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The Sweet Briar Dilemma: Will Predatory Lending Take Down More Colleges?
The Sweet Briar Dilemma: Will Predatory Lending Take Down More Colleges?
Sunday, 05 April 2015 00:00
By Alan Smith, Next New Deal | Op-Ed
After 114 years of educating young women in rural Virginia, Sweet Briar College recently announced that the 2015 academic year would be its last. Its closing its doors, administrators say, because its model is no longer sustainable.
There are plenty of people coming out of the woodwork to explain Sweet Briar's problems. Dr. James F. Jones, the schools president, claims that there are simply not enough people who want to attend an all-women's rural liberal arts school (though application numbers and some pundits disagree); he blames the discount that the school was giving to low-income students for the institutional budget shortfall. Billionaire investor Mark Cuban says that Sweet Briar has fallen victim to the student loan bubble and that students are unwilling to commit the money to attend, which sounds a lot like the blame-the-homeowner narrative that came out of the 2008 financial crisis.(more) Others are wringing their hands that small colleges in general are doomed.
These takes are varied and complex, but they are all missing an important point: that predatory banking practices and bad financial deals played an important and nearly invisible role in precipitating the schools budget crisis.
A quick look at Sweet Briars audited financial reports (easily available in public records) reveals enough confusing and obfuscating financial-speak to last a lifetime, but a few days of digging did manage to unearth a series of troubling things.
A single swap on a bond issued in June 2008 cost Sweet Briar more then a million dollars in payments to Wachovia before the school exited the swap in September 2011. While it is unclear exactly why they chose 2011 to pay off the remainder of the bond early, they paid a $730,119 termination fee. For a school that was sorely strapped for cash, these fines and the fees that accrued around this deal (which are hard to definitively pick out from financial documents) couldn't have come at a worse time. ....................(more)
http://truth-out.org/opinion/item/30040-the-sweet-briar-dilemma-will-predatory-lending-take-down-more-colleges
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The Sweet Briar Dilemma: Will Predatory Lending Take Down More Colleges? (Original Post)
marmar
Apr 2015
OP
KoKo
(84,711 posts)1. Good news about the Roosevelt Institute working to track these criminals....
From the article:
This is why the Roosevelt Institute | Campus Network is working to track the ways in which financial institutions are extracting wealth from our colleges and universities, and make a clear case for demanding our money back. I hope that the storied institution of Sweet Briar can find a way to keep its doors open in 2016, but even if it fails, that failure should wake us up to predatory practices at colleges and universities around the country.