602.15  Administrative and fiscal responsibilities.
    
    Required Standards and Their Application
    
    602.16  Accreditation and preaccreditation standards.
    602.17  Application of standards in reaching an accrediting 
    decision.
    602.18  Ensuring consistency in decision-making.
    602.19 Monitoring and reevaluation of accredited institutions and 
    programs.
    602.20  Enforcement of standards.
    602.21  Review of standards.
    
    Required Operating Policies and Procedures
    
    602.22  Substantive change.
    602.23  Operating procedures all agencies must have.
    602.24  Additional procedures certain institutional accreditors must 
    have.
    602.25  Due process.
    602.26  Notification of accrediting decisions.
    602.27  Other information an agency must provide the Department.
    602.28  Regard for decisions of States and other accrediting 
    agencies.
    
    Subpart C--The Recognition Process
    
    Application and Review by Department Staff
    
    602.30  How does an agency apply for recognition?
    602.31  How does Department staff review an agency's application?
    
    Review by the National Advisory Committee on Institutional Quality and 
    Integrity
    
    602.32  What is the role of the Advisory Committee and the senior 
    Department official in the review of an agency's application?
    602.33  How may an agency appeal a recommendation of the Advisory 
    Committee?
    
    Review and Decision by the Secretary
    
    602.34  What does the Secretary consider when making a recognition 
    decision?
    602.35  What information does the Secretary's recognition decision 
    include?
    602.36  May an agency appeal the Secretary's final recognition 
    decision?
    
    Subpart D--Limitation, Suspension, or Termination of Recognition
    
    Limitation, Suspension, and Termination Procedures
    
    602.40  How may the Secretary limit, suspend, or terminate an 
    agency's recognition?
    602.41  What are the notice procedures?
    602.42  What are the response and hearing procedures?
    602.43  How is a decision on limitation, suspension, or termination 
    of recognition reached?
    
    Appeal Rights and Procedures
    
    602.44  How may an agency appeal the subcommittee's recommendation?
    602.45  May an agency appeal the Secretary's final decision to 
    limit, suspend, or terminate its recognition?
    
    Subpart E--Department Responsibilities
    
    602.50  What information does the Department share with a recognized 
    agency about its accredited institutions and programs?
    
        Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b, unless otherwise noted.
    
    Subpart A--General
    
    
    Sec. 602.1  Why does the Secretary recognize accrediting agencies?
    
        (a) The Secretary recognizes accrediting agencies to ensure that 
    these agencies are, for the purposes of the Higher Education Act of 
    1965, as amended (HEA), or for other Federal purposes, reliable 
    authorities regarding the quality of education or training offered by 
    the institutions or programs they accredit.
        (b) The Secretary lists an agency as a nationally recognized 
    accrediting agency if the agency meets the criteria for recognition 
    listed in subpart B of this part.
    
        (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    
    Sec. 602.2  How do I know which agencies the Secretary recognizes?
    
        (a) Periodically, the Secretary publishes a list of recognized 
    agencies in the Federal Register, together with each agency's scope of 
    recognition. You may obtain a copy of the list from the Department at 
    any time. The list is also available on the Department's web site.
        (b) If the Secretary denies continued recognition to a previously 
    recognized agency, or if the Secretary limits, suspends, or terminates 
    the agency's recognition before the end of its recognition period, the 
    Secretary publishes a notice of that action in the Federal Register. 
    The Secretary also makes the reasons for the action available to the 
    public, on request.
    
        (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    
    Sec. 602.3  What definitions apply to this part?
    
        The following definitions apply to this part:
        Accreditation means the status of public recognition that an 
    accrediting agency grants to an educational institution or program that 
    meets the agency's standards and requirements.
        Accrediting agency or agency means a legal entity, or that part of 
    a legal entity, that conducts accrediting activities through voluntary, 
    non-Federal peer review and makes decisions concerning the 
    accreditation or preaccreditation status of institutions, programs, or 
    both.
        Act means the Higher Education Act of 1965, as amended.
        Adverse accrediting action or adverse action means the denial, 
    withdrawal, suspension, revocation, or termination of accreditation or 
    preaccreditation, or any comparable accrediting action an agency may 
    take against an institution or program.
        Advisory Committee means the National Advisory Committee on 
    Institutional Quality and Integrity.
        Branch campus means a location of an institution that meets the 
    definition of branch campus in 34 CFR 600.2.
        Distance education means an educational process that is 
    characterized by the separation, in time or place, between instructor 
    and student. The term includes courses offered principally through the 
    use of--
        (1) Television, audio, or computer transmission, such as open 
    broadcast, closed circuit, cable, microwave, or satellite transmission;
        (2) Audio or computer conferencing;
        (3) Video cassettes or disks; or
        (4) Correspondence.
        Final accrediting action means a final determination by an 
    accrediting agency regarding the accreditation or
    
    [[Page 56618]]
    
    preaccreditation status of an institution or program. A final 
    accrediting action is not appealable within the agency.
        Institution of higher education or institution means an educational 
    institution that qualifies, or may qualify, as an eligible institution 
    under 34 CFR part 600.
        Institutional accrediting agency means an agency that accredits 
    institutions of higher education.
        Nationally recognized accrediting agency, nationally recognized 
    agency, or recognized agency means an accrediting agency that the 
    Secretary recognizes under this part.
        Preaccreditation means the status of public recognition that an 
    accrediting agency grants to an institution or program for a limited 
    period of time that signifies the agency has determined that the 
    institution or program is progressing towards accreditation and is 
    likely to attain accreditation before the expiration of that limited 
    period of time.
        Program means a postsecondary educational program offered by an 
    institution of higher education that leads to an academic or 
    professional degree, certificate, or other recognized educational 
    credential.
        Programmatic accrediting agency means an agency that accredits 
    specific educational programs that prepare students for entry into a 
    profession, occupation, or vocation.
        Representative of the public means a person who is not--
        (1) An employee, member of the governing board, owner, or 
    shareholder of, or consultant to, an institution or program that either 
    is accredited or preaccredited by the agency or has applied for 
    accreditation or preaccreditation;
        (2) A member of any trade association or membership organization 
    related to, affiliated with, or associated with the agency; or
        (3) A spouse, parent, child, or sibling of an individual identified 
    in paragraph (1) or (2) of this definition.
        Scope of recognition or scope means the range of accrediting 
    activities for which the Secretary recognizes an agency. The Secretary 
    may place a limitation on the scope of an agency's recognition for 
    Title IV, HEA purposes. The Secretary's designation of scope defines 
    the recognition granted according to--
        (1) Geographic area of accrediting activities;
        (2) Types of degrees and certificates covered;
        (3) Types of institutions and programs covered;
        (4) Types of preaccreditation status covered, if any; and
        (5) Coverage of accrediting activities related to distance 
    education, if any.
        Secretary means the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Education 
    or any official or employee of the Department acting for the Secretary 
    under a delegation of authority.
        Senior Department official means the senior official in the U.S. 
    Department of Education who reports directly to the Secretary regarding 
    accrediting agency recognition.
        State means a State of the Union, American Samoa, the Commonwealth 
    of Puerto Rico, the District of Columbia, Guam, the United States 
    Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, the 
    Republic of the Marshall Islands, the Federated States of Micronesia, 
    and the Republic of Palau. The latter three are also known as the 
    Freely Associated States.
        Teach-out agreement means a written agreement between institutions 
    that provides for the equitable treatment of students if one of those 
    institutions stops offering an educational program before all students 
    enrolled in that program have completed the program.
    
        (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    Subpart B--The Criteria for Recognition
    
    Basic Eligibility Requirements
    
    
    Sec. 602.10  Link to Federal programs.
    
        The agency must demonstrate that--
        (a) If the agency accredits institutions of higher education, its 
    accreditation is a required element in enabling at least one of those 
    institutions to establish eligibility to participate in HEA programs; 
    or
        (b) If the agency accredits institutions of higher education or 
    higher education programs, or both, its accreditation is a required 
    element in enabling at least one of those entities to establish 
    eligibility to participate in non-HEA Federal programs.
    
        (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    
    Sec. 602.11  Geographic scope of accrediting activities.
    
        The agency must demonstrate that its accrediting activities cover--
        (a) A State, if the agency is part of a State government;
        (b) A region of the United States that includes at least three 
    States that are reasonably close to one another; or
        (c) The United States.
    
        (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    
    Sec. 602.12  Accrediting experience.
    
        (a) An agency seeking initial recognition must demonstrate that it 
    has--
        (1) Granted accreditation or preaccreditation--
        (i) To one or more institutions if it is requesting recognition as 
    an institutional accrediting agency and to one or more programs if it 
    is requesting recognition as a programmatic accrediting agency;
        (ii) That covers the range of the specific degrees, certificates, 
    institutions, and programs for which it seeks recognition; and
        (iii) In the geographic area for which it seeks recognition; and
        (2) Conducted accrediting activities, including deciding whether to 
    grant or deny accreditation or preaccreditation, for at least two years 
    prior to seeking recognition.
        (b) A recognized agency seeking an expansion of its scope of 
    recognition must demonstrate that it has granted accreditation or 
    preaccreditation covering the range of the specific degrees, 
    certificates, institutions, and programs for which it seeks the 
    expansion of scope.
    
        (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    
    Sec. 602.13  Acceptance of the agency by others.
    
        The agency must demonstrate that its standards, policies, 
    procedures, and decisions to grant or deny accreditation are widely 
    accepted in the United States by--
        (a) Educators and educational institutions; and
        (b) Licensing bodies, practitioners, and employers in the 
    professional or vocational fields for which the educational 
    institutions or programs within the agency's jurisdiction prepare their 
    students.
    
        (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    Organizational and Administrative Requirements
    
    
    Sec. 602.14  Purpose and organization.
    
        (a) The Secretary recognizes only the following four categories of 
    agencies:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     The Secretary recognizes . .                  that . . .
    --------------.---------------------------------------------------------
    (1) An accrediting agency....  (i) Has a voluntary membership of
                                    institutions of higher education;
    
    [[Page 56619]]
    
     
                                   (ii) Has as a principal purpose the
                                    accrediting of institutions of higher
                                    education and that accreditation is a
                                    required element in enabling those
                                    institutions to participate in HEA
                                    programs; and
                                   (iii) Satisfies the ``separate and
                                    independent'' requirements in paragraph
                                    (b) of this section.
    (2) An accrediting agency....  (i) Has a voluntary membership; and
                                   (ii) Has as its principal purpose the
                                    accrediting of higher education
                                    programs, or higher education programs
                                    and institutions of higher education,
                                    and that accreditation is a required
                                    element in enabling those entities to
                                    participate in non-HEA Federal programs.
    (3) An accrediting agency....  for purposes of determining eligibility
                                    for Title IV, HEA programs--
                                   (i) Either has a voluntary membership of
                                    individuals participating in a
                                    profession or has as its principal
                                    purpose the accrediting of programs
                                    within institutions that are accredited
                                    by a nationally recognized accrediting
                                    agency; and
                                   (ii) Either satisfies the ``separate and
                                    independent'' requirements in paragraph
                                    (b) of this section or obtains a waiver
                                    of those requirements under paragraphs
                                    (d) and (e) of this section.
    (4) A State agency...........  (i) Has as a principal purpose the
                                    accrediting of institutions of higher
                                    education, higher education programs, or
                                    both; and
                                   (ii) The Secretary listed as a nationally
                                    recognized accrediting agency on or
                                    before October 1, 1991 and has
                                    recognized continuously since that date.
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (b) For purposes of this section, the term separate and independent 
    means that--
        (1) The members of the agency's decision-making body--who decide 
    the accreditation or preaccreditation status of institutions or 
    programs, establish the agency's accreditation policies, or both--are 
    not elected or selected by the board or chief executive officer of any 
    related, associated, or affiliated trade association or membership 
    organization;
        (2) At least one member of the agency's decision-making body is a 
    representative of the public, and at least one-seventh of that body 
    consists of representatives of the public;
        (3) The agency has established and implemented guide lines for each 
    member of the decision-making body to avoid conflicts of interest in 
    making decisions;
        (4) The agency's dues are paid separately from any dues paid to any 
    related, associated, or affiliated trade association or membership 
    organization; and
        (5) The agency develops and determines its own budget, with no 
    review by or consultation with any other entity or organization.
        (c) The Secretary considers that any joint use of personnel, 
    services, equipment, or facilities by an agency and a related, 
    associated, or affiliated trade association or membership organization 
    does not violate the ``separate and independent'' requirements in 
    paragraph (b) of this section if--
        (1) The agency pays the fair market value for its proportionate 
    share of the joint use; and
        (2) The joint use does not compromise the independence and 
    confidentiality of the accreditation process.
        (d) For purposes of paragraph (a)(3) of this section, the Secretary 
    may waive the ``separate and independent'' requirements in paragraph 
    (b) of this section if the agency demonstrates that--
        (1) The Secretary listed the agency as a nationally recognized 
    agency on or before October 1, 1991 and has recognized it continuously 
    since that date;
        (2) The related, associated, or affiliated trade association or 
    membership organization plays no role in making or ratifying either the 
    accrediting or policy decisions of the agency;
        (3) The agency has sufficient budgetary and administrative autonomy 
    to carry out its accrediting functions independently; and
        (4) The agency provides to the related, associated, or affiliated 
    trade association or membership organization only information it makes 
    available to the public.
        (e) An agency seeking a waiver of the ``separate and independent'' 
    requirements under paragraph (d) of this section must apply for the 
    waiver each time the agency seeks recognition or continued recognition.
        (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    
    Sec. 602.15  Administrative and fiscal responsibilities.
    
        The agency must have the administrative and fiscal capability to 
    carry out its accreditation activities in light of its requested scope 
    of recognition. The agency meets this requirement if the agency 
    demonstrates that--
        (a) The agency has--
        (1) Adequate administrative staff and financial resources to carry 
    out its accrediting responsibilities;
        (2) Competent and knowledgeable individuals, qualified by education 
    and experience in their own right and trained by the agency on its 
    standards, policies, and procedures, to conduct its on-site 
    evaluations, establish its policies, and make its accrediting and 
    preaccrediting decisions;
        (3) Academic and administrative personnel on its evaluation, 
    policy, and decision-making bodies, if the agency accredits 
    institutions;
        (4) Educators and practitioners on its evaluation, policy, and 
    decision-making bodies, if the agency accredits programs or single-
    purpose institutions that prepare students for a specific profession;
        (5) Representatives of the public on all decision-making bodies; 
    and
        (6) Clear and effective controls against conflicts of interest, or 
    the appearance of conflicts of interest, by the agency's--
        (i) Board members;
        (ii) Commissioners;
        (iii) Evaluation team members;
        (iv) Consultants;
        (v) Administrative staff; and
        (vi) Other agency representatives; and
        (b) The agency maintains complete and accurate records of--
        (1) Its last two full accreditation or preaccreditation reviews of 
    each institution or program, including on-site evaluation team reports, 
    the institution's or program's responses to on-site reports, periodic 
    review reports, any reports of special reviews conducted by the agency 
    between regular reviews, and a copy of the institution's or program's 
    most recent self-study; and
        (2) All decisions regarding the accreditation and preaccreditation 
    of any institution or program, including all correspondence that is 
    significantly related to those decisions.
    
    (Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control 
    number 1845-0003)
    
        (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    
    [[Page 56620]]
    
    
    Required Standards and Their Application
    
    
    Sec. 602.16  Accreditation and preaccreditation standards.
    
        (a) The agency must demonstrate that it has standards for 
    accreditation, and preaccreditation, if offered, that are sufficiently 
    rigorous to ensure that the agency is a reliable authority regarding 
    the quality of the education or training provided by the institutions 
    or programs it accredits. The agency meets this requirement if--
        (1) The agency's accreditation standards effectively address the 
    quality of the institution or program in the following areas:
        (i) Success with respect to student achievement in relation to the 
    institution's mission, including, as appropriate, consideration of 
    course completion, State licensing examination, and job placement 
    rates.
        (ii) Curricula.
        (iii) Faculty.
        (iv) Facilities, equipment, and supplies.
        (v) Fiscal and administrative capacity as appropriate to the 
    specified scale of operations.
        (vi) Student support services.
        (vii) Recruiting and admissions practices, academic calendars, 
    catalogs, publications, grading, and advertising.
        (viii) Measures of program length and the objectives of the degrees 
    or credentials offered.
        (ix) Record of student complaints received by, or available to, the 
    agency.
        (x) Record of compliance with the institution's program 
    responsibilities under Title IV of the Act, based on the most recent 
    student loan default rate data provided by the Secretary, the results 
    of financial or compliance audits, program reviews, and any other 
    information that the Secretary may provide to the agency; and
        (2) The agency's preaccreditation standards, if offered, are 
    appropriately related to the agency's accreditation standards and do 
    not permit the institution or program to hold preaccreditation status 
    for more than five years.
        (b) If the agency only accredits programs and does not serve as an 
    institutional accrediting agency for any of those programs, its 
    accreditation standards must address the areas in paragraph (a)(1) of 
    this section in terms of the type and level of the program rather than 
    in terms of the institution.
        (c) If none of the institutions an agency accredits participates in 
    any Title IV, HEA program, or if the agency only accredits programs 
    within institutions that are accredited by a nationally recognized 
    institutional accrediting agency, the agency is not required to have 
    the accreditation standards described in paragraphs (a)(1)(viii) and 
    (a)(1)(x) of this section.
        (d) An agency that has established and applies the standards in 
    paragraph (a) of this section may establish any additional 
    accreditation standards it deems appropriate.
    
    (Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control 
    number 1845-0003)
    
    (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    
    Sec. 602.17  Application of standards in reaching an accrediting 
    decision.
    
        The agency must have effective mechanisms for evaluating an 
    institution's or program's compliance with the agency's standards 
    before reaching a decision to accredit or preaccredit the institution 
    or program. The agency meets this requirement if the agency 
    demonstrates that it--
        (a) Evaluates whether an institution or program--
        (1) Maintains clearly specified educational objectives that are 
    consistent with its mission and appropriate in light of the degrees or 
    certificates awarded;
        (2) Is successful in achieving its stated objectives; and
        (3) Maintains degree and certificate requirements that at least 
    conform to commonly accepted standards;
        (b) Requires the institution or program to prepare, following 
    guidance provided by the agency, an in-depth self-study that includes 
    the assessment of educational quality and the institution's or 
    program's continuing efforts to improve educational quality;
        (c) Conducts at least one on-site review of the institution or 
    program during which it obtains sufficient information to determine if 
    the institution or program complies with the agency's standards;
        (d) Allows the institution or program the opportunity to respond in 
    writing to the report of the on-site review;
        (e) Conducts its own analysis of the self-study and supporting 
    documentation furnished by the institution or program, the report of 
    the on-site review, the institution's or program's response to the 
    report, and any other appropriate information from other sources to 
    determine whether the institution or program complies with the agency's 
    standards; and
        (f) Provides the institution or program with a detailed written 
    report that assesses--
        (1) The institution's or program's compliance with the agency's 
    standards, including areas needing improvement; and
        (2) The institution's or program's performance with respect to 
    student achievement.
    
        (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    
    Sec. 602.18  Ensuring consistency in decision-making.
    
        The agency must consistently apply and enforce its standards to 
    ensure that the education or training offered by an institution or 
    program, including any offered through distance education, is of 
    sufficient quality to achieve its stated objective for the duration of 
    any accreditation or preaccreditation period granted by the agency. The 
    agency meets this requirement if the agency--
        (a) Has effective controls against the inconsistent application of 
    the agency's standards;
        (b) Bases decisions regarding accreditation and preaccreditation on 
    the agency's published standards; and
        (c) Has a reasonable basis for determining that the information the 
    agency relies on for making accrediting decisions is accurate.
    
        (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    
    Sec. 602.19  Monitoring and reevaluation of accredited institutions and 
    programs.
    
        (a) The agency must reevaluate, at regularly established intervals, 
    the institutions or programs it has accredited or preaccredited.
        (b) The agency must monitor institutions or programs throughout 
    their accreditation or preaccreditation period to ensure that they 
    remain in compliance with the agency's standards. This includes 
    conducting special evaluations or site visits, as necessary.
    
        (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    
    Sec. 602.20  Enforcement of standards.
    
        (a) If the agency's review of an institution or program under any 
    standard indicates that the institution or program is not in compliance 
    with that standard, the agency must--
        (1) Immediately initiate adverse action against the institution or 
    program; or
        (2) Require the institution or program to take appropriate action 
    to bring itself into compliance with the agency's standards within a 
    time period that must not exceed--
        (i) Twelve months, if the program, or the longest program offered 
    by the institution, is less than one year in length;
        (ii) Eighteen months, if the program, or the longest program 
    offered by the institution, is at least one year, but less than two 
    years, in length; or
        (iii) Two years, if the program, or the longest program offered by 
    the
    
    [[Page 56621]]
    
    institution, is at least two years in length.
        (b) If the institution or program does not bring itself into 
    compliance within the specified period, the agency must take immediate 
    adverse action unless the agency, for good cause, extends the period 
    for achieving compliance.
    
        (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    
    Sec. 602.21  Review of standards.
    
        (a) The agency must maintain a systematic program of review that 
    demonstrates that its standards are adequate to evaluate the quality of 
    the education or training provided by the institutions and programs it 
    accredits and relevant to the educational or training needs of 
    students.
        (b) The agency determines the specific procedures it follows in 
    evaluating its standards, but the agency must ensure that its program 
    of review--
        (1) Is comprehensive;
        (2) Occurs at regular, yet reasonable, intervals or on an ongoing 
    basis;
        (3) Examines each of the agency's standards and the standards as a 
    whole; and
        (4) Involves all of the agency's relevant constituencies in the 
    review and affords them a meaningful opportunity to provide input into 
    the review.
        (c) If the agency determines, at any point during its systematic 
    program of review, that it needs to make changes to its standards, the 
    agency must initiate action within 12 months to make the changes and 
    must complete that action within a reasonable period of time. Before 
    finalizing any changes to its standards, the agency must--
        (1) Provide notice to all of the agency's relevant constituencies, 
    and other parties who have made their interest known to the agency, of 
    the changes the agency proposes to make;
        (2) Give the constituencies and other interested parties adequate 
    opportunity to comment on the proposed changes; and
        (3) Take into account any comments on the proposed changes 
    submitted timely by the relevant constituencies and by other interested 
    parties.
    
        (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    Required Operating Policies and Procedures
    
    
    Sec. 602.22  Substantive change.
    
        (a) If the agency accredits institutions, it must maintain adequate 
    substantive change policies that ensure that any substantive change to 
    the educational mission, program, or programs of an institution after 
    the agency has accredited or preaccredited the institution does not 
    adversely affect the capacity of the institution to continue to meet 
    the agency's standards. The agency meets this requirement if--
        (1) The agency requires the institution to obtain the agency's 
    approval of the substantive change before the agency includes the 
    change in the scope of accreditation or preaccreditation it previously 
    granted to the institution; and
        (2) The agency's definition of substantive change includes at least 
    the following types of change:
        (i) Any change in the established mission or objectives of the 
    institution.
        (ii) Any change in the legal status, form of control, or ownership 
    of the institution.
        (iii) The addition of courses or programs that represent a 
    significant departure, in either content or method of delivery, from 
    those that were offered when the agency last evaluated the institution.
        (iv) The addition of courses or programs at a degree or credential 
    level above that which is included in the institution's current 
    accreditation or preaccreditation.
        (v) A change from clock hours to credit hours.
        (vi) A substantial increase in the number of clock or credit hours 
    awarded for successful completion of a program.
        (vii) The establishment of an additional location geographically 
    apart from the main campus at which the institution offers at least 50 
    percent of an educational program.
        (b) The agency may determine the procedures it uses to grant prior 
    approval of the substantive change. Except as provided in paragraph (c) 
    of this section, these may, but need not, require a visit by the 
    agency.
        (c) If the agency's accreditation of an institution enables the 
    institution to seek eligibility to participate in Title IV, HEA 
    programs, the agency's procedures for the approval of an additional 
    location described in paragraph (a)(2)(vii) of this section must 
    determine if the institution has the fiscal and administrative capacity 
    to operate the additional location. In addition, the agency's 
    procedures must include--
        (1) A visit, within six months, to each additional location the 
    institution establishes, if the institution--
        (i) Has a total of three or fewer additional locations;
        (ii) Has not demonstrated, to the agency's satisfaction, that it 
    has a proven record of effective educational oversight of additional 
    locations; or
        (iii) Has been placed on warning, probation, or show cause by the 
    agency or is subject to some limitation by the agency on its 
    accreditation or preaccreditation status;
        (2) An effective mechanism for conducting, at reasonable intervals, 
    visits to additional locations of institutions that operate more than 
    three additional locations; and
        (3) An effective mechanism, which may, at the agency's discretion, 
    include visits to additional locations, for ensuring that accredited 
    and preaccredited institutions that experience rapid growth in the 
    number of additional locations maintain educational quality.
        (d) The purpose of the visits described in paragraph (c) of this 
    section is to verify that the additional location has the personnel, 
    facilities, and resources it claimed to have in its application to the 
    agency for approval of the additional location.
    
        (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    
    Sec. 602.23  Operating procedures all agencies must have.
    
        (a) The agency must maintain and make available to the public, upon 
    request, written materials describing--
        (1) Each type of accreditation and preaccreditation it grants;
        (2) The procedures that institutions or programs must follow in 
    applying for accreditation or preaccreditation;
        (3) The standards and procedures it uses to determine whether to 
    grant, reaffirm, reinstate, restrict, deny, revoke, terminate, or take 
    any other action related to each type of accreditation and 
    preaccreditation that the agency grants;
        (4) The institutions and programs that the agency currently 
    accredits or preaccredits and, for each institution and program, the 
    year the agency will next review or reconsider it for accreditation or 
    preaccreditation; and
        (5) The names, academic and professional qualifications, and 
    relevant employment and organizational affiliations of--
        (i) The members of the agency's policy and decision-making bodies; 
    and
        (ii) The agency's principal administrative staff.
        (b) In providing public notice that an institution or program 
    subject to its jurisdiction is being considered for accreditation or 
    preaccreditation, the agency must provide an opportunity for third-
    party comment concerning the institution's or program's qualifications 
    for accreditation or preaccreditation. At the agency's discretion, 
    third-party comment may be received either in writing or at a public 
    hearing, or both.
        (c) The accrediting agency must--
        (1) Review in a timely, fair, and equitable manner any complaint it
    
    [[Page 56622]]
    
    receives against an accredited institution or program that is related 
    to the agency's standards or procedures;
        (2) Take follow-up action, as necessary, including enforcement 
    action, if necessary, based on the results of its review; and
        (3) Review in a timely, fair, and equitable manner, and apply 
    unbiased judgment to, any complaints against itself and take follow-up 
    action, as appropriate, based on the results of its review.
        (d) If an institution or program elects to make a public disclosure 
    of its accreditation or preaccreditation status, the agency must ensure 
    that the institution or program discloses that status accurately, 
    including the specific academic or instructional programs covered by 
    that status and the name, address, and telephone number of the agency.
        (e) The accrediting agency must provide for the public correction 
    of incorrect or misleading information an accredited or preaccredited 
    institution or program releases about--
        (1) The accreditation or preaccreditation status of the institution 
    or program;
        (2) The contents of reports of on-site reviews; and
        (3) The agency's accrediting or preaccrediting actions with respect 
    to the institution or program.
        (f) The agency may establish any additional operating procedures it 
    deems appropriate. At the agency's discretion, these may include 
    unannounced inspections.
    
    (Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control 
    number 1845-0003)
    
        (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    
    Sec. 602.24  Additional procedures certain institutional accreditors 
    must have.
    
        If the agency is an institutional accrediting agency and its 
    accreditation or preaccreditation enables those institutions to obtain 
    eligibility to participate in Title IV, HEA programs, the agency must 
    demonstrate that it has established and uses all of the following 
    procedures:
        (a) Branch campus. (1) The agency must require the institution to 
    notify the agency if it plans to establish a branch campus and to 
    submit a business plan for the branch campus that describes--
        (i) The educational program to be offered at the branch campus;
        (ii) The projected revenues and expenditures and cash flow at the 
    branch campus; and
        (iii) The operation, management, and physical resources at the 
    branch campus.
        (2) The agency may extend accreditation to the branch campus only 
    after it evaluates the business plan and takes whatever other actions 
    it deems necessary to determine that the branch campus has sufficient 
    educational, financial, operational, management, and physical resources 
    to meet the agency's standards.
        (3) The agency must undertake a site visit to the branch campus as 
    soon as practicable, but no later than six months after the 
    establishment of that campus.
        (b) Change in ownership. The agency must undertake a site visit to 
    an institution that has undergone a change of ownership that resulted 
    in a change of control as soon as practicable, but no later than six 
    months after the change of ownership.
        (c) Teach-out agreements. (1) The agency must require an 
    institution it accredits or preaccredits that enters into a teach-out 
    agreement with another institution to submit that teach-out agreement 
    to the agency for approval.
        (2) The agency may approve the teach-out agreement only if the 
    agreement is between institutions that are accredited or preaccredited 
    by a nationally recognized accrediting agency, is consistent with 
    applicable standards and regulations, and provides for the equitable 
    treatment of students by ensuring that--
        (i) The teach-out institution has the necessary experience, 
    resources, and support services to provide an educational program that 
    is of acceptable quality and reasonably similar in content, structure, 
    and scheduling to that provided by the closed institution; and
        (ii) The teach-out institution demonstrates that it can provide 
    students access to the program and services without requiring them to 
    move or travel substantial distances.
        (3) If an institution the agency accredits or preaccredits closes, 
    the agency must work with the Department and the appropriate State 
    agency, to the extent feasible, to ensure that students are given 
    reasonable opportunities to complete their education without additional 
    charge.
    
    (Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control 
    number 1845-0003)
    
        (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    
    Sec. 602.25  Due process.
    
        The agency must demonstrate that the procedures it uses throughout 
    the accrediting process satisfy due process. The agency meets this 
    requirement if the agency does the following:
        (a) The agency uses procedures that afford an institution or 
    program a reasonable period of time to comply with the agency's 
    requests for information and documents.
        (b) The agency notifies the institution or program in writing of 
    any adverse accrediting action or an action to place the institution or 
    program on probation or show cause. The notice describes the basis for 
    the action.
        (c) The agency permits the institution or program the opportunity 
    to appeal an adverse action and the right to be represented by counsel 
    during that appeal. If the agency allows institutions or programs the 
    right to appeal other types of actions, the agency has the discretion 
    to limit the appeal to a written appeal.
        (d) The agency notifies the institution or program in writing of 
    the result of its appeal and the basis for that result.
    
        (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    
    Sec. 602.26  Notification of accrediting decisions.
    
        The agency must demonstrate that it has established and follows 
    written procedures requiring it to provide written notice of its 
    accrediting decisions to the Secretary, the appropriate State licensing 
    or authorizing agency, the appropriate accrediting agencies, and the 
    public. The agency meets this requirement if the agency, following its 
    written procedures--
        (a) Provides written notice of the following types of decisions to 
    the Secretary, the appropriate State licensing or authorizing agency, 
    the appropriate accrediting agencies, and the public no later than 30 
    days after it makes the decision:
        (1) A decision to award initial accreditation or preaccreditation 
    to an institution or program.
        (2) A decision to renew an institution's or program's accreditation 
    or preaccreditation;
        (b) Provides written notice of the following types of decisions to 
    the Secretary, the appropriate State licensing or authorizing agency, 
    and the appropriate accrediting agencies at the same time it notifies 
    the institution or program of the decision, but no later than 30 days 
    after it reaches the decision:
        (1) A final decision to place an institution or program on 
    probation or an equivalent status.
        (2) A final decision to deny, withdraw, suspend, revoke, or 
    terminate the accreditation or preaccreditation of an institution or 
    program;
        (c) Provides written notice to the public of the decisions listed 
    in paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(2) of this section within 24 hours of its 
    notice to the institution or program;
    
    [[Page 56623]]
    
        (d) For any decision listed in paragraph (b)(2) of this section, 
    makes available to the Secretary, the appropriate State licensing or 
    authorizing agency, and the public upon request, no later than 60 days 
    after the decision, a brief statement summarizing the reasons for the 
    agency's decision and the comments, if any, that the affected 
    institution or program may wish to make with regard to that decision; 
    and
        (e) Notifies the Secretary, the appropriate State licensing or 
    authorizing agency, the appropriate accrediting agencies, and, upon 
    request, the public if an accredited or preaccredited institution or 
    program--
        (1) Decides to withdraw voluntarily from accreditation or 
    preaccreditation, within 30 days of receiving notification from the 
    institution or program that it is withdrawing voluntarily from 
    accreditation or preaccreditation; or
        (2) Lets its accreditation or preaccreditation lapse, within 30 
    days of the date on which accreditation or preaccreditation lapses.
    
    (Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control 
    number 1845-0003)
    
        (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    
    Sec. 602.27  Other information an agency must provide the Department.
    
        The agency must submit to the Department--
        (a) A copy of any annual report it prepares;
        (b) A copy, updated annually, of its directory of accredited and 
    preaccredited institutions and programs;
        (c) A summary of the agency's major accrediting activities during 
    the previous year (an annual data summary), if requested by the 
    Secretary to carry out the Secretary's responsibilities related to this 
    part;
        (d) Any proposed change in the agency's policies, procedures, or 
    accreditation or preaccreditation standards that might alter its--
        (1) Scope of recognition; or
        (2) Compliance with the criteria for recognition;
        (e) The name of any institution or program it accredits that the 
    agency has reason to believe is failing to meet its Title IV, HEA 
    program responsibilities or is engaged in fraud or abuse, along with 
    the agency's reasons for concern about the institution or program; and
        (f) If the Secretary requests, information that may bear upon an 
    accredited or preaccredited institution's compliance with its Title IV, 
    HEA program responsibilities, including the eligibility of the 
    institution or program to participate in Title IV, HEA programs. The 
    Secretary may ask for this information to assist the Department in 
    resolving problems with the institution's participation in the Title 
    IV, HEA programs.
    
    (Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control 
    number 1845-0003)
    
        (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    
    Sec. 602.28  Regard for decisions of States and other accrediting 
    agencies.
    
        (a) If the agency is an institutional accrediting agency, it may 
    not accredit or preaccredit institutions that lack legal authorization 
    under applicable State law to provide a program of education beyond the 
    secondary level.
        (b) Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this section, the agency 
    may not grant initial or renewed accreditation or preaccreditation to 
    an institution, or a program offered by an institution, if the agency 
    knows, or has reasonable cause to know, that the institution is the 
    subject of--
        (1) A pending or final action brought by a State agency to suspend, 
    revoke, withdraw, or terminate the institution's legal authority to 
    provide postsecondary education in the State;
        (2) A decision by a recognized agency to deny accreditation or 
    preaccreditation;
        (3) A pending or final action brought by a recognized accrediting 
    agency to suspend, revoke, withdraw, or terminate the institution's 
    accreditation or preaccreditation; or
        (4) Probation or an equivalent status imposed by a recognized 
    agency.
        (c) The agency may grant accreditation or preaccreditation to an 
    institution or program described in paragraph (b) of this section only 
    if it provides to the Secretary, within 30 days of its action, a 
    thorough and reasonable explanation, consistent with its standards, why 
    the action of the other body does not preclude the agency's grant of 
    accreditation or preaccreditation.
        (d) If the agency learns that an institution it accredits or 
    preaccredits, or an institution that offers a program it accredits or 
    preaccredits, is the subject of an adverse action by another recognized 
    accrediting agency or has been placed on probation or an equivalent 
    status by another recognized agency, the agency must promptly review 
    its accreditation or preaccreditation of the institution or program to 
    determine if it should also take adverse action or place the 
    institution or program on probation or show cause.
        (e) The agency must, upon request, share with other appropriate 
    recognized accrediting agencies and recognized State approval agencies 
    information about the accreditation or preaccreditation status of an 
    institution or program and any adverse actions it has taken against an 
    accredited or preaccredited institution or program.
    
    (Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control 
    number 1845-0003)
    
        (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    Subpart C--The Recognition Process
    
    Application and Review by Department Staff
    
    
    Sec. 602.30  How does an agency apply for recognition?
    
        (a) An accrediting agency seeking initial or continued recognition 
    must submit a written application to the Secretary. The application 
    must consist of--
        (1) A statement of the agency's requested scope of recognition;
        (2) Evidence that the agency complies with the criteria for 
    recognition listed in subpart B of this part; and
        (3) Supporting documentation.
        (b) By submitting an application for recognition, the agency 
    authorizes Department staff to observe its site visits and decision 
    meetings and to gain access to agency records, personnel, and 
    facilities on an announced or unannounced basis.
        (c) The Secretary does not make available to the public any 
    confidential agency materials a Department employee reviews during the 
    evaluation of either the agency's application for recognition or the 
    agency's compliance with the criteria for recognition.
    
    (Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control 
    number 1845-0003)
    
    (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    
    Sec. 602.31  How does Department staff review an agency's application?
    
        (a) Upon receipt of an agency's application for either initial or 
    continued recognition, Department staff--
        (1) Establishes a schedule for the review of the agency by 
    Department staff, the National Advisory Committee on Institutional 
    Quality and Integrity, and the Secretary;
        (2) Publishes a notice of the agency's application in the Federal 
    Register, inviting the public to comment on the agency's compliance 
    with the criteria for recognition and establishing a deadline for 
    receipt of public comment; and
        (3) Provides State licensing or authorizing agencies, all currently 
    recognized accrediting agencies, and other appropriate organizations 
    with copies of the Federal Register notice.
        (b) Department staff analyzes the agency's application to determine
    
    [[Page 56624]]
    
    whether the agency satisfies the criteria for recognition, taking into 
    account all available relevant information concerning the compliance of 
    the agency with those criteria and any deficiencies in the agency's 
    performance with respect to the criteria. The analysis includes--
        (1) Site visits, on an announced or unannounced basis, to the 
    agency and, at the Secretary's discretion, to some of the institutions 
    or programs it accredits or preaccredits;
        (2) Review of the public comments and other third-party information 
    the Department staff receives by the established deadline, as well as 
    any other information Department staff assembles for purposes of 
    evaluating the agency under this part; and
        (3) Review of complaints or legal actions involving the agency.
        (c) Department staff's evaluation may also include a review of 
    information directly related to institutions or programs accredited or 
    preaccredited by the agency relative to their compliance with the 
    agency's standards, the effectiveness of the standards, and the 
    agency's application of those standards.
        (d) If, at any point in its evaluation of an agency seeking initial 
    recognition, Department staff determines that the agency fails to 
    demonstrate substantial compliance with the basic eligibility 
    requirements in Secs. 602.10 through 602.13, the staff--
        (1) Returns the agency's application and provides the agency with 
    an explanation of the deficiencies that caused staff to take that 
    action; and
        (2) Recommends that the agency withdraw its application and reapply 
    when the agency can demonstrate compliance.
        (e) Except with respect to an application that is withdrawn under 
    paragraph (d) of this section, when Department staff completes its 
    evaluation of the agency, the staff--
        (1) Prepares a written analysis of the agency, which includes a 
    recognition recommendation;
        (2) Sends the analysis and all supporting documentation, including 
    all third-party comments the Department received by the established 
    deadline, to the agency no later than 45 days before the Advisory 
    Committee meeting; and
        (3) Invites the agency to provide a written response to the staff 
    analysis and third-party comments, specifying a deadline for the 
    response that is at least two weeks before the Advisory Committee 
    meeting.
        (f) If Department staff fails to provide the agency with the 
    materials described in paragraph (e)(2) of this section at least 45 
    days before the Advisory Committee meeting, the agency may request that 
    the Advisory Committee defer acting on the application at that meeting. 
    If Department staff's failure to send the materials at least 45 days 
    before the Advisory Committee meeting is due to the failure of the 
    agency to submit reports or other information the Secretary requested 
    by the deadline the Secretary established, the agency forfeits its 
    right to request a deferral.
        (g) Department staff reviews any response to the staff analysis 
    that the agency submits. If necessary, Department staff prepares an 
    addendum to the staff analysis and provides the agency with a copy.
        (h) Before the Advisory Committee meeting, Department staff 
    provides the Advisory Committee with the following information:
        (1) The agency's application for recognition and supporting 
    documentation.
        (2) The Department staff analysis of the agency.
        (3) Any written third-party comments the Department received about 
    the agency on or before the established deadline.
        (4) Any agency response to either the Department staff analysis or 
    third-party comments.
        (5) Any addendum to the Department staff analysis.
        (6) Any other information Department staff relied on in developing 
    its analysis.
        (i) At least 30 days before the Advisory Committee meeting, the 
    Department publishes a notice of the meeting in the Federal Register 
    inviting interested parties, including those who submitted third-party 
    comments concerning the agency's compliance with the criteria for 
    recognition, to make oral presentations before the Advisory Committee.
    
    (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    Review by the National Advisory Committee on Institutional Quality and 
    Integrity
    
    
    Sec. 602.32  What is the role of the Advisory Committee and the senior 
    Department official in the review of an agency's application?
    
        (a) The Advisory Committee considers an agency's application for 
    recognition at a public meeting and invites Department staff, the 
    agency, and other interested parties to make oral presentations at the 
    meeting. A transcript is made of each Advisory Committee meeting.
        (b) When it concludes its review, the Advisory Committee recommends 
    that the Secretary either approve or deny recognition or that the 
    Secretary defer a decision on the agency's application for recognition.
        (1)(i) The Advisory Committee recommends approval of recognition if 
    the agency complies with the criteria for recognition listed in subpart 
    B of this part and if the agency is effective in its performance with 
    respect to those criteria.
        (ii) If the Advisory Committee recommends approval, the Advisory 
    Committee also recommends a recognition period and a scope of 
    recognition.
        (iii) If the recommended scope or period of recognition is less 
    than that requested by the agency, the Advisory Committee explains its 
    reasons for recommending the lesser scope or recognition period.
        (2)(i) If the agency fails to comply with the criteria for 
    recognition in subpart B of this part, or if the agency is not 
    effective in its performance with respect to those criteria, the 
    Advisory Committee recommends denial of recognition, unless the 
    Advisory Committee concludes that a deferral under paragraph (b)(3) of 
    this section is warranted.
        (ii) If the Advisory Committee recommends denial, the Advisory 
    Committee specifies the reasons for its recommendation, including all 
    criteria the agency fails to meet and all areas in which the agency 
    fails to perform effectively.
        (3)(i) The Advisory Committee may recommend deferral of a decision 
    on recognition if it concludes that the agency's deficiencies do not 
    warrant immediate loss of recognition and if it concludes that the 
    agency will demonstrate or achieve compliance with the criteria for 
    recognition and effective performance with respect to those criteria 
    before the expiration of the deferral period.
        (ii) In its deferral recommendation, the Advisory Committee states 
    the bases for its conclusions, specifies any criteria for recognition 
    the agency fails to meet, and identifies any areas in which the agency 
    fails to perform effectively with respect to the criteria.
        (iii) The Advisory Committee also recommends a deferral period, 
    which may not exceed 12 months, either as a single deferral period or 
    in combination with any expiring deferral period in which similar 
    deficiencies in compliance or performance were cited by the Secretary.
        (c) At the conclusion of its meeting, the Advisory Committee 
    forwards its recommendations to the Secretary through the senior 
    Department official.
        (d) For any Advisory Committee recommendation not appealed under
    
    [[Page 56625]]
    
    Sec. 602.33, the senior Department official includes with the Advisory 
    Committee materials forwarded to the Secretary a memorandum containing 
    the senior Department official's recommendations regarding the actions 
    proposed by the Advisory Committee.
    
        (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b and 1145)
    
    
    Sec. 602.33  How may an agency appeal a recommendation of the Advisory 
    Committee?
    
        (a) Either the agency or the senior Department official may appeal 
    the Advisory Committee's recommendation. If a party wishes to appeal, 
    that party must--
        (1) Notify the Secretary and the other party in writing of its 
    intent to appeal the recommendation no later than 10 days after the 
    Advisory Committee meeting;
        (2) Submit its appeal in writing to the Secretary no later than 30 
    days after the Advisory Committee meeting; and
        (3) Provide the other party with a copy of the appeal at the same 
    time it submits the appeal to the Secretary.
        (b) The non-appealing party may file a written response to the 
    appeal. If that party wishes to do so, it must--
        (1) Submit its response to the Secretary no later than 30 days 
    after receiving its copy of the appeal; and
        (2) Provide the appealing party with a copy of its response at the 
    same time it submits its response to the Secretary.
        (c) Neither the agency nor the senior Department official may 
    include any new evidence in its submission; i.e., evidence it did not 
    previously submit to the Advisory Committee.
    
        (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b and 1145) Review and Decision by the 
    Secretary
    
    
    Sec. 602.34  What does the Secretary consider when making a recognition 
    decision?
    
        The Secretary makes the decision regarding recognition of an agency 
    based on the entire record of the agency's application, including the 
    following:
        (a) The Advisory Committee's recommendation.
        (b) The senior Department official's recommendation, if any.
        (c) The agency's application and supporting documentation.
        (d) The Department staff analysis of the agency.
        (e) All written third-party comments forwarded by Department staff 
    to the Advisory Committee for consideration at the meeting.
        (f) Any agency response to the Department staff analysis and third-
    party comments.
        (g) Any addendum to the Department staff analysis.
        (h) All oral presentations at the Advisory Committee meeting.
        (i) Any materials submitted by the parties, within the established 
    timeframes, in an appeal taken in accordance with Sec. 602.33.
    
        (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    
    Sec. 602.35  What information does the Secretary's recognition decision 
    include?
    
        (a) The Secretary notifies the agency in writing of the Secretary's 
    decision regarding the agency's application for recognition.
        (b) The Secretary either approves or denies recognition or defers a 
    decision on the agency's application for recognition.
        (1)(i) The Secretary approves recognition if the agency complies 
    with the criteria for recognition listed in subpart B of this part and 
    if the agency is effective in its performance with respect to those 
    criteria.
        (ii) If the Secretary approves recognition, the Secretary's 
    recognition decision defines the scope of recognition and the 
    recognition period.
        (iii) If the scope or period of recognition is less than that 
    requested by the agency, the Secretary explains the reasons for 
    approving a lesser scope or recognition period.
        (2)(i) If the agency fails to comply with the criteria for 
    recognition in subpart B of this part, or if the agency is not 
    effective in its performance with respect to those criteria, the 
    Secretary denies recognition, unless the Secretary concludes that a 
    deferral under paragraph (b)(3) of this section is warranted.
        (ii) If the Secretary denies recognition, the Secretary specifies 
    the reasons for this decision, including all criteria the agency fails 
    to meet and all areas in which the agency fails to perform effectively.
        (3)(i) The Secretary may defer a decision on recognition if the 
    Secretary concludes that the agency's deficiencies do not warrant 
    immediate loss of recognition and if the Secretary concludes that the 
    agency will demonstrate or achieve compliance with the criteria for 
    recognition and effective performance with respect to those criteria 
    before the expiration of the deferral period.
        (ii) In the deferral decision, the Secretary states the bases for 
    the Secretary's conclusions, specifies any criteria for recognition the 
    agency fails to meet, and identifies any areas in which the agency 
    fails to perform effectively with respect to the criteria.
        (iii) The Secretary also establishes a deferral period, which 
    begins on the date of the Secretary's decision.
        (iv) The deferral period may not exceed 12 months, either as a 
    single deferral period or in combination with any expiring deferral 
    period in which similar deficiencies in compliance or performance were 
    cited by the Secretary, except that the Secretary may grant an 
    extension of an expiring deferral period at the request of the agency 
    for good cause shown.
        (c) The recognition period may not exceed five years.
        (d) If the Secretary does not reach a final decision to approve or 
    deny an agency's application for continued recognition before the 
    expiration of its recognition period, the Secretary automatically 
    extends the recognition period until the final decision is reached.
    
    (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    
    Sec. 602.36  May an agency appeal the Secretary's final recognition 
    decision?
    
        An agency may appeal the Secretary's decision under this part in 
    the Federal courts as a final decision in accordance with applicable 
    Federal law.
    
    (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    Subpart D--Limitation, Suspension, or Termination of Recognition 
    Limitation, Suspension, and Termination Procedures
    
    
    Sec. 602.40  How may the Secretary limit, suspend, or terminate an 
    agency's recognition?
    
        (a) If the Secretary determines, after notice and an opportunity 
    for a hearing, that a recognized agency does not comply with the 
    criteria for recognition in subpart B of this part or that the agency 
    is not effective in its performance with respect to those criteria, the 
    Secretary--
        (1) Limits, suspends, or terminates the agency's recognition; or
        (2) Requires the agency to take appropriate action to bring itself 
    into compliance with the criteria and achieve effectiveness within a 
    timeframe that may not exceed 12 months.
        (b) If, at the conclusion of the timeframe specified in paragraph 
    (a)(2) of this section, the Secretary determines, after notice and an 
    opportunity for a hearing, that the agency has failed to bring itself 
    into compliance or has failed to achieve effectiveness, the Secretary 
    limits, suspends, or terminates recognition, unless the Secretary 
    extends the timeframe, on request by the agency for good cause shown.
    
    (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b).
    
    [[Page 56626]]
    
    Sec. 602.41  What are the notice procedures?
    
        (a) Department staff initiates an action to limit, suspend, or 
    terminate an agency's recognition by notifying the agency in writing of 
    the Secretary's intent to limit, suspend, or terminate recognition. The 
    notice--
        (1) Describes the specific action the Secretary seeks to take 
    against the agency and the reasons for that action, including the 
    criteria with which the agency has failed to comply;
        (2) Specifies the effective date of the action; and
        (3) Informs the agency of its right to respond to the notice and 
    request a hearing.
        (b) Department staff may send the notice described in paragraph (a) 
    of this section at any time the staff concludes that the agency fails 
    to comply with the criteria for recognition in subpart B of this part 
    or is not effective in its performance with respect to those criteria.
    
    (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    
    Sec. 602.42  What are the response and hearing procedures?
    
        (a) If the agency wishes either to respond to the notice or request 
    a hearing, or both, it must do so in writing no later than 30 days 
    after it receives the notice of the Secretary's intent to limit, 
    suspend, or terminate recognition.
        (1) The agency's submission must identify the issues and facts in 
    dispute and the agency's position on them.
        (2) If neither a response nor a request for a hearing is filed by 
    the deadline, the notice of intent becomes a final decision by the 
    Secretary.
        (b)(1) After receiving the agency's response and hearing request, 
    if any, the Secretary chooses a subcommittee composed of five members 
    of the Advisory Committee to adjudicate the matter and notifies the 
    agency of the subcommittee's membership.
        (2) The agency may challenge membership of the subcommittee on 
    grounds of conflict of interest on the part of one or more members and, 
    if the agency's challenge is successful, the Secretary will replace the 
    member or members challenged.
        (c) After the subcommittee has been selected, Department staff 
    sends the members of the subcommittee copies of the notice to limit, 
    suspend, or terminate recognition, along with the agency's response, if 
    any.
        (d)(1) If a hearing is requested, it is held in Washington, DC, at 
    a date and time set by Department staff.
        (2) A transcript is made of the hearing.
        (3) Except as provided in paragraph (e) of this section, the 
    subcommittee allows Department staff, the agency, and any interested 
    party to make an oral or written presentation, which may include the 
    introduction of written and oral evidence.
        (e) On agreement by Department staff and the agency, the 
    subcommittee review may be based solely on the written materials 
    submitted.
    
    (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    
    Sec. 602.43  How is a decision on limitation, suspension, or 
    termination of recognition reached?
    
        (a) After consideration of the notice of intent to limit, suspend, 
    or terminate recognition, the agency's response, if any, and all 
    submissions and presentations made at the hearing, if any, the 
    subcommittee issues a written opinion and sends it to the Secretary, 
    with copies to the agency and the senior Department official. The 
    opinion includes--
        (1) Findings of fact, based on consideration of all the evidence, 
    presentations, and submissions before the subcommittee;
        (2) A recommendation as to whether a limitation, suspension, or 
    termination of the agency's recognition is warranted; and
        (3) The reasons supporting the subcommittee's recommendation.
        (b) Unless the subcommittee's recommendation is appealed under 
    Sec. 602.44, the Secretary issues a final decision on whether to limit, 
    suspend, or terminate the agency's recognition. The Secretary bases the 
    decision on consideration of the full record before the subcommittee 
    and the subcommittee's opinion.
    
    (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    Appeal Rights and Procedures
    
    
    Sec. 602.44  How may an agency appeal the subcommittee's 
    recommendation?
    
        (a) Either the agency or the senior Department official may appeal 
    the subcommittee's recommendation. If a party wishes to appeal, that 
    party must--
        (1) Notify the Secretary and the other party in writing of its 
    intent to appeal the recommendation no later than 10 days after receipt 
    of the recommendation;
        (2) Submit its appeal to the Secretary in writing no later than 30 
    days after receipt of the recommendation; and
        (3) Provide the other party with a copy of the appeal at the same 
    time it submits the appeal to the Secretary.
        (b) The non-appealing party may file a written response to the 
    appeal. If that party wishes to do so, it must--
        (1) Submit its response to the Secretary no later than 30 days 
    after receiving its copy of the appeal; and
        (2) Provide the appealing party with a copy of its response at the 
    same time it submits its response to the Secretary.
        (c) Neither the agency nor the senior Department official may 
    include any new evidence in its submission, i.e., evidence it did not 
    previously submit to the subcommittee.
        (d) If the subcommittee's recommendation is appealed, the Secretary 
    renders a final decision after taking into account that recommendation 
    and the parties' written submissions on appeal, as well as the entire 
    record before the subcommittee and the subcommittee's opinion.
    
    (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    
    Sec. 602.45  May an agency appeal the Secretary's final decision to 
    limit, suspend, or terminate its recognition?
    
        An agency may appeal the Secretary's final decision limiting, 
    suspending, or terminating its recognition to the Federal courts as a 
    final decision in accordance with applicable Federal law.
    
    (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    
    Subpart E--Department Responsibilities
    
    
    Sec. 602.50  What information does the Department share with a 
    recognized agency about its accredited institutions and programs?
    
        (a) If the Department takes an action against an institution or 
    program accredited by the agency, it notifies the agency no later than 
    10 days after taking that action.
        (b) If another Federal agency or a State agency notifies the 
    Department that it has taken an action against an institution or 
    program accredited by the agency, the Department notifies the agency as 
    soon as possible but no later than 10 days after receiving the written 
    notice from the other Government agency.
    
        (Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1099b)
    [FR Doc. 99-27313 Filed 10-19-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4000-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
7/1/2000
Published:
10/20/1999
Department:
Education Department
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final regulations.
Document Number:
99-27313
Dates:
These regulations are effective July 1, 2000.
Pages:
56612-56626 (15 pages)
RINs:
1845-AA09
PDF File:
99-27313.pdf
CFR: (36)
34 CFR 602.1
34 CFR 602.2
34 CFR 602.3
34 CFR 602.10
34 CFR 602.11
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