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Scott W. Steffey, President and Chief Executive Officer
Reid Simpson, Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Jeffrey D. Ayers, Senior Vice President, General Counsel, Corporate Secretary and Chief Compliance Officer
Lysa Hlavinka Clemens, Senior Vice President and Chief Career Schools Officer
Jason T. Friesen, Senior Vice President, Chief University Education Officer
George P. Miller, President and Chancellor, American InterContinental University
Andrew Hurst, President, Colorado Technical University
Diane Auer Jones, Senior Vice President & Chief External Affairs Officer and President of the Career Education Scholarship Fund (CESF)
Jeffrey Cooper, Senior Vice President, Chief Compliance Officer
Dave Czeszewski, Senior Vice President, Chief Information Officer
Career Education Corporation (CEC), is for-profit postsecondary education provider with campus-based and online curricula. Headquartered in Contents 1 History 1.1 CEC schools 2 Controversies and federal scrutiny 3 Downsizing 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External links
Career Education was founded in 1994 by John M. Larson[2] who served as the company’s president, CEO and was a member of the board of directors until 2006. Under his leadership, Career Education grew to include over 24 U.S. campuses. In 2009, Career Education purchased the right to operate Le Cordon Bleu schools in the United States and Canada [3] and on July 1, 2003, Career Education Corporation merged with competitor Whitman Education Group, Inc., gaining control over the latter's Sanford-Brown Colleges, Ultrasound Diagnostic Schools (now known as the Sanford-Brown Institute), and Colorado Technical University. And also the former Western School of Health and Business.[4] In the same year, CEC was sued for inflating financial results and issuing misleading statements, thus violating the Securities Exchange Act. [5]
In March 2007, Gary McCullough joined the company[6] and served as CEO until November 2011, when Steven H. Lesnik assumed the role of president and CEO on an interim basis. Lesnik is the former chairman of the Illinois State Board of Education.[7] In April 2013, Scott Steffey -- a veteran of Strayer Education Inc. and former vice chancellor of the State University of New York (SUNY) system -- was named as Lesnik's permanent replacement.[8]
California Regent Richard Blum (Dianne Feinstein's husband)has been a significant shareholder of Career Education stock. [9]
Career Education was investigated by the United States Securities and Exchange Commission[10] for various issues of non-compliance in 2005. On February 15, 2005, the company announced an adjustment related to an increase in the estimate for its allowance for doubtful accounts and a restatement for a change in revenue recognition method for its Culinary and Healthcare externships. [11] In January 2008, CEC reported that the SEC has closed its investigation and will take no action against the company.[12][13][14] A Department of Justice investigation began in 1994[15] and was terminated in April 2007, with the DOJ declining prosecution. Another investigation on a different matter was begun by the Civil Division of the DOJ in June 2006 and is currently ongoing.[16]
In June 2005, the U.S. Department of Education prohibited CEC from expanding until it had resolved issues with financial statements and program reviews connected with Collins College and Brooks College two CEC schools.[17] In January 2007, the U.S. Department of Education lifted its restrictions on the company opening new schools or acquiring existing ones.[18]
Career Education's American InterContinental University was placed on probation in December 2005 with its accrediting agency, SACS.[19] The probation status was reviewed after one year, in December 2006, and extended an additional 12 months.[20] On December 11, 2007, CEC announced that SACS has removed AIU's probation and that the university's accreditation remains in good standing.[21]
Brooks College, a Career Education owned school, was the subject of an unfavorable examination of for-profit trade schools in the CBS news magazine 60 Minutes which focused on alleged misrepresentations by admission representatives to prospective students. A CBS producer with a hidden camera visited several Career Education schools in the New York area, including the Katharine Gibbs School.[22] In June 2007, Career Education announced that it will close both campuses of Brooks College.[23]
In January 2007, the New York State Education Department reported deficiencies at the Katharine Gibbs School's New York campus. The problems related to faculty qualifications and remedial course offerings. Career Education has since closed Katharine Gibbs School's New York campus.[24]
California Culinary Academy, which was purchased by Career Education in 1999, was the subject of an unfavorable article in the San Francisco Weekly focusing on alleged misrepresentations and omissions made to prospective students to enroll them in the school.[25] According to the Chronicle of Higher Education, a lawsuit was filed over the matter.[26]
On November 1, 2011 Career Education's Chief Executive Officer resigned as corporate profits significantly fell and allegations were made involving inflated student placement statistics at its career-oriented schools in New York.[27][28] Over the year the stock value dropped about 48%.[29] Steve Lesnik was appointed by the Board of Directors to serve as the new CEO. Lesnik was also a visiting lecturer at Northwestern University and a Director of the Illinois Math & Science Academy Foundation.[30] Several lawsuits were filed by investors who claimed they were defrauded. CEO Gary McCullough was paid nearly $9.8 million in 2011.[31]
In 2014, Career Education Corporation was under investigation by more than a dozen states Attorneys General, although no charges of any kind have been filed by them. The company said it was cooperating fully with the request for information. [32]
After seeking unsuccessfully to sell several of its campuses, in June 2007 Career Education announced that it would close the Brooks College campuses in Sunnyvale and Long Beach, California, and the Pittsburgh branch of the International Academy of Design and Technology. No new enrollments would be accepted, and the final graduation dates would be September 2008 at the Sunnyvale campus, December 2008 in Pittsburgh, and March 2009 in Long Beach.[33]
On February 2008 Career Education Corporation announced that it would also phase out operations of nine money-losing colleges, including several Gibbs College campuses, Lehigh Valley College, and McIntosh College in New Hampshire and to seek permission to convert two Gibbs college locations to Sanford-Brown College campuses.[23]
On February 18, 2008 CEC's [34]
In January 2011, the company announced it would be laying off 600 people.[35] Due to continued declining enrollment, additional plans to lay off as much as 7% of CEC's workforce (900 jobs) and close 23 schools were announced on November 8, 2012.[36] The corporation made the announcement as it reported a $33.1 million net loss for the third quarter of 2012, as well a 23 percent decline in enrollment from a year ago. The Chicago Sun Times explained that "a U.S. Senate committee report last summer criticized for-profit schools for focusing on their own profits above their students’ job-readiness and for burdening students with loan debt at taxpayers’ expense. The scrutiny has hurt for-profit college enrollment."[37] 25% of the current faculty at the California Culinary Academy were notified of their termination in mid November, effective December 31, 2012.
Year over year, student enrollment dropped 16% from 2012 to 2013. [38]
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