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Court Rules Against Accrediting Agency of ITT Tech, Corinthian Colleges

WASHINGTON — The Accrediting Council on Independent Colleges and Schools — the beleaguered accrediting agency that had oversight for two recently collapsed for-profit schools — lost its bid Tuesday to stop the U.S. Department of Education from terminating its federal recognition.

The loss was due largely to testimony from ACICS interim president Roger Williams himself, who conceded the accrediting agency needed a “change agent” and had substantial “weaknesses” at the time it lost its accreditation.

The decision by Judge Reggie B. Walton — United States District Judge for the District of Columbia — leaves intact a 2016 decision by former U.S. Secretary of Education John B. King, Jr., to terminate ACICS’ federal recognition due to lax oversight.

Judge Walton ruled that ACICS failed to show that Secretary King abused his discretion by refusing to grant ACICS a year to come into compliance with numerous agency criteria.

The judge also ruled that ACICS failed to show that it has suffered “irreparable harm” as a result of Secretary King’s decision.

Walton cited testimony that ACICS has “substantial reserves,” can cut costs in other areas, and rely upon activities outside of accrediting schools that receive federal financial aid in order to stay in business.

Spectators were barred from the courtroom when Williams testified about how much money ACICS has in its reserves.

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