Toni Cornell of Tacoma was a teenage mother who wanted off welfare and off the graveyard shift at Jack in the Box. She borrowed $7,000, enrolled at the Business Computer Training Institute and hoped for a good-paying office job when she graduated.
Tom Jonez and Morrie Pigott, the owners of the Business Computer Training Institute, have declined repeated
requests for interviews. They did respond to written questions submitted by The News Tribune. Here are their responses to various issues.
If a class-action lawsuit against the Business Computer Training Institute goes to trial, the outcome might hinge on what jurors think of people like Anita Wright.
Toni Cornell was 17 years old, single and pregnant with her third child when she enrolled at Business Computer Training Institute’s Tacoma campus in 2002. She was working nights at Jack in the Box and needed food stamps and medical coupons to get by.
Its finances were shaky. Its graduation and job-placement rates were substandard. Its students filed lawsuits and complained.
The for-profit higher-education sector has a history of troubles.
THE CASE AGAINST BCTI
More than 400 students have joined a class-action lawsuit that claims the Business Computer Training Institute defrauded students and enriched its owners. Here’s a look at BCTI’s operations through the eyes of those students, some former employees and regulators.
RECRUITING
BCTI recruited at locations as varied as welfare and unemployment offices, the Tacoma Mall and the Salvation Army. Some former employees say recruiters lied to students about BCTI programs and job opportunities to entice them to enroll.
THE TOUR
Potential students toured BCTI facilities, learned about financial aid and – according to some students – heard tales of good-paying jobs after graduation.
FUNDING
Nearly all BCTI students got some form of federal financial aid, often a student loan. Some received state grants. The money helped low-income students pay BCTI tuition – nearly $11,000 for a 30-week program in 2004. BCTI was almost completely dependent on public financial aid programs.
CLASSES
Oregon investigators found that BCTI advertised “information technology” classes, but its main program trained students for entry-level clerical jobs. Some students complained of lackluster classes, outdated equipment and high teacher turnover. Some former instructors say they were forced to keep underperforming students in class so the school could collect their financial aid.
GRADUATION
BCTI officials say the school had 28,000 graduates over 20 years and most are happy with the education they received. Regulators found substandard graduation rates in many BCTI programs. Whether they graduated or not, many students were on the hook for thousands of dollars in student loans.
JOB PLACEMENT
Job placement rates in many BCTI programs also were substandard. Many graduates wound up working at retail stores, fast-food restaurants and other low-wage businesses. Many students also defaulted on their taxpayer-backed student loans.
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