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Career Education Colleges and Universities

US trade association From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Career Education Colleges and Universities (CECU) is a Washington, D.C.-based trade association that represents for-profit colleges.

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CECU as it is organized today was created in 1991 following a merger of the Association for Independent Colleges and Schools (AICS) and the National Association of Trade and Technical Schools (NATTS). The combined association was called the Career College Association (CCA).[2] In 2010, the association changed its name to the Association of Private Sector Colleges and Universities (APSCU),[3] but today is known as CECU.

During the administration of President Barack Obama, a series of federal investigations and lawsuits were initiated against for-profit education companies. APSCU waged an extensive lobbying campaign[4] and filed a 2012 lawsuit against the United States Department of Education seeking to halt the department's regulations targeting for-profit colleges.[5] Judge Rudolph Contreras struck down the regulations, which he called "arbitrary and capricious".[6] In 2014, the association filed a second lawsuit challenging similar regulations (79 FR 64890),[7] but this time the regulations were implemented.

By 2015, some of APSCU's largest members were under federal and state investigation[8] and several subsequently left the association.[9][10] Some of the largest companies in the sector collapsed under the weight of the regulations, charges of impropriety, and related legal actions.[11] In 2016, APSCU changed its name to Career Education Colleges and Universities (CECU), a move association leaders said better reflected the evolving membership of the organization.[12]

President Donald Trump and his Education Secretary Betsy DeVos dismantled many of Obama's actions targeting for-profit colleges.[13][14]

Recent activities

After Joe Biden won the 2020 presidential election, CECU named former Democratic congressman Jason Altmire as its president.[15]

The group has grown in influence in recent years, playing an active role in opposing Biden-era regulations targeting for-profit colleges,[16] supporting lawsuits against those regulations,[17][18] and advocating for policies that would favor for-profit institutions.[19][20]

In 2025, President Trump nominated a former senior official at CECU, Nicholas Kent, to lead the administration’s work on higher education as Under Secretary of Education.[21]

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