Student Tuition Recovery Fund Disclosures
The State of California created the Student Tuition Recovery Fund
(STRF) to relieve or mitigate economic losses suffered by California residents
who were students attending certain schools regulated by the Bureau for
Private Postsecondary and Vocational Education. You may be eligible for
STRF if you are a California resident, prepaid tuition, paid the STRF assessment,
and suffered an economic loss as a result of any of the following:
1. The school closed before the course of instruction was completed.
2. The schools failure to pay refunds or charges on behalf of a student
to a third party for license fees or any other purpose, or to provide equipment
or materials for which a charge was collected within 180 days before the
closure of the school.
3. The schools failure to pay or reimburse loan proceeds under a federally
guaranteed student loan program as required by law or to pay or reimburse
proceeds received by the school prior to closure in excess of tuition and
other cost.
4. There was a decline in the quality of the course of instruction within
30 days before the school closed or, if the decline began earlier than 30
days prior to closure, the period of decline determined by the Bureau.
5. An inability to collect on a judgment against the institution for a violation
of the Act.
You must pay the state-imposed assessment for the Student Tuition
Recovery Fund (STRF) if all of the following applies to you:
1. You are a student, who is a California resident and prepays all or part
of your tuition either by cash, guaranteed student loans, or personal loans,
and
2. Your total charges are not paid by any third-party payer such as an employer,
government program or other payer unless you have a separate agreement to
repay the third party.
You are not eligible for protection from the STRF and you are not required
to pay the STRF assessment, if either of the following applies:
1. You are not a California resident.
2. Your total charges are paid by a third party, such as an employer, government
program or other payer, and you have no separate agreement to repay the
third party.
Complaint Procedure
If a complaint cannot be resolved after exhausting the institutions
procedure, A student or any member of the public may file a complaint
about this institution with the Bureau for Private Postsecondary Education
by calling (888) 370-7589 or by completing a complaint form, which can be
obtained on the bureaus Internet Web site, www.bppe.ca.gov. |