Schools
ITT Tech Abruptly Closes; Students Without a School
BREAKING: ITT Technical Institute, has operated throughout the United States for half a century. Federal student aid flap is the cause.

WISCONSIN -- ITT Technical Institute, one of the nation’s leaders in technical and industrial education, shuttered 130 campuses nation-wide, include three of their campuses in Houston, after the Department of education denied access to federal financial aid funding for its student body.
The shutdown includes its campus at 6300 W. Layton Ave. in Greenfield. The latest data available indicated Greenfield's enrollment was 422 students in 2014, with an in-district tuition cost of just over $18,000.
ITT Technical Institute, which has operated throughout the United States for half a century, eliminated the positions of most of the school’s 8,000 employees, with the remaining staff left to help those students with their educational records and any future educational needs.
Find out what's happening in Greenfieldfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
In late last month, the Department of Education blocked ITT Tech from taking any new students who use federal financial aid.
Nationwide, there are 43,000 students enrolled at campuses in 38 states, and is the among the largest for-profit college chains in the United States, reporting $850 million in revenue last year.
Find out what's happening in Greenfieldfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
On Tuesday, the college issued a statement expressing regret to the students and staff.
"It is with profound regret that we must report that ITT Educational Services, Inc. will discontinue academic operations at all of its ITT Technical Institutes permanently after approximately 50 years of continuous service. With what we believe is a complete disregard by the U.S. Department of Education for due process to the company, hundreds of thousands of current students and alumni and more than 8,000 employees will be negatively affected."
ITT, which has been under federal scrutiny dating back to 2014, stopped enrolling students last week.
ITT has also been ordered to pay $152 million to the department within 30 days to cover student refunds and other liabilities in case the company closes.
The chain, based in Indiana, is still paying another $44 million demanded by the department in June for the same reason.
The company said they believe the actions of the federal government were “inappropriate and unconstitutional,” but that other institutions may “now likely rest on other parties to understand these reprehensible actions and to take action to attempt to prevent this from happening again."
Photo credit: Dwight Burdette/Wikimedia Commons
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