Pell Grants,
maxing out around $5,500 per year, are available to college students for
tuition payment, as well as living costs such as rent, groceries, and
transportation. However, when a student who receives a Pell Grant never shows
up to class and disappears with the money, the college is left high and dry.
Because of their lower tuition
rates, community colleges are victimized more so than costly universities. When
a student signs up for a full semester of classes for $700 to $900, he can choose
to pocket the leftover cash, received as a check from the school. While a
thousand dollars may not seem like much for a college collecting thousands in
tuition money from students every semester, the money lost to these Pell
Jumpers adds up. Mark Kantrowitz, a leading expert on financial aid issues,
estimates that 3.6 percent of Pell Grant recipients collect the money
fraudulently. As a result, taxpayers lose $1.2 billion per school year. In
context, it seems, Pell Grant fraud can be incredibly costly.
While colleges can attempt to go
after these scammers, it’s an uphill battle to track down students after they
leave the school with their check in hand. As a result, the U.S. Department of Education has proposed ways to
put a stop to the fraud before it begins: by delaying payments to students
until a few weeks into the semester and requiring professors to take
attendance, schools hope to differentiate the students who are committed to
their education from those who are interested in the money but not necessarily an
education. Other suggestions include requiring financial-aid recipients to put
a bank account or credit card on file in order to make them more easily
traceable if they disappear with their Pell Grant check. However, such tactics
may be potentially harmful for those who truly need the money – the delay in
receiving a necessary check may prevent students from purchasing text books or
paying rent.
One such college, Kellogg Community College in Battle Creek , has implemented
such procedures and, and a result, cut its financial-aid losses in half in
recent years. While Kellogg
Community College
represents one success story, there is yet to be an ideal remedy for preventing
Pell Jumpers from running away with taxpayer dollars.
If you have questions about
criminal matters, fraud or other legal issues, please contact Mark Mandell or
Tariq Hafeez at 248.380.0000 or online at www.MichiganFraudLawyer.com.
To learn more and read the
original article, please visit: http://www.livingstondaily.com/article/20130218/NEWS01/302180313/Pell-Grant-scammers-cheating-Michigan-colleges-out-millions?odyssey=tab%7Ctopnews%7Ctext%7CFrontpage
No comments:
Post a Comment