Bill Text: NY S04268 | 2011-2012 | General Assembly | Amended

NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Relates to the licensure of private proprietary schools; provides for increased competition among schools to improve the quality of training provided at private proprietary schools and the quality of student performance in the workplace.

Spectrum: Bipartisan Bill

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2012-06-19 - SUBSTITUTED BY A7859A [S04268 Detail]

Download: New_York-2011-S04268-Amended.html
                           S T A T E   O F   N E W   Y O R K
       ________________________________________________________________________
                                        4268--B
           Cal. No. 512
                              2011-2012 Regular Sessions
                                   I N  S E N A T E
                                    March 25, 2011
                                      ___________
       Introduced by Sen. LAVALLE -- (at request of the State Education Depart-
         ment)  --  read  twice  and  ordered  printed,  and when printed to be
         committed to the Committee on Higher Education --  reported  favorably
         from  said committee, ordered to first and second report, ordered to a
         third reading -- reported favorably from said committee and  committed
         to  the  Committee  on  Finance -- committee discharged, bill amended,
         ordered reprinted as amended and  recommitted  to  said  committee  --
         committee  discharged,  bill amended, ordered reprinted as amended and
         recommitted to said committee
       AN ACT to amend the education law,  in  relation  to  the  licensure  of
         private  proprietary  schools; and providing for the repeal of certain
         provisions upon the expiration thereof
         THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, REPRESENTED IN SENATE AND  ASSEM-
       BLY, DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:
    1    Section  1. The article heading of article 101 of the education law is
    2  amended to read as follows:
    3                         LICENSED PRIVATE [TRADE AND
    4                CORRESPONDENCE] CAREER SCHOOLS AND CERTIFIED
    5                    ENGLISH AS A SECOND LANGUAGE SCHOOLS
    6    S 2. Legislative intent. The Legislature  hereby  finds  and  declares
    7  that  there  is  a  growing need to protect students enrolled in certain
    8  non-degree granting proprietary schools from inadequate job training and
    9  school closure, which disrupts the academic progress of  these  students
   10  and jeopardizes their tuition funds. Given the growing needs and demands
   11  of  business and industry, the legislature further finds and declares it
   12  necessary to align the state education department's current oversight of
   13  these schools with these significantly increasing needs. The legislature
   14  finds it necessary for the department to review these  schools'  curric-
   15  ulums  and instruction to help ensure students receive adequate training
   16  to obtain employment and to successfully perform their occupation in the
   17  workplace. It also finds it necessary for the department to intervene in
        EXPLANATION--Matter in ITALICS (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                             [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                  LBD08579-09-1
       S. 4268--B                          2
    1  certain school closures where teach out plans  may  not  be  efficiently
    2  implemented and students may not complete training.
    3    The  legislature  also finds it necessary for the department to review
    4  these schools for financial viability to prevent school  closure,  which
    5  will,  in  turn,  preserve  tuition  funds and federal and state funding
    6  sources. This act is also necessary to increase the  accountability  and
    7  transparency of these schools by allowing students to check on whether a
    8  school is approved or whether a teacher at such school is licensed.
    9    The  legislature  intends  for  this act to increase competition among
   10  these schools, which will, in turn,  improve  the  quality  of  training
   11  offered  at  these schools and the quality of student performance in the
   12  workplace.  This act will provide the  department  with  the  tools  and
   13  resources  necessary  to effectively supervise these schools for compli-
   14  ance and to reimburse students for tuition and other related costs  when
   15  these  schools  close  as  a  result of fiscal failure or noncompliance,
   16  which will overall strengthen student protection.
   17    S 3. Section 5001 of the education law, as added by chapter 817 of the
   18  laws of 1972, the section heading, subdivision 1, paragraph h of  subdi-
   19  vision  2  and paragraph b of subdivision 4 as amended and paragraphs i,
   20  j, k, l and m of subdivision 2 and subdivisions 2-a and 2-b as added  by
   21  chapter 434 of the laws of 1999, paragraph b of subdivision 2 as amended
   22  and subdivisions 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9 as added by chapter 887 of the laws of
   23  1990,  paragraph  d of subdivision 2 and subdivision 4 as amended, para-
   24  graphs a, b, c and d of subdivision 9 as added and subdivisions 5, 6, 7,
   25  8 and 9 as renumbered by chapter 604 of the laws of 1993, paragraph e of
   26  subdivision 2 as amended by chapter 439 of the laws of 1980,  and  para-
   27  graph  f  of subdivision 2 as amended by chapter 13 of the laws of 2010,
   28  is amended to read as follows:
   29    S 5001. Licensed  private  CAREER  schools  [and  registered  business
   30  schools/computer   training  facilities].  1.  Schools  required  to  be
   31  licensed [or registered]. No private school [or computer training facil-
   32  ity] which charges tuition or fees  [for]  RELATED  TO  instruction  and
   33  which  is  not  exempted  hereunder  shall  be operated by any person or
   34  persons, firm, corporation, or private organization for the  purpose  of
   35  teaching  or giving instruction in any subject or subjects, unless it is
   36  licensed [or registered] by the department. As used  in  this  article[,
   37  the following terms shall have the following meanings]:
   38    a.  ["Licensed]  "LICENSED private CAREER school" OR "LICENSED PRIVATE
   39  SCHOOL" shall mean any entity offering to instruct or teach any  subject
   40  by  any  plan  or method including written, visual or audio-visual meth-
   41  ods[.], AND SHALL INCLUDE ANY INSTITUTION LICENSED OR  REGISTERED  AS  A
   42  REGISTERED  BUSINESS  SCHOOL OR COMPUTER TRAINING FACILITY ON THE EFFEC-
   43  TIVE DATE OF THE CHAPTER OF  THE  LAWS  OF  TWO  THOUSAND  ELEVEN  WHICH
   44  AMENDED  THIS SUBDIVISION. FOLLOWING SUCH EFFECTIVE DATE, THERE SHALL BE
   45  NO DISTINCTION BETWEEN INSTITUTIONS PREVIOUSLY  DEFINED  AS  "REGISTERED
   46  BUSINESS  SCHOOLS"  OR "COMPUTER TRAINING FACILITIES" AND OTHER LICENSED
   47  PRIVATE SCHOOLS, AND ANY REFERENCE  IN  LAW  TO  A  REGISTERED  BUSINESS
   48  SCHOOL  OR  COMPUTER  TRAINING FACILITY SHALL BE DEEMED A REFERENCE TO A
   49  LICENSED PRIVATE CAREER SCHOOL. INSTITUTIONS HOLDING  A  VALID  BUSINESS
   50  SCHOOL  REGISTRATION ON SUCH EFFECTIVE DATE, INCLUDING COMPUTER-TRAINING
   51  FACILITIES, SHALL HAVE SUCH REGISTRATIONS REPLACED BY THE  COMMISSIONER,
   52  AT NO COST, WITH LICENSES VALID UNTIL THE EXPIRATION DATE LISTED ON SUCH
   53  PREVIOUS REGISTRATION; AND
   54    b.  ["Registered  business  school"  shall  mean  a  school in which a
   55  curriculum primarily provides a sequence of  courses  that  may  include
   56  accounting or bookkeeping, marketing, business arithmetic, business law,
       S. 4268--B                          3
    1  business     English,     shorthand,     typing,    computer    business
    2  applications/programming, or substantially all  said  courses,  for  the
    3  purpose  of  preparing  an  individual  to pursue a business occupation;
    4  provided, however, that a registered business school program may include
    5  instruction  in  English  as  a  second language at a beginning or basic
    6  level, provided such instruction shall not constitute  more  than  fifty
    7  percent  of such program. Such authorization shall apply to all students
    8  who commence instruction in a registered business school  program  prior
    9  to July first, nineteen hundred ninety-one. A business school registered
   10  under  this  section  shall employ only teachers licensed by the depart-
   11  ment,  whose  qualifications  are  substantially  equivalent  to   those
   12  required of teachers of equivalent subjects in public secondary schools.
   13    c.  "Computer  training  facility"  shall  mean  any  entity primarily
   14  engaged in providing training on the use, language,  programs,  applica-
   15  tion,  networking  and technical repair of computers] "CERTIFIED ENGLISH
   16  AS A SECOND LANGUAGE SCHOOL" OR "CERTIFIED  ESL  SCHOOL"  SHALL  MEAN  A
   17  LANGUAGE  SCHOOL  CONDUCTED  FOR-PROFIT  WHICH  PROVIDES  INSTRUCTION IN
   18  ENGLISH AS A SECOND LANGUAGE AND WHICH ACCEPTS NO PUBLIC  FUNDS  AND  IS
   19  CERTIFIED PURSUANT TO PARAGRAPH F OF SUBDIVISION FOUR OF THIS SECTION.
   20    2. Exempt schools. The following schools are exempted from the licens-
   21  ing requirement of this section:
   22    a. institutions authorized to confer degrees in this state;
   23    b.  schools[, other than correspondence schools,] providing kindergar-
   24  ten,  nursery,  elementary  or  secondary  education,   except   schools
   25  conducted  for  profit  which provide instruction in English as a second
   26  language or preparation for  high  school  equivalency  examinations  to
   27  out-of-school youth or adults;
   28    c. schools operated by governmental agencies or authorities;
   29    d. schools which engage exclusively in training of students with disa-
   30  bilities as defined in section forty-four hundred one of this chapter;
   31    e.  schools  conducted on a not-for-profit basis by firms or organiza-
   32  tions for the training of their own employees only, provided  that  such
   33  instruction is offered at no charge to such employees, or by a fraternal
   34  society or benevolent order for its members or their immediate relatives
   35  only;
   36    f.  schools  which provide instruction in the following subjects only:
   37  religion, dancing, music, painting, drawing, sculpture, poetry, dramatic
   38  art, languages, reading comprehension,  mathematics,  recreation,  yoga,
   39  martial  arts, PILATES and athletics, including the training of students
   40  to teach such subjects, PROVIDED, HOWEVER, THAT  SCHOOLS  CONDUCTED  FOR
   41  THE  PURPOSE  OF  TRAINING PERSONAL TRAINERS SHALL BE EXCLUDED FROM THIS
   42  EXEMPTION AND SHALL BE REQUIRED TO OBTAIN LICENSURE;
   43    g. schools in which the course of instruction is licensed,  registered
   44  or  approved  under  any  other  section of this chapter or by any other
   45  department or agency of the state;
   46    h. schools which provide instruction designed solely for giving flight
   47  training and/or related ground school instruction;
   48    i. schools in which instruction designed solely to prepare  applicants
   49  for admission to professional licensing examinations administered by the
   50  department  pursuant  to title eight of this chapter, and applicants for
   51  examination for admission to the practice of law;
   52    j. schools which offer continuing education  courses  exclusively  for
   53  individuals  licensed  by the department pursuant to title eight of this
   54  chapter and for individuals admitted to the practice of law;
       S. 4268--B                          4
    1    k. schools which provide instruction given exclusively to employees of
    2  a person or organization which has contracted  with  another  person  or
    3  organization to provide such instruction at no cost to the employees;
    4    l. conferences, trade shows, workshops, seminars, institutes or cours-
    5  es  of  study  offered  and  sponsored either jointly or individually by
    6  recognized trade, business or professional organizations for the benefit
    7  of their membership; [or those offered to the general public by individ-
    8  uals, firms or organizations which neither conduct such activities for a
    9  duration of more than five consecutive days  nor  more  frequently  than
   10  twice in any one calendar year;]
   11    m. SCHOOLS THAT LIMIT THEIR TOTAL CONFERENCES, TRADE SHOWS, WORKSHOPS,
   12  SEMINARS,  INSTITUTES OR OTHER COURSE OFFERINGS TO NO MORE THAN TWICE IN
   13  ONE CALENDAR YEAR WITH EACH OF THOSE OFFERINGS FOR  NO  MORE  THAN  FIVE
   14  DAYS;
   15    N.  schools  which provide instruction exclusively to persons employed
   16  full-time or part-time in  the  field  in  which  instruction  is  being
   17  offered,  where the instruction is provided to meet continuing education
   18  standards required for professional licensure as defined by law in  this
   19  state; AND
   20    O.  SCHOOLS IN CANDIDACY STATUS PURSUANT TO SUBPARAGRAPH (IV) OF PARA-
   21  GRAPH B OF SUBDIVISION FOUR OF THIS SECTION.
   22    2-a. Schools exempted pursuant to subdivision two of this section  may
   23  waive  such  exemption  and  apply  for  a  license  [or  registration];
   24  provided, however, that the review of such applications shall be left to
   25  the discretion of the commissioner.
   26    2-b. Programs offered by licensed private CAREER  schools  [or  regis-
   27  tered  business  schools to private businesses where there is no tuition
   28  liability] TO EMPLOYEES OF A PERSON OR ORGANIZATION WHICH HAS CONTRACTED
   29  WITH ANOTHER PERSON OR ORGANIZATION TO PROVIDE SUCH  INSTRUCTION  AT  NO
   30  COST  to  the  employees  shall  be exempt from the requirements of this
   31  article, provided that the following requirements are met:
   32    a. Only employees of the [private business]  EMPLOYER  for  which  the
   33  program is being offered may enroll in classes that make up the program.
   34    b. Certificates or diplomas awarded to students in the program may not
   35  reference in any way the department.
   36    c. Prior to the commencement of the program, such schools shall submit
   37  to  the  department  a  disclosure form, prescribed by the commissioner,
   38  copies of which shall  be  provided  to  all  students  in  such  exempt
   39  program,  which shall include but not be limited to the following infor-
   40  mation:
   41    (i) a description of the location and time period in which the program
   42  will be offered;
   43    (ii) a statement that the students enrolled in the program  shall  not
   44  be  subject  to  any  tuition  liability  for  the program, even if such
   45  students do not complete the program;
   46    (iii) a statement that the program  being  provided  to  the  [private
   47  business]  EMPLOYER  has  not been approved by the department and is not
   48  under the department's jurisdiction and that the students in the program
   49  have been advised of the fact; and
   50    (iv) the signatures of the school director or owner of the school  and
   51  the  representative  of  the  [private  business] EMPLOYER for which the
   52  program is being offered certifying the accuracy of  the  statements  on
   53  the form.
   54    d.  Any  additional student openings in a program deemed exempt by the
   55  department may be made available to students  not  affiliated  with  the
   56  [private  business] EMPLOYER on the condition that such students execute
       S. 4268--B                          5
    1  a disclosure form as prescribed in paragraph c of this subdivision. Such
    2  admitted students shall only constitute up to ten percent of the  exempt
    3  program's total capacity.
    4    4.  Application, renewal application and application fees. a. Applica-
    5  tion and renewal application for a license as a  private  CAREER  school
    6  [or  registration  as  a  business  school] required by the commissioner
    7  shall be filed on forms  prescribed  and  provided  by  the  department.
    8  Except as provided in subparagraph (iii) of paragraph e of this subdivi-
    9  sion, each renewal application for [a private business school registered
   10  pursuant to this section or for] a private CAREER school licensed pursu-
   11  ant to this section shall include an audited financial statement audited
   12  according  to  generally  accepted  auditing standards by an independent
   13  certified public accountant or  an  independent  public  accountant  and
   14  statistical reports certified by the owner or operator of the school, as
   15  required  by  the commissioner; provided, however, that the commissioner
   16  shall accept a copy of a current financial statement previously filed by
   17  a school with any other  governmental  agency  in  compliance  with  the
   18  provisions of any federal or state laws, or rules or regulations if such
   19  statement  contains  all of the information required under this subdivi-
   20  sion and conforms to this subdivision's requirements of auditing, review
   21  and certification. Any required audit of the financial  statement  shall
   22  be  a  condition of licensure [or registration] and shall be paid for by
   23  the school, and the results of the  audit  shall  be  forwarded  to  the
   24  commissioner.  Applications  not  accompanied  by the audits and reports
   25  required pursuant to  this  subdivision  shall  not  be  considered  for
   26  approval  by the commissioner. Initial applications shall be accompanied
   27  by financial reports as required by the commissioner. [The  commissioner
   28  shall act on an initial application for a license or registration within
   29  one  hundred  twenty  days  of  receipt  of a complete application.] The
   30  applicant shall receive a written approval or denial together  with  the
   31  reasons for a denial of such application.
   32    b.  (i)  An  initial  license [or registration] issued pursuant to the
   33  provisions of this article shall be valid for a period of two  years.  A
   34  renewal  of  license [or registration] issued pursuant to the provisions
   35  of this article shall be valid for a period of four years. [All  license
   36  and  registration  fees for a renewal shall be double the amounts listed
   37  in paragraph g of this subdivision.]
   38    (ii) EVERY APPLICANT AND RENEWAL APPLICANT SHALL PAY TO THE DEPARTMENT
   39  A NONREFUNDABLE, NONTRANSFERABLE APPLICATION FEE. THE  INITIAL  APPLICA-
   40  TION  FEE FOR NEW SCHOOLS SHALL BE FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS, OF WHICH THREE
   41  THOUSAND DOLLARS SHALL ACCRUE TO THE CREDIT  OF  THE  PROPRIETARY  VOCA-
   42  TIONAL  SCHOOL SUPERVISION ACCOUNT AND TWO THOUSAND DOLLARS SHALL ACCRUE
   43  TO THE TUITION REIMBURSEMENT ACCOUNT. FOR ADDITIONAL LICENSED  LOCATIONS
   44  OF  CURRENTLY  OPERATING SCHOOLS, THE APPLICATION FEE SHALL BE TWO THOU-
   45  SAND FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS, WHICH SHALL  ACCRUE  TO  THE  CREDIT  OF  THE
   46  PROPRIETARY  VOCATIONAL SCHOOL SUPERVISION ACCOUNT. FOR RENEWAL APPLICA-
   47  TIONS, THE FEE SHALL BE BASED ON GROSS ANNUAL TUITION INCOME  AS  DETER-
   48  MINED BY THE ANNUAL FINANCIAL STATEMENTS REQUIRED IN PARAGRAPH A OF THIS
   49  SUBDIVISION  FOR  THE  MOST  RECENT SCHOOL FISCAL YEAR, ACCORDING TO THE
   50  FOLLOWING SCHEDULE:
   51       GROSS ANNUAL TUITION INCOME           FEE
   52       0-$199,999                            $   750.00
   53       $200,000-$499,999                     $ 1,500.00
   54       $500,000-$999,999                     $ 2,225.00
       S. 4268--B                          6
    1       $1,000,000-$4,999,999                 $ 4,500.00
    2       $5,000,000-$9,999,999                 $ 9,000.00
    3       $10,000,000 OR ABOVE                  $18,000.00
    4    SUCH  RENEWAL FEES SHALL ACCRUE TO THE CREDIT OF THE PROPRIETARY VOCA-
    5  TIONAL SCHOOL SUPERVISION ACCOUNT. IF THE  EVALUATION  OF  A  PARTICULAR
    6  COURSE  OR  FACILITY  REQUIRES THE SERVICES OF AN EXPERT NOT EMPLOYED BY
    7  THE DEPARTMENT, THE DEPARTMENT SHALL RETAIN SUCH EXPERT AND  THE  SCHOOL
    8  SHALL REIMBURSE THE DEPARTMENT FOR THE REASONABLE COST OF SUCH SERVICES.
    9    (III)  Each school shall display, near the entrance to the school [and
   10  under glass], the license [or registration] which has been issued to it.
   11  Such authorization shall be displayed only  during  the  period  of  its
   12  validity.
   13    (IV)  A  SCHOOL  WHICH HAS APPLIED FOR A PRIVATE CAREER SCHOOL LICENSE
   14  MAY REQUEST CANDIDACY STATUS FOR ONE TIME ONLY. CANDIDACY  STATUS  SHALL
   15  NOT  BE  ISSUED  TO  SCHOOLS OFFERING PROGRAMS TO TRAIN STUDENTS TO PASS
   16  LICENSURE EXAMINATIONS SUCH AS  APPEARANCE  ENHANCEMENT  TESTS,  ACHIEVE
   17  NURSE  AIDE OR NURSE ASSISTANT CERTIFICATION, OR PASS EXAMINATIONS LEAD-
   18  ING TO LICENSURE IN ANY OTHER PROFESSION OR OCCUPATION DETERMINED BY THE
   19  COMMISSIONER TO REQUIRE FULL LICENSURE STATUS.   CANDIDACY STATUS  SHALL
   20  ALLOW  A  SCHOOL  TO  OPERATE UNLICENSED FOR AN INITIAL PERIOD OF TWELVE
   21  MONTHS DURING THE LICENSURE APPLICATION PROCESS, WHICH MAY  BE  EXTENDED
   22  TO A MAXIMUM, NON-RENEWABLE PERIOD OF EIGHTEEN MONTHS, UNDER THE FOLLOW-
   23  ING CONDITIONS:
   24    (1) THE PROSPECTIVE SCHOOL SUBMITS A CANDIDATE SCHOOL APPLICATION FEE,
   25  SEPARATE FROM THE SCHOOL APPLICATION FEE, OF FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS WHICH
   26  SHALL  ACCRUE  TO THE CREDIT OF THE PROPRIETARY VOCATIONAL SCHOOL SUPER-
   27  VISION ACCOUNT;
   28    (2) THE SCHOOL SHALL NOT REPRESENT THAT IT IS  LICENSED  OR  THAT  ITS
   29  PROGRAMS ARE APPROVED THROUGH THE DEPARTMENT;
   30    (3)  TO  EVERY  PROSPECTIVE  STUDENT,  THE  SCHOOL SHALL DISSEMINATE A
   31  STATEMENT, PROVIDED BY THE DEPARTMENT, THAT THE FACILITIES, INSTRUCTORS,
   32  AND PROGRAMS BEING PROVIDED HAVE NOT BEEN APPROVED AND ARE NOT UNDER THE
   33  DEPARTMENT'S JURISDICTION DURING THE CANDIDACY  PERIOD.  SUCH  STATEMENT
   34  SHALL  INDICATE  THAT STUDENTS ATTENDING CANDIDATE SCHOOLS SHALL HAVE NO
   35  RECOURSE THROUGH THE DEPARTMENT'S STUDENT COMPLAINT PROCESS NOR HAVE ANY
   36  RESTITUTION AVAILABLE FROM THE TUITION REIMBURSEMENT  ACCOUNT.  STUDENTS
   37  SHALL  SIGN  AN ATTESTATION TO THE RECEIPT OF THIS STATEMENT. THE SCHOOL
   38  SHALL RETAIN THE SIGNED ATTESTATION AND PROVIDE THE STUDENT WITH A  COPY
   39  OF SUCH SIGNED STATEMENT;
   40    (4)  THE  SCHOOL  SHALL  DEMONSTRATE FINANCIAL VIABILITY THROUGH MEANS
   41  DEEMED APPROPRIATE BY THE COMMISSIONER. SUCH MEANS MAY  INCLUDE  SUBMIT-
   42  TING AN AUDITED FINANCIAL STATEMENT BASED ON THE MOST RECENTLY COMPLETED
   43  FISCAL YEAR; SECURING AND MAINTAINING A PERFORMANCE BOND, PAYABLE TO THE
   44  COMMISSIONER, IN AN AMOUNT APPROPRIATE TO ELIMINATE ANY LIABILITY TO THE
   45  TUITION  REIMBURSEMENT ACCOUNT IN THE EVENT THE SCHOOL CEASES OPERATION;
   46  LIMITING THE COLLECTION OF TUITION FUNDS UNTIL  EACH  STUDENT  COMPLETES
   47  THE PROGRAM OF STUDY; OR OTHER MEANS ACCEPTABLE TO THE COMMISSIONER; AND
   48    (5) ANY BREACH OF THE ABOVE CONDITIONS SHALL RESULT IN THE DISAPPROVAL
   49  OF  THE  SCHOOL'S  LICENSURE APPLICATION AND THE FORFEITURE OF CANDIDATE
   50  STATUS. CONTINUED OPERATION AFTER THIS  DISAPPROVAL  SHALL  SUBJECT  THE
   51  SCHOOL TO THE DISCIPLINARY ACTION PRESCRIBED UNDER PARAGRAPH B OF SUBDI-
   52  VISION SIX OF SECTION FIVE THOUSAND THREE OF THIS ARTICLE.
   53    (6)  ON OR BEFORE THE END OF THE INITIAL TWELVE-MONTH PERIOD OF CANDI-
   54  DACY STATUS, THE COMMISSIONER SHALL REVIEW THE SCHOOL'S APPLICATION  FOR
   55  LICENSURE  AND  DOCUMENTATION  RELATING TO THE SCHOOL'S CANDIDACY STATUS
       S. 4268--B                          7
    1  AND SHALL DETERMINE WHETHER SUCH CANDIDACY STATUS SHOULD BE EXTENDED  TO
    2  THE  FULL  EIGHTEEN MONTHS AND WHETHER THE SCHOOL MAY CONTINUE TO ENROLL
    3  STUDENTS BEYOND THE EIGHTEEN-MONTH PERIOD OR  THE  SCHOOL'S  APPLICATION
    4  FOR LICENSURE WILL BE INITIALLY DISAPPROVED FOR FAILURE TO MEET REQUIRED
    5  STANDARDS.
    6    c.  An  application for renewal of any license [or registration] shall
    7  be submitted at least one hundred twenty days prior  to  the  expiration
    8  date  of  the current authorization to operate accompanied by the nonre-
    9  fundable application fee and  such  certified  statistical  reports  and
   10  annual financial statements required pursuant to this subdivision.
   11    d.  When  complete and timely application has been made for renewal of
   12  any license [or  registration],  the  school  shall  receive  a  written
   13  approval  or  denial,  together  with the reasons for denial of renewal,
   14  from the commissioner no less than thirty days prior to  the  date  such
   15  license [or registration] expires.
   16    e.  Financial statements and statistical reports. (i) Licensed private
   17  CAREER schools and [registered business] CANDIDATE schools shall  submit
   18  such  certified  statistical  reports and annual financial statements as
   19  required by the  commissioner.  The  commissioner  may  require  audited
   20  statistical  reports  upon  a  determination  that a school has provided
   21  false or inaccurate certified statistical reports. The financial  state-
   22  ments  shall  be  based  on the fiscal year of the school and shall also
   23  include an itemized account of tuition refunds due and owing to past  or
   24  presently  enrolled students. Statistical reports shall include, but not
   25  be limited to, enrollment, completion and placement  data.  The  commis-
   26  sioner  shall  use  such  financial  statements  and statistical reports
   27  submitted for the purposes of licensure [and registration]  of  schools,
   28  establishing  fees or assessments pursuant to this article and determin-
   29  ing standards pursuant to paragraph b of  subdivision  five  of  section
   30  five thousand two of this article. The attorney general, the comptroller
   31  and  the  president  of  the higher education services corporation shall
   32  have access to this information when it is necessary  to  perform  their
   33  duties as required by state law.
   34    (ii)  Any  school which received [in excess of two hundred fifty] FIVE
   35  HUNDRED thousand dollars OR MORE in gross tuition  in  a  school  fiscal
   36  year  shall  be required to submit TO THE COMMISSIONER an annual audited
   37  financial statement [to the commissioner] PREPARED  IN  ACCORDANCE  WITH
   38  GENERALLY  ACCEPTED ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES for that fiscal year. In addi-
   39  tion, any school which has a gross tuition of [two hundred  fifty]  LESS
   40  THAN FIVE HUNDRED thousand dollars [or less] in a school fiscal year but
   41  whose  combined  state  and  federal  student financial aid in such year
   42  [exceeds] EQUALS one hundred thousand dollars OR MORE shall also  submit
   43  an  annual  audited  financial  statement  to  the commissioner for that
   44  fiscal year.
   45    (iii) Schools whose gross tuition is [two  hundred  fifty]  LESS  THAN
   46  FIVE  HUNDRED  thousand  dollars  [or  less] in a school fiscal year and
   47  which receive less than one hundred thousand dollars in state and feder-
   48  al student financial aid in a school fiscal year  shall  file  with  the
   49  commissioner  an unaudited financial statement in a format prescribed by
   50  the commissioner, provided, however, that any such  school  [with  gross
   51  tuition  in  excess  of fifty thousand dollars shall have filed at least
   52  one audited financial statement after the first year of  its  operation.
   53  The  statement shall be signed by the president or chief executive offi-
   54  cer and the chief fiscal officer of the school who  shall  certify  that
   55  the  statements  are  true and accurate] SHALL FILE AN AUDITED FINANCIAL
   56  STATEMENT THE FISCAL  YEAR  AFTER  A  REVIEWED  FINANCIAL  STATEMENT  IS
       S. 4268--B                          8
    1  SUBMITTED.  FOR  SUCH SCHOOLS, AUDITED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS ARE REQUIRED
    2  EVERY TWO YEARS, AT MINIMUM, WITH REVIEWED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  ALLOWED
    3  DURING THE ALTERNATE YEAR. Upon a determination by the commissioner that
    4  a  school has submitted false or inaccurate statements or that a signif-
    5  icant, unsubstantiated  decline  in  gross  tuition  has  occurred,  the
    6  commissioner  may  require  any such school to file an audited financial
    7  statement pursuant to this paragraph EVEN DURING  ALTERNATE  YEARS  WHEN
    8  REVIEWED STATEMENTS WOULD ORDINARILY BE ALLOWED.
    9    f.  Alternate  licensing provision. The commissioner shall issue regu-
   10  lations which define alternate licensing OR  CERTIFICATION  requirements
   11  for the following:
   12    (1)  correspondence schools in which all approved programs and courses
   13  are under three hundred hours;
   14    (2) schools which are eligible for exemption under  this  section  but
   15  which elect to be licensed;
   16    (3) non-profit schools exempt from taxation under section 501(c)(3) of
   17  the  internal  revenue  code  whose programs are funded entirely through
   18  donations from individuals or  philanthropic  organizations,  or  endow-
   19  ments, and interest accrued thereon; and
   20    (4) language schools conducted for-profit which provide instruction in
   21  English as a second language and which accept no public funds.
   22    [g.  Application  fee. Every applicant and renewal applicant shall pay
   23  to the department a nonrefundable, nontransferable fee  based  on  gross
   24  annual  tuition  income as determined by the annual financial statements
   25  required in paragraph a of this subdivision for the most  recent  school
   26  fiscal year, according to the following schedule:
   27       GROSS ANNUAL TUITION INCOME            FEE
   28       0-$199,999                             $ 250.00
   29       $200,000-$499,999                      $ 500.00
   30       $500,000-$999,999                      $ 750.00
   31       $1,000,000-$4,999,999                 $1,500.00
   32       $5,000,000-$9,999,999                 $3,000.00
   33       $10,000,000 or above                  $6,000.00
   34    Such  fees  shall  accrue  to the credit of the proprietary vocational
   35  school supervision account. If the evaluation of a particular course  or
   36  facility  requires the services of an expert not employed by the depart-
   37  ment, the department shall retain such expert and the school shall reim-
   38  burse the department for the reasonable cost of such services.]
   39    5. Required  disclosure  for  licensure.  a.  The  commissioner  shall
   40  require that each applicant for a license for the operation of a private
   41  [vocational  or  business] CAREER school disclose the following informa-
   42  tion:
   43    (1) Whether the applicant, or any  corporation,  partnership,  associ-
   44  ation or organization or person holding an ownership or control interest
   45  in  such  school,  or any employee responsible in a supervisory capacity
   46  for the administration of student funds or governmental funds, has  been
   47  convicted of a crime defined in this article, or any other crime involv-
   48  ing  the  operation  of  any  educational  or  training  program, or, in
   49  connection with the operation of any such program, a crime involving the
   50  unlawful acquisition, use, payment  or  expenditure  of  educational  or
   51  training program funds; and
   52    (2)  Whether  the  applicant, or any corporation, partnership, associ-
   53  ation or organization or person holding an ownership or control interest
       S. 4268--B                          9
    1  in such school, or any employee responsible in  a  supervisory  capacity
    2  for  the  administration of student funds or governmental funds has been
    3  convicted:
    4    (A)  in  this  state  of  any of the following felonies defined in the
    5  penal law: bribery involving public servants; commercial bribery; perju-
    6  ry in the second degree;  rewarding  official  misconduct;  larceny,  in
    7  connection  with  the  provision  of  services or involving the theft of
    8  governmental funds; offering a false instrument for  filing,  falsifying
    9  business  records; tampering with public records; criminal usury; scheme
   10  to defraud; or defrauding the government; or
   11    (B) in any other jurisdiction of an  offense  which  is  substantially
   12  similar  to  any  of the felonies defined in clause (A) of this subpara-
   13  graph and for which a sentence to a term of imprisonment  in  excess  of
   14  one  year  was  authorized and is authorized in this state regardless of
   15  whether such sentence was imposed; and
   16    (3) Whether the applicant, or any  corporation,  partnership,  associ-
   17  ation or organization or person holding an ownership or control interest
   18  in  such  school,  or any employee responsible in a supervisory capacity
   19  for the administration of student funds or governmental funds, has  been
   20  finally  determined  in  any  administrative or civil proceeding to have
   21  committed a violation of any provision of this article or any rules  and
   22  regulations promulgated pursuant thereto, or any related order or deter-
   23  mination  of  the  commissioner,  or of any similar statute, rule, regu-
   24  lation, order or determination of another jurisdiction pertaining to the
   25  licensure and operation of any educational or training program; and
   26    (4) Whether any school owned or operated by the  applicant  closed  or
   27  ceased  operation  and,  if  so,  whether at the time of the closing the
   28  applicant was subject to a pending  disciplinary  action,  disallowance,
   29  fine  or  other  penalty  and  whether it owed refunds to any government
   30  agency or students.
   31    b. No application for any license pursuant to this  article  shall  be
   32  denied  by  reason  of  disclosure  pursuant  to this subdivision of the
   33  applicant, or any corporation, partnership, association or  organization
   34  or  person  holding  an ownership or control interest in such school, or
   35  any employee responsible in a  supervisory  capacity  for  the  adminis-
   36  tration  of  student funds or governmental funds unless the commissioner
   37  makes a written  determination  that  there  is  a  direct  relationship
   38  between one or more of such previous offenses and the license sought, or
   39  that  issuance of the license would create an unreasonable risk to prop-
   40  erty or to the safety, education or welfare of specific  individuals  or
   41  the general public. In making such determination, the commissioner shall
   42  be  guided by the factors set forth in section seven hundred fifty-three
   43  of the correction law. For purposes of this subdivision,  "ownership  or
   44  control  interest"  means: with respect to a school that is organized as
   45  or owned by a corporation, a position as an officer or director of  such
   46  corporation;  or, with respect to a school that is organized as or owned
   47  by a partnership, a position as a partner; or any other interest  total-
   48  ing ten percent or more, whether direct or indirect, in the total equity
   49  or assets of such school.
   50    c.  The commissioner may deny, suspend, revoke or decline to renew any
   51  license: (1) if the significance of the  convictions  or  administrative
   52  violations  warrant such action [or]; (2) if the commissioner determines
   53  that a school did not make any disclosure required by this  subdivision;
   54  OR  (3)  IF THE COMMISSIONER DETERMINES THAT A SCHOOL'S FINANCIAL CONDI-
   55  TION MAY RESULT IN THE INTERRUPTION OR CESSATION OF INSTRUCTION OR JEOP-
   56  ARDIZE STUDENT TUITION FUNDS.
       S. 4268--B                         10
    1    6. If, during the [two year] period for which a license [or  registra-
    2  tion]  is granted, the commissioner determines that a school's financial
    3  condition may result in the interruption or cessation of instruction  or
    4  jeopardize  student  tuition funds, the commissioner may, upon notice to
    5  the  school,  place the school on probation for a period of no more than
    6  [thirty days] ONE YEAR, during which time the school and the  department
    7  must  make  efforts  to  resolve the problems at the school.  THE SCHOOL
    8  SHALL SUBMIT A REPORT ON ITS FINANCIAL  CONDITION  TO  THE  COMMISSIONER
    9  WITHIN  THE TIME PRESCRIBED BY THE COMMISSIONER. SUCH REPORT SHALL BE IN
   10  THE FORM AND SHALL INCLUDE CONTENT PRESCRIBED BY  THE  COMMISSIONER  AND
   11  SHALL  BE  REVIEWED BY THE COMMISSIONER TO DETERMINE THE SCHOOL'S FINAN-
   12  CIAL VIABILITY. THE COMMISSIONER MAY  SUSPEND  OR  REVOKE  THE  SCHOOL'S
   13  LICENSE,  AS WELL AS REQUIRE THE CESSATION OF STUDENT ENROLLMENT, UPON A
   14  DETERMINATION THAT THE SCHOOL'S FINANCIAL CONDITION CONTINUES TO THREAT-
   15  EN ITS ABILITY TO EDUCATE STUDENTS AND/OR  THE  STUDENT  TUITION  FUNDS.
   16  ALTERNATIVES  FOR  THE  SCHOOL TO DEMONSTRATE A FISCALLY SOUND OPERATION
   17  MAY INCLUDE SECURING AND MAINTAINING A PERFORMANCE BOND, PAYABLE TO  THE
   18  COMMISSIONER, IN AN APPROPRIATE AMOUNT TO ELIMINATE ANY LIABILITY TO THE
   19  TUITION  REIMBURSEMENT ACCOUNT SHOULD THE SCHOOL CEASE OPERATION, LIMIT-
   20  ING THE COLLECTION OF TUITION FUNDS UNTIL  EACH  STUDENT  COMPLETES  THE
   21  PROGRAM  OF  STUDY, OR OTHER MEANS ACCEPTABLE TO THE COMMISSIONER. If no
   22  resolution can be attained, a hearing, pursuant to subdivisions two  and
   23  three  of section five thousand three of this article will be scheduled.
   24  Such probation may include additional monitoring,  inspections,  limita-
   25  tions  on  enrollment,  teaching  out  some or all of a school's present
   26  students or temporary cessation of instruction.
   27    7. No license [or registration] granted under this  section  shall  be
   28  transferable  or  assignable  without  the approval of the commissioner.
   29  [Any] UPON transfer or assignment of any interest totaling  [ten]  TWEN-
   30  TY-FIVE percent or more, whether direct or indirect, in the total equity
   31  or  assets  of a school, SUCH SCHOOL shall be deemed a [transfer of such
   32  school's license or registration. The commissioner shall approve or deny
   33  a transfer or assignment based on the requirements set forth in subdivi-
   34  sions three and four of this section.  Such approval or denial, together
   35  with the reasons for denial, shall  be  transmitted  in  writing  within
   36  ninety  days  of  the receipt of the complete application by the commis-
   37  sioner. Upon a showing of good cause as to why the applicant  could  not
   38  obtain  the  commissioner's  approval prior to a transfer or assignment,
   39  the commissioner shall temporarily approve the  transfer  or  assignment
   40  for a period not to exceed forty-five days and for such additional peri-
   41  ods  as  the  commissioner  may deem appropriate] NEW SCHOOL REQUIRED TO
   42  SUBMIT A NEW SCHOOL APPLICATION AND OBTAIN A  NEW  LICENSE  PURSUANT  TO
   43  THIS  ARTICLE. PROVIDED, HOWEVER, THAT UPON SUCH A SUBSTANTIAL CHANGE IN
   44  INTEREST, THE PREVIOUS SCHOOL LICENSE SHALL REMAIN IN EFFECT  UNTIL  THE
   45  NEW  LICENSE  IS  ISSUED OR DENIED OR THE PREVIOUS LICENSE EXPIRES OR IS
   46  REVOKED, WHICHEVER OCCURS FIRST.
   47    8. No licensed [or registered] school shall discontinue  operation  or
   48  surrender  its  license  [or  registration]  unless  thirty days written
   49  notice of its intention to do so and a  plan  for  maintenance  of  safe
   50  keeping  of  the  records of the school is provided to the commissioner.
   51  However, upon good cause shown, the commissioner may  waive  the  thirty
   52  days notice requirement.
   53    9.  Annual  supervision  fund and tuition reimbursement [fund] ACCOUNT
   54  assessment.  a. The commissioner shall annually  assess  each  school  a
   55  total  percentage of that school's gross tuition pursuant to subdivision
   56  three of section five thousand two of this article, as determined by the
       S. 4268--B                         11
    1  annual [financial  statement  or  annual]  audited  financial  statement
    2  required  by  this  article.  This  assessment  shall be based upon each
    3  school's gross tuition from the previous year, and shall be  payable  to
    4  the  commissioner  in equal quarterly installments which shall be due on
    5  June first, September first, December first and March first.
    6    b. (i) [Beginning April first, nineteen hundred ninety-one, such] SUCH
    7  annualized assessment shall be one percent  FOR SCHOOLS WHICH HAVE  PAID
    8  LESS  THAN  SIXTEEN  QUARTERS OF ASSESSMENTS, BUT SUCH ANNUAL ASSESSMENT
    9  SHALL NOT FALL BELOW FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS.
   10    (ii) [Beginning July first, nineteen hundred ninety-four,  such]  SUCH
   11  annualized assessment shall be [nine-tenths] EIGHT-TENTHS of one percent
   12  FOR SCHOOLS WHICH HAVE PAID SIXTEEN OR MORE QUARTERS OF ASSESSMENTS, BUT
   13  SUCH ANNUAL ASSESSMENT SHALL NOT FALL BELOW FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS.
   14    [(iii)  Beginning  April  first,  nineteen hundred ninety-five, and in
   15  each succeeding year, such annualized assessment shall  be  eight-tenths
   16  of one percent.]
   17    c. (i) Of the total assessment provided for herein, FIVE-TENTHS OF ONE
   18  PERCENT  SHALL ACCRUE TO THE CREDIT OF THE TUITION REIMBURSEMENT ACCOUNT
   19  PURSUANT TO SECTION FIVE  THOUSAND  SEVEN  OF  THIS  ARTICLE  FOR  THOSE
   20  SCHOOLS  WHICH  HAVE  PAID LESS THAN SIXTEEN QUARTERS OF ASSESSMENTS. OF
   21  THE TOTAL ASSESSMENT PROVIDED FOR SCHOOLS WHICH  HAVE  PAID  SIXTEEN  OR
   22  MORE  QUARTERS  OF ASSESSMENTS, three-tenths of one percent shall accrue
   23  to the credit of the tuition reimbursement [fund]  ACCOUNT  pursuant  to
   24  section  five  thousand  seven of this article.   FOR SCHOOLS PAYING THE
   25  MINIMUM FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS ANNUAL ASSESSMENT, NONE SHALL ACCRUE TO THE
   26  TUITION REIMBURSEMENT ACCOUNT.
   27    (ii) The balance of the total assessment provided for herein shall  be
   28  dedicated  to  fund  the  department's  supervision  and  regulation  of
   29  licensed private schools [and registered business schools]  pursuant  to
   30  an  annual  appropriation  and an annual plan of expenditure prepared by
   31  the commissioner and approved by the director of the budget.  [Following
   32  the  close  of  each fiscal year, the commissioner, in consultation with
   33  the director of the budget,  shall  determine  if  the  balance  in  the
   34  proprietary  vocational  school  supervision  fund  for such fiscal year
   35  exceeded the amount required for the support of the department's  super-
   36  visory  activities  taking  into account projected revenues and expendi-
   37  tures for the subsequent fiscal year. To the extent that  a  surplus  is
   38  identified,  the  commissioner, with the approval of the director of the
   39  budget, shall direct  the  transfer  of  such  surplus  to  the  tuition
   40  reimbursement fund.]
   41    d.  Payments  made  within thirty days following the due date shall be
   42  subject to interest at one percent  above  the  prevailing  prime  rate.
   43  Thereafter,  late  payments may result in suspension of licensure by the
   44  commissioner. Payments required by this subdivision shall be  considered
   45  a condition of licensure [or registration].
   46    S 4. Section 5002 of the education law, as added by chapter 887 of the
   47  laws  of 1990, subparagraph 3 of paragraph b and paragraph d of subdivi-
   48  sion 1, subparagraph 2 of paragraph g of subdivision 3 and subdivision 6
   49  as amended and paragraph c of subdivision 1 and paragraph d of  subdivi-
   50  sion  2  as  added  by  chapter  604 of the laws of 1993, paragraph c of
   51  subdivision 2, paragraph a of subdivision 4 and subdivision 7 as amended
   52  and paragraph e of subdivision 4 and paragraph c  of  subdivision  6  as
   53  added  by  chapter 434 of the laws of 1999, paragraph f of subdivision 4
   54  as added by chapter 457 of the laws of 2003 and subparagraph 2 of  para-
   55  graph  b of subdivision 5 as amended by chapter 301 of the laws of 1996,
   56  is amended to read as follows:
       S. 4268--B                         12
    1    S 5002. Standards for licensed private CAREER schools [and  registered
    2  business  schools].  Any  school  licensed  [or  registered] pursuant to
    3  section five thousand  one  of  this  article  shall  be  organized  and
    4  conducted  only  as a school and shall be subject to the jurisdiction of
    5  the  department  exclusively,  or  in  conjunction with such other state
    6  agency or department or district attorney upon  which  jurisdiction  has
    7  also  been conferred by law. Such schools shall be subject to and comply
    8  with the provisions of this section.
    9    1. Standards. a. No program of such schools shall be  conducted  in  a
   10  factory  or commercial establishment, except where the use of facilities
   11  or equipment of such factory or commercial  establishment  is  permitted
   12  for necessary or desirable educational purposes and objectives.
   13    b.  For  every  such school, the commissioner shall set forth in regu-
   14  lation standards governing all of the following:
   15    (1) criteria for admission, which shall provide that students at least
   16  possess a high school diploma or its equivalent or demonstrate the abil-
   17  ity to benefit from the instruction, except that in the case of students
   18  who do not possess a high school  diploma  or  its  equivalent,  certif-
   19  ication  of  the  students' ability to benefit from instruction shall be
   20  provided to the commissioner as provided in paragraph c of this subdivi-
   21  sion;
   22    (2) the standards and the methods of instruction;
   23    (3) the equipment available for instruction with the  maximum  enroll-
   24  ment that such equipment and physical plant will accommodate;
   25    (4)  the  qualifications  and  experience  of  teaching and management
   26  personnel;
   27    (5) the form and  content  of  the  student  enrollment  agreement  or
   28  contract,  provided  that such agreement or contract shall be written in
   29  the same language as that principally used in the sales presentation;
   30    (6) the methods of collecting tuition;
   31    (7) eligibility criteria for programs that will require licensure;
   32    (8) the sufficiency and suitability of the resources available for the
   33  support of such school; and
   34    (9) counseling provided to students.
   35    B-1. (1) STUDENT LOANS OR OTHER  FINANCIAL  AID  FUNDS  RECEIVED  FROM
   36  FEDERAL,  STATE,  OR LOCAL GOVERNMENTS OR ADMINISTERED UNDER THE FEDERAL
   37  STUDENT FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS GOVERNED BY TITLE IV OF THE HIGHER
   38  EDUCATION ACT OF NINETEEN HUNDRED SIXTY-FIVE, 20 U.S.C.  SECTION 1070 ET
   39  SEQ., AS AMENDED, MUST  BE  COLLECTED  AND  APPLIED  IN  THE  MANNER  AS
   40  CONTROLLED BY THE APPLICABLE FEDERAL, STATE OR LOCAL REGULATIONS.
   41    (2)  STUDENT  LOANS OR OTHER FINANCIAL AID FUNDS RECEIVED FROM PRIVATE
   42  ENTITIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, BANKS, FINANCING COMPANIES, AND
   43  OTHER LENDING SOURCES MUST BE COLLECTED OR DISBURSED  IN  THE  FOLLOWING
   44  MANNER:
   45    (A) LOANS OR OTHER FINANCIAL AID PAYMENTS FOR AMOUNTS OF FIVE THOUSAND
   46  DOLLARS OR LESS MAY BE DISBURSED AS A SINGLE DISBURSEMENT, REGARDLESS OF
   47  COURSE LENGTH.
   48    (B)  LOANS  OR  OTHER  FINANCIAL AID PAYMENTS FOR AMOUNTS GREATER THAN
   49  FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS THAT REFLECT A CLASS TERM OF LESS THAN SIX  MONTHS
   50  SHALL  HAVE  TWO EQUAL DISBURSEMENTS. THE DISBURSEMENT SCHEDULE FOR SUCH
   51  LOANS OR PAYMENTS SHALL BE AS FOLLOWS: ONE-HALF OF  THE  TUITION  AMOUNT
   52  RELEASED  INITIALLY,  AND  THE  REMAINDER  RELEASED  HALFWAY THROUGH THE
   53  COURSE TERM.
   54    (C) LOANS OR OTHER FINANCIAL AID PAYMENTS  FOR  AMOUNTS  GREATER  THAN
   55  FIVE  THOUSAND  DOLLARS  THAT  REFLECT  A CLASS TERM OF GREATER THAN SIX
   56  MONTHS, BUT LESS THAN TWELVE MONTHS MUST HAVE THREE EQUAL DISBURSEMENTS.
       S. 4268--B                         13
    1  THE DISBURSEMENT SCHEDULE  FOR  SUCH  LOANS  OR  PAYMENTS  SHALL  BE  AS
    2  FOLLOWS:  ONE-THIRD OF THE TUITION AMOUNT RELEASED INITIALLY, THE SECOND
    3  DISBURSEMENT  SHALL  BE RELEASED ONE-THIRD OF THE WAY THROUGH THE LENGTH
    4  OF  THE  TRAINING,  AND  THE  REMAINDER  RELEASED  TWO-THIRDS OF THE WAY
    5  THROUGH THE COURSE TERM.
    6    (D) LOANS OF OTHER FINANCIAL AID PAYMENTS  FOR  AMOUNTS  GREATER  THAN
    7  FIVE  THOUSAND  DOLLARS  THAT  REFLECT  A CLASS TERM GREATER THAN TWELVE
    8  MONTHS SHALL HAVE FOUR EQUAL DISBURSEMENTS.  THE  DISBURSEMENT  SCHEDULE
    9  FOR  SUCH  LOANS  OR  PAYMENTS  SHALL  BE AS FOLLOWS: ONE-QUARTER OF THE
   10  TUITION AMOUNT RELEASED INITIALLY,  THE  SECOND  DISBURSEMENT  SHALL  BE
   11  RELEASED  ONE QUARTER OF THE WAY THROUGH THE LENGTH OF THE TRAINING; THE
   12  THIRD DISBURSEMENT SHALL BE RELEASED HALFWAY THROUGH THE LENGTH  OF  THE
   13  TRAINING,  AND THE REMAINDER SHALL BE RELEASED THREE-QUARTERS OF THE WAY
   14  THROUGH THE TRAINING.
   15    (3) NO SCHOOL MAY ENTER INTO ANY CONTRACT OR AGREEMENT WITH OR RECEIVE
   16  ANY STUDENTS LOAN OR FINANCIAL AID FUNDS FROM PRIVATE ENTITIES,  INCLUD-
   17  ING,  BUT  NOT  LIMITED  TO,  BANKS,  FINANCING COMPANIES, AND ANY OTHER
   18  PRIVATE LENDING SOURCES UNLESS THE PRIVATE  ENTITY  HAS  A  DISBURSEMENT
   19  POLICY THAT, AT A MINIMUM, MEETS THE REQUIREMENTS OF SUBPARAGRAPH TWO OF
   20  THIS PARAGRAPH.
   21    (4)  THE TERM PRIVATE ENTITY REFERENCED IN SUBPARAGRAPHS TWO AND THREE
   22  OF THIS PARAGRAPH SHALL NOT BE CONSTRUED TO INCLUDE A FRIEND  OR  FAMILY
   23  MEMBER  OF  THE  STUDENT WHO IS NOT IN THE ROUTINE BUSINESS OF PROVIDING
   24  STUDENT LOANS OR FINANCIAL AID FUNDS. THE PROVISION OF SUCH  A  LOAN  OR
   25  FUND  BY  A  PRIVATE  ENTITY  SHALL  ALSO NOT INCLUDE THE PAYMENT OF THE
   26  STUDENT'S TUITION OR FEES BY USE OF A CREDIT CARD.
   27    c. Notwithstanding any other provisions of this article to the contra-
   28  ry, the commissioner shall define alternative educational and curriculum
   29  standards for any program of less than forty hours designed  exclusively
   30  for non-occupational, personal enrichment purposes.
   31    d. Admission of students under the ability to benefit provision.
   32    (1)  Certification.  Each school admitting students who do not possess
   33  at least a high school diploma or its equivalent shall  certify  to  the
   34  satisfaction  of  the  commissioner  that such prospective students have
   35  been administered and passed an examination which has been  approved  by
   36  the  commissioner  to determine their ability to benefit from the chosen
   37  curriculum prior to admission to the curriculum or course of study. Such
   38  examination shall, whenever possible, be a  nationally  recognized  test
   39  appropriate for the course of instruction which has been approved by the
   40  commissioner. The examination results of each such student who is admit-
   41  ted  shall be made available to the commissioner at a time prescribed by
   42  the commissioner and, together with the student's original answer sheet,
   43  shall be maintained by the school in the student's permanent record. For
   44  any student failing to achieve the necessary score on  such  examination
   45  for  enrollment,  the  school  shall be required to provide such student
   46  with a listing of appropriate counseling and  educational  opportunities
   47  available  to the student at no cost, as determined by the commissioner.
   48  WHERE APPROPRIATE, THE  COMMISSIONER  MAY  ACCEPT  SUCH  OTHER  ENTRANCE
   49  REQUIREMENT  DOCUMENTATION SUCH AS PREREQUISITE COURSEWORK, PROFESSIONAL
   50  OR VENDOR CERTIFICATIONS, PERSONAL INTERVIEWS,  AND/OR  ATTESTATIONS  OF
   51  EQUIVALENT KNOWLEDGE IN LIEU OF THE EXAMINATION REQUIREMENT.
   52    (2) Counseling. Each school [admitting] OFFERING CURRICULA WHICH ADMIT
   53  students  who  do  not  possess  a high school diploma or its equivalent
   54  shall develop a plan to be approved by the commissioner  for  the  coun-
   55  seling  of such students on an individual basis on matters including but
   56  not limited to the student's ability to progress in the curriculum,  the
       S. 4268--B                         14
    1  student's financial aid rights and responsibilities, the availability of
    2  programs  to  earn a high school equivalency diploma, including programs
    3  provided at no cost to the student, and the potential of the training to
    4  prepare  the  student  for available employment opportunities within the
    5  region.
    6    (3) Compliance. (A) The commissioner  shall  monitor  compliance  with
    7  this  paragraph  and  verify  the examination and counseling process and
    8  student examination scores. Such  procedures  may  include  but  not  be
    9  limited  to an annual, statistically significant, random sampling of the
   10  examinations taken by prospective students of each school  administering
   11  such examinations.
   12    (B)  [Such  procedures  shall  provide  that  the examinations of each
   13  school be inspected on site at least once annually.
   14    (C)] In the event that the commissioner determines that the school  is
   15  out  of  compliance  with  the  examination  process and counseling, the
   16  commissioner shall require that examinations and counseling for students
   17  admitted under the ability  to  benefit  provision  and  the  counseling
   18  required  by  subparagraph  two  of  this paragraph be conducted off the
   19  premises of the school by an entity approved  by  the  commissioner  for
   20  such  period  of time as the commissioner deems appropriate, the cost of
   21  which shall be incurred by the school.
   22    2. Inspections. a. Every school  licensed  pursuant  to  this  article
   23  shall  maintain  adequate  and accurate records for a period of not less
   24  than [six] SEVEN years at its principal place of  business  within  this
   25  state.  Such records shall be maintained in a manner and form prescribed
   26  by the commissioner and shall be made available to  the  department  and
   27  the higher education services corporation upon request.
   28    b.  In addition to other requirements in this article, the information
   29  to be made a part of the record shall include, but not be limited to:
   30    (1) names and addresses of each enrolled student;
   31    (2) the course of study offered by the institution;
   32    (3) the name and address of its faculty, together with a record of the
   33  educational qualifications of each;
   34    (4) the graduation date of each student; and
   35    (5) for each student who fails to complete his  or  her  program,  the
   36  student's  last date of attendance and, if applicable, the amount of any
   37  refund paid to, or on behalf of, the student and the date the refund was
   38  made.
   39    c. The commissioner shall conduct periodic unscheduled inspections  of
   40  licensed  private  CAREER  schools  [and registered business schools] to
   41  monitor compliance with the provisions of this article or the  rules  or
   42  regulations promulgated thereunder or any final order or decision of the
   43  commissioner made pursuant to this article. The department shall conduct
   44  an  inspection  of  each  school  at  least once every [three years. The
   45  department shall annually inspect schools: (1) having a high  percentage
   46  of  students admitted under ability to benefit criteria as determined by
   47  the commissioner; (2) having a high student loan default rate as  deter-
   48  mined by the commissioner in a manner consistent with federal standards;
   49  or  (3) which are the subject of a high volume of complaints by students
   50  or other parties] LICENSURE  PERIOD.  All  schools  shall  provide  upon
   51  request  of  the  department,  any  and  all records necessary to review
   52  compliance with the provisions of this article.
   53    d. Student permanent records, as defined in  the  regulations  of  the
   54  commissioner, shall be maintained for a period of twenty years.
   55    3.  Tuition liability. a. The tuition charge for programs approved for
   56  participation in student financial aid general award  programs  pursuant
       S. 4268--B                         15
    1  to  articles  thirteen and fourteen of this chapter shall be apportioned
    2  on the basis of terms, quarters or semesters. For the purposes  of  this
    3  section,  the terms "term", "quarter" and "semester" shall be defined in
    4  regulations by the commissioner.
    5    b.  The  tuition  refund  policy  for the first term or quarter of any
    6  program at schools licensed [or registered]  pursuant  to  section  five
    7  thousand one of this article shall be as follows:
    8    (1)  For  programs  which  are divided into quarters of up to fourteen
    9  weeks, the school shall evenly divide the total  tuition  charges  among
   10  the  number  of  quarters.  After instruction is begun in a school, if a
   11  student withdraws or is discontinued, the  school  may  retain  no  more
   12  than:
   13    (i) zero percent of the quarter's tuition if the termination is during
   14  the first week of instruction; or
   15    (ii)  twenty-five  percent of the quarter's tuition if the termination
   16  is during the second week of instruction; or
   17    (iii) fifty percent of the quarter's tuition  if  the  termination  is
   18  during the third week of instruction; or
   19    (iv)  seventy-five percent of the quarter's tuition if the termination
   20  is during the fourth week of instruction; or
   21    (v) one hundred percent of the quarter's tuition  if  the  termination
   22  occurs after the fourth week of instruction.
   23    (2)  For programs organized by terms of fifteen, sixteen, seventeen or
   24  eighteen weeks apiece, the school shall evenly divide the total  tuition
   25  charges  among  the  number  of  terms.  After instruction is begun in a
   26  school, if a student withdraws or is discontinued, the school may retain
   27  no more than:
   28    (i) zero percent of the term's tuition if the  termination  is  during
   29  the first week of instruction; or
   30    (ii) twenty percent of the term's tuition if the termination is during
   31  the second week of instruction; or
   32    (iii)  thirty-five percent of the term's tuition if the termination is
   33  during the third week of instruction; or
   34    (iv) fifty percent of the term's tuition if the termination is  during
   35  the fourth week of instruction; or
   36    (v) seventy percent of the term's tuition if the termination is during
   37  the fifth week of instruction; or
   38    (vi)  one  hundred  percent  of  the term's tuition if the termination
   39  occurs after the completion of the fifth week of instruction.
   40    c. (1) The tuition refund policy for the second term or quarter of any
   41  program at schools licensed [or registered]  pursuant  to  section  five
   42  thousand one of this article shall be as follows:
   43    (A)  For  programs  which  are divided into quarters of up to fourteen
   44  weeks, the school shall evenly divide the total  tuition  charges  among
   45  the  number  of  quarters.  After instruction is begun in a school, if a
   46  student withdraws or is discontinued, the  school  may  retain  no  more
   47  than:
   48    (i) twenty-five percent of the quarter's tuition if the termination is
   49  during the first week of instruction; or
   50    (ii)  fifty  percent  of  the  quarter's tuition if the termination is
   51  during the second week of instruction; or
   52    (iii) seventy-five percent of the quarter's tuition if the termination
   53  is during the third week of instruction; or [.]
   54    (iv) one hundred percent of the quarter's tuition if  the  termination
   55  occurs after the third week of instruction.
       S. 4268--B                         16
    1    (B)  For programs organized by terms of fifteen, sixteen, seventeen or
    2  eighteen weeks apiece, the school shall evenly divide the total  tuition
    3  charges  among  the  number  of  terms.  After instruction is begun in a
    4  school, if a student withdraws or is discontinued, the school may retain
    5  no more than:
    6    (i)  twenty percent of the term's tuition if the termination is during
    7  the first week of instruction; or
    8    (ii) thirty-five percent of the term's tuition if the  termination  is
    9  during the second week of instruction; or
   10    (iii) fifty percent of the term's tuition if the termination is during
   11  the third week of instruction; or
   12    (iv)  seventy  percent  of  the  term's  tuition if the termination is
   13  during the fourth week of instruction; or
   14    (v) one hundred percent of  the  term's  tuition  if  the  termination
   15  occurs after the completion of the fourth week of instruction.
   16    (2)  Notwithstanding  the provisions of subparagraph one of this para-
   17  graph, the tuition refund policy set forth in paragraph b of this subdi-
   18  vision shall apply unless the school  demonstrates  that  there  are  no
   19  significant  educational  changes  in  the  educational  program  of the
   20  student, such changes as defined in regulations of the commissioner.
   21    d. The tuition refund policy for the third and any subsequent term  or
   22  quarter of any program licensed [or registered] pursuant to section five
   23  thousand  one  of this article shall be the policy set forth in subpara-
   24  graph one of paragraph c of this subdivision.
   25    e. No program shall have a term in excess of eighteen weeks.
   26    f. The amount of the refund shall be calculated based on the last  day
   27  of student attendance.
   28    g.  (1) Any refund due to a student shall be paid by the school within
   29  forty-five days of the date on which  the  student  withdraws  from  the
   30  program. For the purposes of this article, such date shall be the earli-
   31  est  of  (i)  the  date on which the student gives written notice to the
   32  school or (ii) the date on which the student is deemed to have withdrawn
   33  pursuant to subparagraph two of this paragraph.
   34    (2) If a student has failed to attend classes for a period  of  thirty
   35  calendar  days,  the  school  shall send by regular mail a notice to the
   36  student that the student shall be deemed  to  have  withdrawn  from  the
   37  program if the student does not notify the school to the contrary within
   38  twelve  days  from  the date on which the letter is sent. If the student
   39  fails to respond within such twelve-day period,  the  student  shall  be
   40  deemed  to  have withdrawn and the school shall notify the higher educa-
   41  tion services corporation that the student has withdrawn and the date of
   42  the withdrawal.
   43    h. SCHOOLS SHALL SUBMIT, FOR APPROVAL BY THE COMMISSIONER, THE  SCHOOL
   44  CATALOG  WITH  A  WEEKLY  TUITION  LIABILITY CHART FOR EACH PROGRAM THAT
   45  INDICATES THE AMOUNT OF REFUND DUE THE STUDENT IN  THE  EVENT  OF  WITH-
   46  DRAWAL.
   47    I.  Upon  payment  of a refund to a lender, the school shall forthwith
   48  send a notice to a person designated by  the  president  of  the  higher
   49  education  services  corporation  upon  a form approved by the president
   50  that such refund was made.
   51    [i.] J. If the higher education services corporation fails to  receive
   52  the  notice  required  by  paragraph [h] I of this subdivision, it shall
   53  forthwith notify the student of his or her right to  a  refund  and  the
   54  commissioner  of  such  failure.  Upon receipt of such notification, the
   55  commissioner shall take appropriate action against the school.
       S. 4268--B                         17
    1    4. Curriculum approval. a. An application AND FEE shall  be  made  for
    2  the  initial  approval  of a curriculum or course and shall include such
    3  information as the commissioner  may  require  by  regulation.  Approval
    4  shall  be  valid for a period not to exceed four years.  THE APPLICATION
    5  FEE  FOR  ANY CURRICULUM OF ONE HUNDRED CLOCK HOURS OR MORE SHALL BE TWO
    6  HUNDRED FIFTY DOLLARS. THE APPLICATION FEE FOR ANY COURSE OF  LESS  THAN
    7  ONE  HUNDRED  CLOCK HOURS SHALL BE ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS. SUCH APPLICATION
    8  FEES SHALL ACCRUE TO THE CREDIT OF  THE  PROPRIETARY  VOCATIONAL  SCHOOL
    9  SUPERVISION ACCOUNT.
   10    b. In approving curriculum, the commissioner shall take into consider-
   11  ation the following:
   12    (1)  that  the entrance requirements demonstrate that students possess
   13  the skills, competencies and prerequisite knowledge needed  to  progress
   14  in the curriculum;
   15    (2)  that  the content will enable the student to develop those skills
   16  and competencies required for employment in the  occupational  area  for
   17  which the curriculum was developed;
   18    (3)  that  the  school will utilize appropriate instructional methods;
   19  [and]
   20    (4) that the instructional equipment used  within  the  curriculum  is
   21  comparable  to  the  equipment currently used by business or industry in
   22  the occupational area for which the curriculum was developed; AND
   23    (5) THAT A CURRICULUM MAY INCLUDE INSTRUCTION IN ENGLISH AS  A  SECOND
   24  LANGUAGE  AT A BEGINNING OR BASIC LEVEL, PROVIDED SUCH INSTRUCTION SHALL
   25  NOT CONSTITUTE MORE THAN FIFTY PERCENT OF SUCH PROGRAM.
   26    c. (1) If the evaluation of a particular course or  facility  requires
   27  the services of an expert not employed by the department, the department
   28  shall  retain such expert [and the school shall reimburse the department
   29  for the reasonable cost of such services] AT  THE  SCHOOL'S  EXPENSE  IN
   30  ADDITION  TO  THE  APPLICATION  FEES  PRESCRIBED  IN PARAGRAPH A OF THIS
   31  SUBDIVISION.
   32    (2) If, in the interest of expediting the approvals, a school requests
   33  the department to employ an outside consultant, the school shall  [reim-
   34  burse  the department for] PAY the [reasonable] cost of such services IN
   35  ADDITION TO THE APPLICATION FEES  PRESCRIBED  IN  PARAGRAPH  A  OF  THIS
   36  SUBDIVISION.
   37    d. The commissioner shall act on applications for approval of a course
   38  or  curriculum  within  one hundred twenty days of receipt of a complete
   39  application and, in the case of a denial, shall set forth in writing the
   40  reasons for such denial.
   41    e. Notwithstanding paragraphs b, c and d of this subdivision,  curric-
   42  ulum  certified  by a nationally recognized vendor as defined in commis-
   43  sioner's regulations shall be recognized by the department in lieu of an
   44  expert evaluation when such curriculum is adopted by  a  school  in  the
   45  original  format  provided by the vendor as long as the proposed curric-
   46  ulum is a stand alone program and not part  of  a  larger  comprehensive
   47  course.
   48    f.  Notwithstanding  any  other provision of the law, a not-for-profit
   49  [registered business] LICENSED  CAREER  school,  that  is  eligible  for
   50  participation  in  the tuition assistance program and which has national
   51  accreditation, may, for the purpose of calculation of federal  financial
   52  aid  amounts  only,  measure  students' academic progress in an approved
   53  curriculum in non-degree granting credit hours, based  upon  a  national
   54  accrediting  agency's  conversion and approval of clock hours to non-de-
   55  gree credit hours. For the purposes of this paragraph, "national accred-
       S. 4268--B                         18
    1  itation" shall mean accreditation by a national  accrediting  agency  as
    2  defined in the commissioner's regulations.
    3    5. Application for reapproval. a. An application AND FEE shall be made
    4  for  reapproval  of  a  curriculum  or course. Such application shall be
    5  considered timely if submitted at least one hundred twenty days prior to
    6  the expiration of the current approval.  THE  APPLICATION  FEE  FOR  ANY
    7  CURRICULUM OF ONE HUNDRED CLOCK HOURS OR MORE SHALL BE TWO HUNDRED FIFTY
    8  DOLLARS.  THE  APPLICATION  FEE  FOR ANY COURSE OF LESS THAN ONE HUNDRED
    9  CLOCK HOURS SHALL BE ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS, PROVIDED THAT NO FEE SHALL  BE
   10  ASSESSED  FOR THE SUBMISSION OF A REAPPROVAL APPLICATION WITHOUT CHANGE.
   11  SUCH APPLICATION FEE SHALL ACCRUE TO THE CREDIT OF THE PROPRIETARY VOCA-
   12  TIONAL SCHOOL SUPERVISION ACCOUNT.
   13    b. Curriculum reapproval standards. (1) The  commissioner  shall  pre-
   14  scribe  by  regulation, standards for reapproval after the first year of
   15  licensure, of any curriculum or course based upon factors including  but
   16  not limited to the following, as appropriate:
   17    (i) for each curriculum or course, the percentage of students who have
   18  dropped out;
   19    (ii)  the  acquisition  of  a specified minimum level of skills by the
   20  students; and
   21    (iii) for each curriculum or course, the percentage of students placed
   22  in occupations related to the instruction, where applicable.
   23    (2) Such standards shall be consistent with those applied to all  non-
   24  degree career education programs.
   25    c.  Reapproval contingency. Reapproval of a curriculum or course shall
   26  be contingent upon a demonstration by the applicant that the  curriculum
   27  or  course has met the curriculum reapproval standards set forth in this
   28  subdivision. Except as otherwise provided in paragraph d of this  subdi-
   29  vision, no such curriculum or course or substantially similar curriculum
   30  or course may be given without reapproval by the commissioner.
   31    d.  When timely and complete application is made for the reapproval of
   32  a curriculum or course, and no written denial is made thirty days  prior
   33  to  the  date  of expiration of the existing approval, the curriculum or
   34  course shall be deemed to be approved for the period of the  curriculum.
   35  If  the application is denied, the commissioner shall set forth in writ-
   36  ing the reasons for such denial.
   37    e. The commissioner may provide in regulations for  reapproval  proce-
   38  dures, consistent with this subdivision, for applications submitted less
   39  than one hundred twenty days from the expiration date.
   40    f.  The commissioner shall act upon enrollment agreements and catalogs
   41  within ninety days of receipt, and, in the case  of  denial,  shall  set
   42  forth  in writing the reasons for such denial. If the commissioner fails
   43  to act within ninety days, a catalog shall be deemed  approved  for  one
   44  year  and  an  enrollment  agreement  shall be deemed approved until the
   45  commissioner acts upon it.
   46    6. a. Teachers and directors. No person shall be employed by a private
   47  CAREER school as a director or teacher  who  is  not  licensed  in  such
   48  capacity  by the department pursuant to regulations of the commissioner,
   49  which shall take into consideration such  factors  as  moral  character,
   50  educational  qualifications  and  practical  experience. The application
   51  shall include a statement, signed by the president  or  chief  executive
   52  officer  of  the school, certifying that to the best of his or her know-
   53  ledge, the applicant is able to meet the educational qualifications  and
   54  practical  experience  set forth in the commissioner's regulations. Such
   55  application shall be considered timely if mailed to the commissioner and
   56  postmarked four days prior to employment  at  the  school  and  must  be
       S. 4268--B                         19
    1  completed  within  twenty  days  thereafter; provided, however, that the
    2  commissioner may, for good cause shown, extend the time within which  to
    3  complete  the  application.  When  a  complete  application is made, the
    4  commissioner  shall  act upon such application within thirty days. If no
    5  written denial is made within the thirty days, the application shall  be
    6  deemed  to  be approved until the commissioner acts upon it or until the
    7  end of the term or semester, whichever occurs first. If a written denial
    8  is made after the thirty day period,  the  commissioner  may  allow  the
    9  applicant to teach at the school for the remainder of the term or semes-
   10  ter if the commissioner determines that the removal of the teacher would
   11  not  be  in the best educational interest of the students. This subdivi-
   12  sion shall not apply to directors or teachers employed on or before July
   13  first, nineteen hundred seventy-two. Teachers'  licenses  issued  on  or
   14  after  [January first, nineteen hundred eighty-seven] THE EFFECTIVE DATE
   15  OF THE CHAPTER OF THE LAWS OF TWO THOUSAND  ELEVEN  WHICH  AMENDED  THIS
   16  PARAGRAPH  shall  be valid at all [registered business] LICENSED PRIVATE
   17  CAREER schools for the courses, curricula, or occupations  indicated  on
   18  the  license.  TEACHERS  HOLDING  VALID  PRIVATE SCHOOL TEACHER LICENSES
   19  VALID AT ONLY ONE SCHOOL LOCATION SHALL HAVE THEM REPLACED, AT NO  COST,
   20  WITH  LICENSES  VALID  AT  ANY  LICENSED  SCHOOL  IN THE SAME SUBJECT OR
   21  SUBJECTS AND WITH THE SAME EXPIRATION DATE AS WAS LISTED ON THE PREVIOUS
   22  TEACHING LICENSE.
   23    b. A school director shall have  access  to  all  student  and  school
   24  records  which  shall  be maintained in accordance with this article and
   25  the regulations of the commissioner and shall make such  records  avail-
   26  able  to  the  commissioner  or the commissioner's designee upon request
   27  during an on-site school inspection.
   28    c. Notwithstanding paragraph a of this subdivision, a teacher who  has
   29  been  certified  as  an  instructor by a nationally recognized vendor as
   30  defined in commissioner's regulations may  be  deemed  qualified  as  an
   31  instructor  by  the department, provided such teacher shall only provide
   32  instruction in the course or courses for which he or she holds  vendor's
   33  certification. A teacher authorized by this paragraph will be subject to
   34  all licensing fees required by the department for licensed teachers.
   35    7. Advertising. a. The commissioner is authorized to commence a disci-
   36  plinary  proceeding  pursuant  to  this  article  for false, misleading,
   37  deceptive or fraudulent advertising pursuant to regulations  promulgated
   38  by  the commissioner which shall be consistent with article twenty-two-A
   39  of the general business law. The department shall issue guidelines as to
   40  appropriate advertising content.  In  developing  such  guidelines,  the
   41  department  shall  consider  advertising for similar programs offered by
   42  various educational institutions. In  a  disciplinary  action  or  other
   43  proceeding,  such  guidelines  shall  not  be  presumptive evidence that
   44  particular advertising is appropriate.
   45    b. Beginning on January first, two thousand, all schools shall include
   46  in their advertising, promotional material, or letterhead the  statement
   47  "Licensed  by the State of New York" [or "Registered by the State of New
   48  York", as appropriate], and an  accompanying  symbol  to  indicate  such
   49  status,  issued  by  the  commissioner pursuant to section five thousand
   50  nine of this article.
   51    8. The higher education services corporation  shall  adopt  rules  and
   52  regulations  to  effectuate  the  cessation  of collection activities by
   53  lenders or by the corporation in  cases  in  which  a  licensed  private
   54  [vocational]  CAREER  school  [or a registered business school] at which
   55  the student enrolled has closed or ceased its teaching activities during
   56  the academic period for which the loan was made or guaranteed.
       S. 4268--B                         20
    1    S 5. Section 5003 of the education law, as added by chapter 887 of the
    2  laws of 1990, subparagraph 1 of paragraph c of subdivision 1  and  para-
    3  graphs d and e of subdivision 6 as amended by chapter 604 of the laws of
    4  1993,  paragraph   d of subdivision 1 as added and paragraphs b and f of
    5  subdivision  6 as amended by chapter 434 of the laws of 1999, is amended
    6  to read as follows:
    7    S 5003. Disciplinary actions, hearings and penalties.  1. Disciplinary
    8  action. a. The commissioner for good cause, after affording a school  an
    9  opportunity  for  a hearing, may take disciplinary action as hereinafter
   10  provided against any school authorized to operate under this article.
   11    b. Good cause shall include, but not be limited to, any of the follow-
   12  ing:
   13    (1) fraudulent statements or representations to  the  department,  the
   14  public or any student in connection with any activity of the school;
   15    (2)  violation  of  any provision of this article or regulation of the
   16  commissioner;
   17    (3) conviction or a plea of no contest on the part of any owner, oper-
   18  ator, director or teacher:
   19    (A) of any of the following felonies defined in the penal law: bribery
   20  involving public servants; commercial bribery;  perjury  in  the  second
   21  degree;  rewarding  official misconduct; larceny, in connection with the
   22  provision of services or involving  the  theft  of  governmental  funds;
   23  offering  a  false  instrument  for filing, falsifying business records;
   24  tampering with public records; criminal usury;  scheme  to  defraud;  or
   25  defrauding the government; or
   26    (B)  in  any  other  jurisdiction of an offense which is substantially
   27  similar to any of the felonies defined in clause (A)  of  this  subpara-
   28  graph  and  for  which a sentence to a term of imprisonment in excess of
   29  one year was authorized and is authorized in this  state  regardless  of
   30  whether such sentence was imposed; or
   31    (4) incompetence of any owner or operator to operate a school.
   32    c.  (1)  Any  person  who  believes  he or she has been aggrieved by a
   33  violation of this section, EXCEPT A PERSON AGGRIEVED BY THE  ACTIONS  OR
   34  OMISSIONS  OF A CANDIDATE SCHOOL, shall have the right to file a written
   35  complaint within: (A) two years of the alleged  violation;  or  (B)  one
   36  year of receiving notification from the higher education services corpo-
   37  ration or any other guarantee agency that the student has defaulted on a
   38  student  loan payment; provided, however, that no complaint may be filed
   39  after three years from the date of the alleged  violation.  The  commis-
   40  sioner  shall  maintain a written record of each complaint that is made.
   41  The commissioner shall also send to the complainant a form acknowledging
   42  the complaint and requesting further information if necessary and  shall
   43  advise  the  director  of the school that a complaint has been made and,
   44  where appropriate the nature of the complaint.
   45    (2) The commissioner shall within twenty days of receipt of such writ-
   46  ten complaint commence an investigation of  the  alleged  violation  and
   47  shall within ninety days of the receipt of such written complaint, issue
   48  a  written  finding. The commissioner shall furnish such findings to the
   49  person who filed the complaint and to the chief operating officer of the
   50  school cited in the complaint. If the commissioner finds that there  has
   51  been  a violation of this section, the commissioner shall take appropri-
   52  ate action.
   53    (3)  The  commissioner  may  initiate  an  investigation   without   a
   54  complaint.
       S. 4268--B                         21
    1    [d.  During  the initial two year licensing period, before the commis-
    2  sioner may bring enforcement proceedings against a licensed entity,  the
    3  following shall be taken into consideration:
    4    (1)  whether such entity has demonstrated that the regulations promul-
    5  gated under this chapter are unduly burdensome given the nature  of  the
    6  instruction provided by such entity;
    7    (2)  whether  such entity has identified potential areas of noncompli-
    8  ance with this chapter and any such regulation within sixty days of  the
    9  licensing or registration date of such entity;
   10    (3) whether such entity has engaged in good faith discussions with the
   11  department  to  resolve  such  violations  and/or promulgate regulations
   12  which further the goals of this chapter.]
   13    (4) NOTWITHSTANDING THE PROVISIONS OF SUBPARAGRAPH ONE OF  THIS  PARA-
   14  GRAPH  OR ANY OTHER PROVISION OF THIS ARTICLE TO THE CONTRARY, A STUDENT
   15  AT A CANDIDATE SCHOOL SHALL HAVE THE RIGHT TO FILE A  WRITTEN  COMPLAINT
   16  FROM  AN ALLEGED VIOLATION OF THE PROVISIONS OF CLAUSE THREE OF SUBPARA-
   17  GRAPH (IV) OF PARAGRAPH B OF SUBDIVISION FOUR OF SECTION  FIVE  THOUSAND
   18  ONE  OF THIS ARTICLE THAT REQUIRE DISCLOSURE OF CANDIDACY STATUS AND ITS
   19  IMPLICATIONS AND A SIGNED ATTESTATION BY THE STUDENT, WITHIN  TWO  YEARS
   20  OF  SUCH  VIOLATION.  UPON A FINDING THAT SUCH A VIOLATION HAS OCCURRED,
   21  THE CANDIDATE SCHOOL SHALL BE REQUIRED TO PROVIDE A REFUND OF ALL MONIES
   22  AND FEES RECEIVED FROM OR ON BEHALF OF THE STUDENT.  APPROPRIATE  ACTION
   23  SHALL  ALSO  BE  TAKEN  AGAINST  THE  CANDIDATE  SCHOOL  PURSUANT TO THE
   24  PROVISIONS OF SUBPARAGRAPH (IV) OF PARAGRAPH B OF  SUBDIVISION  FOUR  OF
   25  SECTION FIVE THOUSAND ONE OF THIS ARTICLE.
   26    2.  Hearing  procedures. a. Upon a finding that there is good cause to
   27  believe that a CANDIDATE SCHOOL UNDER  THE  PROVISIONS  OF  SUBPARAGRAPH
   28  (IV)  OF PARAGRAPH B OF SUBDIVISION FOUR OF SECTION FIVE THOUSAND ONE OF
   29  THIS ARTICLE, OR A LICENSED school,  or  an  officer,  agent,  employee,
   30  partner  or  teacher,  has  committed  a  violation of this article, the
   31  commissioner shall initiate proceedings by serving a notice  of  hearing
   32  upon each and every such party subject to the administrative action. The
   33  school  or  such  party  shall  be  given  reasonable notice of hearing,
   34  including the time, place, and nature of the  hearing  and  a  statement
   35  sufficiently  particular  to  give  notice of the transactions or occur-
   36  rences intended to be proved, the material elements  of  each  cause  of
   37  action and the civil penalties and/or administrative sanctions sought.
   38    b.  Opportunity  shall be afforded to the party to respond and present
   39  evidence and argument on the issues involved in  the  hearing  including
   40  the  right  of cross examination. In a hearing, the school or such party
   41  shall be accorded the right to have its representative appear in  person
   42  or  by  or with counsel or other representative. Disposition may be made
   43  in any hearing by stipulation, agreed settlement, consent order, default
   44  or other informal method.
   45    c. (1) The commissioner shall designate an impartial  hearing  officer
   46  to conduct the hearing, who shall be empowered to:
   47    (A) administer oaths and affirmations; and
   48    (B)  regulate  the  course of the hearings, set the time and place for
   49  continued hearings, and fix the time for  filing  of  briefs  and  other
   50  documents; and
   51    (C)  direct  the school or such party to appear and confer to consider
   52  the simplification of the issues by consent; and
   53    (D) grant a request for an adjournment of the hearing only  upon  good
   54  cause shown.
   55    (2)  The strict legal rules of evidence shall not apply, but the deci-
   56  sion shall be supported by substantial evidence in the record.
       S. 4268--B                         22
    1    3. Decision after hearing. The  hearing  officer  shall  make  written
    2  findings  of  fact  and  conclusions of law, and shall also recommend in
    3  writing to the commissioner a final decision  including  penalties.  The
    4  hearing  officer  shall  mail  a  copy  of  his OR HER findings of fact,
    5  conclusions  of  law and recommended penalty to the party and his or her
    6  attorney, or representative.   The commissioner  shall  make  the  final
    7  decision, which shall be based exclusively on evidence and other materi-
    8  als  introduced  at  the  hearing.  If it is determined that a party has
    9  committed a violation, the commissioner shall issue a  final  order  and
   10  shall impose penalties in accordance with this section. The commissioner
   11  shall  send  by  certified mail, return receipt requested, a copy of the
   12  final order to the party and his or her attorney, or representative. The
   13  commissioner shall, at the request of the school or such party,  furnish
   14  a  copy  of  the transcript or any part thereof upon payment of the cost
   15  thereof.
   16    4. Judicial review. Any order imposed  under  this  section  shall  be
   17  subject  to  judicial  review  under  article seventy-eight of the civil
   18  practice law and rules, but no such determination  shall  be  stayed  or
   19  enjoined  except  upon  application  to  the  court  after notice to the
   20  commissioner.
   21    5. Enforcement proceedings. The attorney general, in his  or  her  own
   22  capacity,  or at the request of the commissioner, may bring an appropri-
   23  ate action or proceeding in  any  court  of  competent  jurisdiction  to
   24  recover a fine or otherwise enforce any provision of this article.
   25    6.  Civil penalties and administrative sanctions. a. A hearing officer
   26  may recommend, and the commissioner may impose, a civil penalty  not  to
   27  exceed  [two]  THREE  thousand five hundred dollars for any violation of
   28  this article, INCLUDING A SCHOOL'S FAILURE TO OFFER A COURSE OR  PROGRAM
   29  AS  APPROVED  BY  THE COMMISSIONER.   In the case of a second or further
   30  violation committed within [the previous] five  years  OF  THE  PREVIOUS
   31  VIOLATION,  the  liability shall be a civil penalty not to exceed [five]
   32  SEVEN thousand FIVE HUNDRED dollars for each such violation.
   33    b. Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph a of this  subdivision,
   34  a hearing officer may recommend, and the commissioner may impose a civil
   35  penalty  not  to  exceed [fifty] SEVENTY-FIVE thousand dollars OR DOUBLE
   36  THE DOCUMENTED AMOUNT FROM WHICH  THE  SCHOOL  BENEFITED,  WHICHEVER  IS
   37  GREATER,  for any of the following violations: (1) operation of a school
   38  without a license in violation of section  five  thousand  one  of  this
   39  article; (2) operation of a school knowing that the school's license has
   40  been  suspended  or  revoked; (3) use of false, misleading, deceptive or
   41  fraudulent advertising; (4) employment of recruiters on the basis  of  a
   42  commission,  bonus  or  quota, except as authorized by the commissioner;
   43  (5) directing or authorizing recruiters to offer guarantees of jobs upon
   44  completion of a course; (6) failure to make a tuition refund  when  such
   45  failure is part of a pattern of misconduct; (7) the offering of a course
   46  or program that has not been approved by the commissioner; (8) admitting
   47  students,  who  subsequently drop out, who were admitted in violation of
   48  the admission standards established  by  the  commissioner,  where  such
   49  admissions  constitute  a  pattern  of misconduct and where the drop out
   50  resulted at least in part from such violation; (9)  failure  to  provide
   51  the  notice of discontinuance and the plan required by subdivision seven
   52  of section five thousand one of this article; or (10) violation  of  any
   53  other  provision  of this article, or any rule or regulation promulgated
   54  pursuant thereto, when such violation constitutes part of a  pattern  of
   55  misconduct  which  significantly  impairs the educational quality of the
   56  program or programs being offered by the school.   For  each  enumerated
       S. 4268--B                         23
    1  offense,  a  second or further violation committed within [the previous]
    2  five years, shall be subject to a civil penalty not to exceed  [seventy-
    3  five thousand dollars] ONE AND ONE-HALF TIMES THE AMOUNT OF THE PREVIOUS
    4  VIOLATION for each such violation.
    5    c.  In  addition  to the penalties authorized in paragraphs a and b of
    6  this subdivision, a hearing officer may recommend and  the  commissioner
    7  may  impose  any  of the following administrative sanctions: (1) a cease
    8  and desist order; (2) a mandatory direction; (3) a suspension or revoca-
    9  tion of a license; (4) a probation order; or (5) an  order  of  restitu-
   10  tion.
   11    d.  Penalty  factors.  In the recommendation of any penalty, a hearing
   12  officer shall, at a minimum, give due consideration,  where  applicable,
   13  to  the  good faith of the violator[; the performance of the school with
   14  respect to student placement and retention rates, and students' acquisi-
   15  tion of skills;] AND the gravity of the violation[; and the harm  caused
   16  to the student].
   17    e.  The  commissioner may suspend a license [or registration] upon the
   18  failure of a school to pay any fee, fine, penalty, settlement or assess-
   19  ment as required by this article unless such failure  is  determined  by
   20  the commissioner to be for good cause.
   21    f.  All  civil  penalties,  fines and settlements received after April
   22  first, nineteen hundred ninety shall accrue to the credit of the tuition
   23  reimbursement account established pursuant to section ninety-seven-hh of
   24  the state finance law.
   25    7. Criminal penalties. In addition to any  other  penalties  elsewhere
   26  prescribed:
   27    a.  Any  person  who  knowingly violates any of the provisions of this
   28  article shall be guilty of a class B misdemeanor punishable  in  accord-
   29  ance  with  the  penal  law.  If  the conviction is for a second offense
   30  committed within five years of the first  conviction  under  this  para-
   31  graph,  such  person shall be guilty of a class A misdemeanor punishable
   32  in accordance with the penal law.
   33    b. Any person who knowingly (1) falsifies or destroys school or  other
   34  business  records relating to the operation of the school with intent to
   35  defraud; (2) fails to make a tuition refund as required by section  five
   36  thousand  two  of  this article with the intent to defraud more than one
   37  person; or (3) operates a school without a  valid  license  required  by
   38  section  five  thousand one of this article shall be guilty of a class A
   39  misdemeanor punishable in accordance with the penal law.
   40    c. Any person who, having been convicted within the past five years of
   41  failing to make a tuition refund in violation  of  subparagraph  two  of
   42  paragraph  b of this subdivision, knowingly and intentionally engages in
   43  a scheme constituting a systematic ongoing course of  conduct  involving
   44  the  wrongful  withholding of refunds in violation of section five thou-
   45  sand two of this article with the intent to defraud ten or more persons,
   46  and so withholds tuition refunds in  excess  of  one  thousand  dollars,
   47  shall  be  guilty  of a class E felony punishable in accordance with the
   48  penal law.
   49    d. Upon a determination that there exist reasonable grounds to believe
   50  that a violation of this article has been committed, or that  any  other
   51  crime  has  been  committed in connection with the operation of a school
   52  required to be licensed pursuant to this article, the commissioner shall
   53  refer such determination, and the information upon which it is based, to
   54  the attorney general or to the appropriate district attorney. The attor-
   55  ney general or a district attorney may bring an action on his or her own
   56  initiative.
       S. 4268--B                         24
    1    8. Private right of action. A student injured by a violation  of  this
    2  article  may bring an action against the owner or operator of a licensed
    3  private CAREER school [or registered business school] for actual damages
    4  or one hundred dollars, whichever  is  greater.  A  court  may,  in  its
    5  discretion, award reasonable attorney's fees to a prevailing plaintiff.
    6    S  6.  Subdivisions  3  and 4 of section 5004 of the education law, as
    7  amended by chapter 604 of the laws of 1993, are amended and a new subdi-
    8  vision 4-a is added to read as follows:
    9    3. Exempted from the requirements of this section are  persons  acting
   10  solely  for schools which are not required to be licensed or are specif-
   11  ically exempted from the licensing  [or  registration]  requirements  of
   12  this  article.  Persons  who  are  paid  to  procure,  solicit or enroll
   13  students on the premises of schools required to be licensed  [or  regis-
   14  tered]  shall  not  be  exempt from the provisions of this section.  The
   15  certification requirements of this section shall not  apply  to  persons
   16  receiving  gifts or other non-monetary considerations valued at not more
   17  than [twenty-five] SEVENTY-FIVE dollars from a school  from  which  they
   18  have  graduated  or are currently enrolled for each student referred for
   19  enrollment at the school.
   20    4. Application and renewal application for a  private  school  agent's
   21  certificate shall be filed on forms to be prescribed and provided by the
   22  commissioner. Said certificate shall be valid for [two] THREE years from
   23  the  date  of  issuance.  Certificates  which have been renewed shall be
   24  valid for a period of [two] THREE years from the expiration date of  the
   25  certificate  which  has been renewed. Every applicant and renewal appli-
   26  cant shall pay to the department a fee of [one] TWO hundred dollars.
   27    4-A. NOTWITHSTANDING  THE  PROVISIONS  OF  SUBDIVISION  FOUR  OF  THIS
   28  SECTION,  THE  SCHOOL  DIRECTOR  MAY  APPLY FOR A PRIVATE SCHOOL AGENT'S
   29  CERTIFICATE ON FORMS TO BE PRESCRIBED AND PROVIDED BY  THE  COMMISSIONER
   30  WITHOUT INCURRING THE AGENT APPLICATION FEE.
   31    S 7. Section 5006 of the education law, as added by chapter 887 of the
   32  laws of 1990, is amended to read as follows:
   33    S 5006. Teachout plans.  1. A school may submit a teachout plan to the
   34  commissioner  for  approval  pursuant  to regulations established by the
   35  commissioner. A teachout plan shall consist  of  a  contract  between  a
   36  [registered  business  or]  licensed private CAREER school, with another
   37  school, hereinafter called the teachout school, so  that  in  the  event
   38  that  the [registered business or] licensed private CAREER school ceases
   39  instruction, the teachout school will provide the necessary  instruction
   40  specified  in  a student's original enrollment agreement with the school
   41  ceasing instruction. A teachout plan may employ more than  one  teachout
   42  school to provide instruction to students in the school ceasing instruc-
   43  tion.  Schools  under  common ownership but having separate licenses [or
   44  registrations] may, subject to the approval of the  commissioner,  enter
   45  into  teachout agreements. A TEACHOUT PLAN MAY BE CONTRACTED BETWEEN THE
   46  COMMISSIONER AND ONE OR MORE TEACHOUT SCHOOLS  IN  THE  EVENT  THAT  THE
   47  CLOSING SCHOOL IS UNABLE OR UNWILLING TO DO SO.
   48    2.  A  teachout  plan shall include the following provisions:  (a) the
   49  teachout school must offer courses of study that are substantially simi-
   50  lar to those offered in the school ceasing instruction;
   51    (b) teachout schools must be located in the geographic area  in  which
   52  the  school  ceasing  instruction  was located UNLESS THE SCHOOL CEASING
   53  INSTRUCTION PROVIDED DISTANCE LEARNING OR ONLINE TRAINING;
   54    (c) all provisions for a teachout plan must be included in the enroll-
   55  ment agreement signed by the student; and
       S. 4268--B                         25
    1    (d) the teachout school shall agree to fulfill the  enrollment  agree-
    2  ment signed by the student at the school ceasing instruction.
    3    3.  The  [registered business or] licensed school shall provide to the
    4  teachout school and to the department  [immediately  upon  closure]  the
    5  following information PRIOR TO CLOSURE:
    6    (a)  Copies  of the academic and financial records for all students in
    7  attendance at the school at the projected time of closure;
    8    (b) A listing of all such students presently in  attendance  including
    9  their  names,  addresses,  social security numbers, curriculum that each
   10  student is enrolled in and the number of hours the  students  will  have
   11  completed at the time of the school closure.
   12    4.  The  department  will  provide to the teachout school, immediately
   13  upon notification of a school closing, a copy of each  approved  curric-
   14  ulum that the closing school is presently offering.
   15    5.  The commissioner shall require all teachout schools to address the
   16  following issues:
   17    (a) Integration of students into a curriculum which may  be  different
   18  from the curriculum in which they are currently receiving instruction;
   19    (b)  Assessments of students' progress so that they may be placed into
   20  an appropriate course;
   21    (c) Provision of remedial instruction to students who are found to  be
   22  deficient in one or more course areas upon their initial assessment;
   23    (d)  Provision  by  the  teachout  school  to  adhere  to the required
   24  student/teacher ratios and room capacities; and
   25    (e) Compliance with statutory and regulatory requirements  during  the
   26  teachout.
   27    6.  The  student  shall  not  be subject to any costs beyond the total
   28  costs identified in the original enrollment agreement.
   29    7. A student may decline to pursue instruction at the teachout  school
   30  and may instead seek a refund pursuant to section five thousand seven of
   31  this article.
   32    S 8. Section 5007 of the education law, as added by chapter 887 of the
   33  laws  of  1990, the section heading, subdivision 1 and subdivision 10 as
   34  amended by chapter 434 of the laws of 1999, paragraph a  of  subdivision
   35  3,  paragraphs  c and d of subdivision 4, subparagraphs 1 and 3 of para-
   36  graph a and paragraph b of subdivision 5, paragraph b of  subdivision  9
   37  as  amended  and paragraphs e and f of subdivision 4 as added by chapter
   38  604 of the laws of 1993, is amended to read as follows:
   39    S 5007. Tuition reimbursement account. 1. Except as otherwise provided
   40  in subdivision six of this section, the portion of the annual assessment
   41  of schools [registered and] licensed pursuant to section  five  thousand
   42  one  of  this  article as prescribed in subdivision [eight] NINE of such
   43  section and all fines, penalties and settlements  received  pursuant  to
   44  this  article  shall  be  transferred  upon  receipt  into  the  tuition
   45  reimbursement account.
   46    3. a. The commissioner shall develop a complaint form and provide such
   47  form to students. In order to claim a refund, a student shall  apply  to
   48  the  fund  with a complaint form pursuant to the requirements of section
   49  five thousand three of this article. Except  as  otherwise  provided  in
   50  this  article,  the commissioner shall compute the refund, if any, using
   51  the refund formula established by  subdivision  three  of  section  five
   52  thousand two of this article.
   53    b. Claimants who had been enrolled in schools which have not closed or
   54  ceased operation shall be required to show in a manner determined by the
   55  commissioner that:
   56    (1) the student is eligible for a refund;
       S. 4268--B                         26
    1    (2) the student has made a request to the school for a refund; and
    2    (3)  the  school  has failed to make the refund within the time period
    3  required by this article.
    4    c. The commissioner shall act on each  refund  request  within  thirty
    5  business days of such request.
    6    4. Students may be eligible for refunds under this section as follows:
    7    a.  A  student  who  is  offered a teachout plan for the curriculum in
    8  which the student was enrolled at the time the school closed  or  ceased
    9  operation,  which  has  been  approved  by  the department, may elect to
   10  continue instruction pursuant to the teachout plan  or  may  decline  to
   11  continue  instruction and may instead apply for a full refund under this
   12  section. The option to apply for a refund shall extend to the end of the
   13  first week of instruction at the teachout school.
   14    b. A student who was enrolled in a school  which  has  not  closed  or
   15  ceased operation is entitled to a refund computed in accordance with the
   16  refund  policy established by subdivision three of section five thousand
   17  two of this article.
   18    c. A student who was enrolled in a school at the time the school clos-
   19  es or ceases operation is entitled to a refund of  the  full  amount  of
   20  prepaid  tuition.  In  addition,  commencing  September  first, nineteen
   21  hundred ninety-three, a student who drops out of a  school,  where  such
   22  school closes within [fourteen] THIRTY days of the student's termination
   23  and  prior  to  completion of such student's program as specified in the
   24  enrollment agreement, shall be entitled to a FULL refund  of  [the  full
   25  amount  of  prepaid tuition] ALL TUITION, FEES AND BOOK CHARGES PAID FOR
   26  BY OR ON BEHALF OF THE STUDENT IN CASH OR IN  LOANS,  EXCLUDING  FUNDING
   27  PROVIDED BY ANY GOVERNMENT AGENCIES.
   28    d.  A  student  who  was  enrolled in a school which has not closed or
   29  ceased operation, and who has dropped out, is entitled to a full  refund
   30  of all tuition, fees and other required costs paid by the student if the
   31  student  has  submitted  a  complaint  form  to the commissioner and the
   32  commissioner has  determined  that  a  violation  of  this  article  has
   33  occurred  which  warrants  a  refund.  The commissioner shall promulgate
   34  regulations identifying those violations that warrant a refund.
   35    e.  Commencing  September  first,  nineteen  hundred  ninety-three,  a
   36  student who drops out of a school, which subsequently closes, and who is
   37  owed  a  refund  for the failure of such school to follow the provisions
   38  enumerated in subdivision three of section five  thousand  two  of  this
   39  article  shall  be  eligible for a refund from the tuition reimbursement
   40  fund according to the provisions of subdivision three  of  section  five
   41  thousand two of this article.
   42    f.  Commencing  September  first,  nineteen  hundred ninety-three, any
   43  student enrolled in a school based upon an ability to  benefit  examina-
   44  tion  shall  be  eligible  for  a full refund, regardless of whether the
   45  student is currently enrolled, graduated or dropped out, if  the  school
   46  enrolled the student contrary to the provisions of the approved entrance
   47  requirements  and the student complies with the requirements of subdivi-
   48  sion one of section five thousand three of this article.
   49    5. a. For a student who had been enrolled in a  school  that  has  not
   50  closed or ceased operation, the refund shall be paid as follows:
   51    (1)  guaranteed  student loans, if any, in which case the commissioner
   52  shall notify the student of such payment and shall be paid  directly  to
   53  the lender or guarantee agency where appropriate;
   54    (2) actual personal tuition expenditures, if any; and
   55    (3) tuition assistance program awards and other governmental aid.
       S. 4268--B                         27
    1    b.  For schools that have closed or ceased operation, the commissioner
    2  shall refund actual personal tuition, FEES AND BOOK expenditures to  the
    3  student.  The  repayment of any loans incurred by the student as part of
    4  the actual personal tuition, FEES AND BOOK expenditures  shall  be  paid
    5  directly to the lender or the guarantee agency where appropriate.
    6    6.  a.  Where a claim is paid to a student of an operating school, the
    7  commissioner shall immediately notify the school.
    8    b. Within ten days of the receipt of  the  notice,  the  school  shall
    9  either  request  a hearing to challenge the commissioner's determination
   10  that a refund was owed to the student or reimburse the fund  the  amount
   11  paid  to  the  claimant plus a penalty up to two times such amount. This
   12  payment shall also incur interest for each day it remains unpaid  at  an
   13  annual  interest  rate  of one percent above the prime rate. The commis-
   14  sioner may promulgate streamlined  procedures  for  conducting  hearings
   15  pursuant  to  this  paragraph. Any penalty assessed under this paragraph
   16  shall be in addition to any other penalties assessed  pursuant  to  this
   17  article.    Notwithstanding  any  other  provision of law, penalties and
   18  interest paid pursuant to this paragraph shall accrue to the  credit  of
   19  the  proprietary  vocational  school  supervision account to support the
   20  costs associated with the hearings authorized in this subdivision.
   21    7. Notwithstanding the  notice  procedures  described  in  subdivision
   22  three of this section, in the event of a school closing, the commission-
   23  er  on  his or her own initiative may take appropriate action in accord-
   24  ance with this section to process refund claims on behalf of all of  the
   25  students of the closed school.
   26    8.  Assignment of rights. Persons and entities receiving refunds under
   27  this section shall be  deemed  to  have  assigned  or  subrogated  their
   28  tuition  reimbursement  rights  to  the  commissioner  on  behalf of the
   29  tuition reimbursement fund only for the amount refunded by  the  tuition
   30  reimbursement  fund.  Within  [thirty]  NINETY  days  of any refund made
   31  pursuant to this section, the commissioner or the attorney general shall
   32  take appropriate action to recover the total amount of the refunds made,
   33  plus administrative costs, from the school.
   34    9. a. A student whose loan liability is exempted  pursuant  to  FORMER
   35  section  six  hundred eighty-three of this chapter and is entitled to or
   36  owed a refund shall transfer to the  higher  education  services  corpo-
   37  ration  the  right  to  claim  the  refund owed and due from the tuition
   38  reimbursement fund. In such event, the corporation shall be entitled  to
   39  receive  a  refund  for that portion of the claim not paid to the corpo-
   40  ration by the United States  Secretary  of  Education  pursuant  to  the
   41  federal guaranteed loan program.
   42    b.  Any amounts remaining in the tuition reimbursement fund as of June
   43  first, nineteen hundred ninety-three and  on  every  March  thirty-first
   44  thereafter,  shall  be  made  available to the higher education services
   45  corporation for payment of student loans on  which  collection  activity
   46  has  ceased  pursuant  to  the  provisions  of subdivision six of FORMER
   47  section six hundred eighty-three of this chapter. No  amounts  shall  be
   48  paid  to  the  higher  education services corporation for loans on which
   49  collection activity has ceased because of the operation of  section  437
   50  of the Higher Education Act of 1965, as amended.
   51    10.  Management  of  the  tuition reimbursement account. a. As used in
   52  this subdivision, net balance is defined as the actual cash  balance  of
   53  the  account  as determined by the commissioner on June thirtieth, nine-
   54  teen hundred ninety-three and every three  months  thereafter.  For  the
   55  purpose  of calculating the net balance, the commissioner shall not take
   56  into consideration any refunds made from the account pursuant  to  para-
       S. 4268--B                         28
    1  graphs  d  and  f of subdivision four of this section for the year imme-
    2  diately preceding the date on which the calculation is made.
    3    b.  In  the  event  that  the account has accumulated a net balance in
    4  excess of one million eight hundred thousand dollars,  the  commissioner
    5  shall,  with the approval of the director of the budget, waive an amount
    6  not to exceed the amount due for the next quarterly assessment  pursuant
    7  to  this  section  and  subdivision nine of section five thousand one of
    8  this article FOR SCHOOLS WHICH HAVE PAID SIXTEEN  QUARTERS  OR  MORE  OF
    9  ASSESSMENTS ONLY. In such event, payment of future quarterly assessments
   10  shall  be suspended FOR SCHOOLS WHICH HAVE PAID SIXTEEN QUARTERS OR MORE
   11  OF ASSESSMENTS until the net balance of  the  account  falls  below  one
   12  million three hundred thousand dollars.
   13    c. In the event the net balance of the account falls below one million
   14  three  hundred  thousand  dollars,  if the quarterly assessment has been
   15  suspended FOR SCHOOLS WHICH  HAVE  PAID  SIXTEEN  QUARTERS  OR  MORE  OF
   16  ASSESSMENTS  pursuant  to  paragraph  b of this subdivision, it shall be
   17  reinstated for the next quarterly assessment and all subsequent quarter-
   18  ly assessments until the account has accumulated a net balance in excess
   19  of one million eight hundred thousand dollars.
   20    d. Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph b of this  subdivision,
   21  in the event that the balance of the account is in excess of one million
   22  three  hundred thousand dollars, all schools licensed after June thirti-
   23  eth, nineteen hundred ninety-nine shall be  required  to  pay  into  the
   24  account the equivalence of three years of annual assessments over a five
   25  year period.
   26    e.  Notwithstanding  the provisions of paragraph b of this subdivision
   27  all schools licensed after June thirtieth, nineteen hundred ninety-three
   28  and before July first, nineteen hundred ninety-nine will be required  to
   29  pay  into  the  account the equivalence of three years of annual assess-
   30  ments within four years of the effective date of  this  paragraph.  This
   31  amount  to be assessed shall be determined based upon the school's gross
   32  tuition in its first three years of licensure.
   33    g. In the event that the balance of the tuition reimbursement  account
   34  is  equal  to  or in excess of [one] TWO million [five hundred thousand]
   35  dollars, the  amounts  assessed  the  schools  in  accordance  with  the
   36  provisions  of paragraphs d and e of this subdivision shall be deposited
   37  directly to the proprietary vocational school supervision account.
   38    H. THE COMMISSIONER MAY ANNUALLY APPORTION FROM THE ACCOUNT AN  AMOUNT
   39  UP TO TWO HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS FOR THE PURPOSE OF SECURING, SCANNING
   40  AND  OTHERWISE  MAKING  STUDENT RECORDS FROM CLOSED SCHOOLS AVAILABLE TO
   41  STUDENTS WHO ATTENDED SUCH SCHOOLS.  PROVIDED, HOWEVER, THAT IN NO  CASE
   42  SHALL SUCH APPORTIONMENT CAUSE THE ACCOUNT TO FALL BELOW THE BALANCE SET
   43  FORTH  IN  PARAGRAPH C OF THIS SUBDIVISION, NOR SHALL SUCH APPORTIONMENT
   44  CAUSE SCHOOLS WHOSE QUARTERLY ASSESSMENTS HAVE  BEEN  SUSPENDED  TO  PAY
   45  ADDITIONAL QUARTERLY ASSESSMENTS.
   46    11.  Fund audit. The state comptroller shall [annually] audit or cause
   47  to be audited the tuition reimbursement fund ONCE EVERY  TWO  YEARS  and
   48  produce  an  [annual] AUDITED financial statement according to generally
   49  accepted accounting principles.
   50    12. New schools. Within the first [six  months]  YEAR  that  a  school
   51  begins  LICENSED operation, the commissioner shall assess such school an
   52  amount to be deposited into the fund in an amount to  be  determined  by
   53  the commissioner.
   54    S  9.    Section 5008 of the education law, as added by chapter 887 of
   55  the laws of 1990, is amended to read as follows:
       S. 4268--B                         29
    1    S 5008. Trust accounts.   1. If the  commissioner  determines  that  a
    2  school has demonstrated a pattern or practice of failing to make tuition
    3  refunds  in  a  timely  manner  consistent  with this article AND/OR THE
    4  SCHOOL'S FINANCIAL CONDITION MAY RESULT IN THE INTERRUPTION OR CESSATION
    5  OF  INSTRUCTION  OR  JEOPARDIZE  STUDENT TUITION FUNDS, the commissioner
    6  shall require a school to establish a trust account in a form or  manner
    7  which  the commissioner[, after consultation with the advisory council,]
    8  shall [prescribe in regulations] DETERMINE TO BE APPROPRIATE. The assets
    9  or funds contained in the trust account shall be maintained for the sole
   10  and exclusive benefit of the students.
   11    2. In making this determination, the commissioner shall  consider  the
   12  following  factors:  the  number  of refunds not paid by the school in a
   13  timely manner; the number of claims made to, or  paid  by,  the  tuition
   14  reimbursement  [fund]  ACCOUNT;  [and]  a  pattern  of  misconduct which
   15  substantially affects the financial interests of students or the  state,
   16  POTENTIAL LIABILITY TO THE TUITION REIMBURSEMENT ACCOUNT, CURRENT ASSETS
   17  AS  OPPOSED  TO  CURRENT  LIABILITIES, AND SUCH OTHER MEASURES AS MAY BE
   18  APPROPRIATE.
   19    S 10. Section 5009 of the education law, as amended by chapter 434  of
   20  the laws of 1999, is amended to read as follows:
   21    S 5009. Duties  of  the commissioner.  In addition to all other duties
   22  assigned in this article, the duties of the commissioner shall  include,
   23  but not be limited to:
   24    [(a)  submitting  a report to the governor, the temporary president of
   25  the senate, the speaker of the assembly,  the  minority  leader  of  the
   26  senate  and  the minority leader of the assembly beginning the fifteenth
   27  day of January after this section shall have become effective, and annu-
   28  ally thereafter on that date, on the implementation and  enforcement  of
   29  this  article,  which shall include but not be limited to (i) curriculum
   30  approval and reapproval standards, (ii) student  complaints,  (iii)  the
   31  resolution  of  disciplinary  actions brought by the department or other
   32  appropriate state agency, (iv) the audited financial statements  submit-
   33  ted  by  the  schools,  (v) tuition reimbursement account activity, (vi)
   34  data regarding retention and completion rates for students  enrolled  in
   35  nondegree,  appropriate  degree  or certificate programs of two years or
   36  less at registered business schools, licensed private schools,  proprie-
   37  tary  degree-granting schools and independent and public colleges, (vii)
   38  the extent to which the department has met  the  timelines  mandated  by
   39  this  article,  (viii)  entrance  standards,  (ix) the number of schools
   40  inspected annually, and (x) the number of trust accounts imposed.
   41    (b)] 1. ensuring that up-to-date, accurate information is available to
   42  the public, via the internet  and  other  appropriate  media,  regarding
   43  every  duly licensed proprietary school in this state, as well as disci-
   44  plinary actions decided by the state.
   45    [(c)] 2. developing and issuing  to  duly  licensed  [and  registered]
   46  proprietary schools a symbol to indicate such status; provided that such
   47  symbol  shall  be  developed and made available to such schools no later
   48  than September thirtieth, nineteen hundred ninety-nine.
   49    [(d)] 3. administering a public information campaign aimed at increas-
   50  ing awareness about the importance of attending licensed [or registered]
   51  proprietary vocational schools. Such campaign shall be targeted to popu-
   52  lations at risk of enrolling in unlicensed  [or  unregistered]  schools,
   53  and shall be conducted using means including, but not limited to, public
   54  service  announcements  on  commercial  radio  and  television stations,
   55  public access television, and print media.
       S. 4268--B                         30
    1    [(e)] 4. providing for the orderly maintenance of any student  records
    2  which may be transferred to the department pursuant to any school's plan
    3  developed  pursuant to subdivision eight of section five thousand one of
    4  this article; including responding to student requests  for  transcripts
    5  and  records within twenty days of receiving a request. The commissioner
    6  is hereby authorized to impose an appropriate fee for  such  transcripts
    7  pursuant to a schedule approved by the director of the budget.
    8    S  11.  Section  5010 of the education law, as added by chapter 887 of
    9  the laws of 1990, subdivision 1 as amended by section 23 of  part  A  of
   10  chapter 62 of the laws of 2011, subdivision 4 as added by chapter 604 of
   11  the  laws of 1993, and subdivision 5 as added by chapter 434 of the laws
   12  of 1999, is amended to read as follows:
   13    S 5010. Advisory council. 1. An advisory council for [registered busi-
   14  ness and] licensed [trade] PRIVATE CAREER schools is hereby created  for
   15  the  purpose  of  advising  the board of regents and the commissioner as
   16  provided herein.  The  council  shall  be  composed  of  eleven  members
   17  appointed  by the governor, two of whom shall be upon the recommendation
   18  of the temporary president of the senate, two of whom shall be upon  the
   19  recommendation of the speaker of the assembly, one of whom shall be upon
   20  the  recommendation of the minority leader of the senate and one of whom
   21  shall be upon the recommendation of the minority leader of the assembly.
   22  Of the five remaining members, one shall be an owner or  director  of  a
   23  school  regulated  pursuant  to  this article, [one shall be a currently
   24  enrolled student at the time of appointment or  a  graduate  of  such  a
   25  school who graduated within three years of appointment] and one shall be
   26  a student advocate. The governor shall designate a chairperson from such
   27  members.    The commissioner [of education], the president of the higher
   28  education services corporation, the secretary of state, the comptroller,
   29  the director of the division of the budget, and the  executive  director
   30  of the job training partnership council, or their designees, shall serve
   31  as ex-officio, non-voting members of the council.
   32    2.  The  council shall meet no less than four times a year. Members of
   33  the council shall receive no compensation for their services  but  shall
   34  be  reimbursed for reasonable expenses actually and necessarily incurred
   35  by them in the performance of their  duties.  COUNCIL  MEMBER  TERMS  OF
   36  OFFICE  SHALL  BE  LIMITED  TO THREE YEARS, PROVIDED THAT MEMBERS MAY BE
   37  REAPPOINTED. ALL APPOINTMENTS TO THE COUNCIL TO FILL VACANCIES IN EXIST-
   38  ENCE ON THE EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE CHAPTER OF THE LAWS  OF  TWO  THOUSAND
   39  ELEVEN  WHICH  AMENDED THIS SUBDIVISION SHALL BE MADE WITHIN NINETY DAYS
   40  OF SUCH EFFECTIVE DATE.
   41    3. The council shall advise the commissioner on [the  following]  SUCH
   42  matters[:
   43    (a) trust accounts;
   44    (b) performance standards;
   45    (c)  the  effectiveness  and  utilization of the tuition reimbursement
   46  fund;
   47    (d) the efficacy of instituting a fee-for-service system;
   48    (e) the effectivesness of the timelines mandated by this article;
   49    (f) the impact of assessments on schools;
   50    (g) recruitment bonuses; and
   51    (h) such other matters] as the council determines are appropriate.
   52    [4. The proprietary school advisory  council  shall  conduct  a  study
   53  concerning  the  methodologies  used  to determine student refunds. Such
   54  study shall include, but not be limited to, refund policies  promulgated
   55  pursuant  to  federal statute or regulation, state statute or regulation
   56  and the policies of national accrediting organizations as they relate to
       S. 4268--B                         31
    1  term-based and clock hour-based programs. Not  later  than  July  first,
    2  nineteen  hundred ninety-four, the advisory council shall make recommen-
    3  dations to the commissioner and the board of regents for any changes  in
    4  legislation,  regulations,  policy  or  practice  needed  to improve and
    5  simplify the student refund process. The  commissioner  shall  submit  a
    6  report  of the findings of the advisory council together with the recom-
    7  mendations of the department to the legislature  and  the  governor  not
    8  later than the first day of October, nineteen hundred ninety-four.
    9    5.  The  advisory  council shall report to the governor, the temporary
   10  president of the senate, the speaker of the assembly,  and  the  commis-
   11  sioner  on  the  status of unlicensed proprietary schools in this state.
   12  The report shall also contain a statement on the  effectiveness  of  the
   13  change  in the tuition reimbursement fund and any recommendations for an
   14  extension of the changes or the consideration of different changes  when
   15  such  changes  are  repealed.  Such  report  is to be delivered on April
   16  first, two thousand two.]
   17    S 12. This act shall take effect on  the  one  hundred  twentieth  day
   18  after  it  shall have become a law; provided, however, that subparagraph
   19  (iv) of paragraph b of subdivision 4 of section 5001  of  the  education
   20  law,  as  added by section three of this act, shall expire and be deemed
   21  repealed three years after such effective date; and  provided,  further,
   22  that paragraph g of subdivision 10 of section 5007 of the education law,
   23  as  amended  by section eight of this act shall not affect the repeal of
   24  such paragraph and shall be deemed  repealed  therewith;  and  provided,
   25  further,  that  effective  immediately, the commissioner of education is
   26  authorized and directed to promulgate any regulations needed  to  imple-
   27  ment the provisions of this act on such effective date.
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