TINA’s Take: FTC Puts For-Profit Higher Education Institutions on Notice
A disproportionate number of students that have defaulted on their students loans attended for-profit colleges.
Tune in on Thursday to hear TINA.org's take on ways to safeguard consumers and fight fraud during the COVID-19 pandemic.
On Thursday, Feb. 4, at 12 p.m. ET, TINA.org Executive Director Bonnie Patten testified before Congress in a hearing that focused on ways to safeguard American consumers and fight fraud during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The ongoing pandemic has exacerbated the ever-present dangers of deceptive and unfair acts and practices in the marketplace. TINA.org has heard from countless consumers – including senior citizens, military veterans and struggling parents – whose experiences illustrate the fact that deceptive marketing is putting the health, financial well-being and safety of our most susceptible populations at risk.
These dangers highlight the need for legislative action.
Watch what Bonnie had to say on these important consumer protection issues in her testimony before the Subcommittee on Consumer Protection and Commerce of the Committee on Energy and Commerce.
She was joined by Jessica Rich, former director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection and now Distinguished Fellow at Georgetown Law’s Institute for Technology Law & Policy, as well as Hon. William E. Kovacic, director of the Competition Law Center at George Washington University Law School, and Traci Ponto, a Spokane COPS Crime Victim Advocate.
To read Bonnie’s full written testimony, click here.
A disproportionate number of students that have defaulted on their students loans attended for-profit colleges.
Despite the splashy announcement, weight-loss ads persist on social media platform.
Tune in on Tuesday to hear TINA.org’s take on fighting fraud during the COVID-19 pandemic and strengthening the FTC’s 13(b) authority.