[Federal Register: November 25, 1997 (Volume 62, Number 227)]
[Rules and Regulations]               
[Page 62829-62887]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr25no97-10]


[[Page 62829]]

_______________________________________________________________________

Part IV


Department of Education
_______________________________________________________________________


34 CFR Part 668


Student Assistance General Provisions; Final Rule


[[Page 62830]]



DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION

34 CFR Part 668

RIN 1840-AC36

 
Student Assistance General Provisions

AGENCY: Department of Education.

ACTION: Final regulations.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

SUMMARY: The Secretary amends the Student Assistance General Provisions 
regulations (34 CFR part 668) to revise Subparts B and K and add a new 
Subpart L. These final regulations improve the Secretary's oversight of 
institutions participating in programs authorized by title IV of the 
Higher Education Act of 1965, as amended (title IV, HEA programs), by 
revising the standards of financial responsibility to provide a more 
accurate and comprehensive measure of an institution's financial 
condition. The regulations reflect the Secretary's commitment to 
ensuring institutional accountability and protecting the Federal 
interest while imposing the least possible burden on participating 
institutions.

DATES: Effective dates: These regulations take effect on July 1, 1998.
    Applicability and Compliance Dates: The Secretary will apply the 
standards of financial responsibility established in these regulations 
to institutions that submit audited financial statements to the 
Department on or after July 1, 1998. However, affected parties do not 
have to comply with the information collection requirements in 
Secs. 668.171(c), 668.172(c)(5), 668.174(b)(2)(i), 668.175(d)(2)(ii), 
668.175(f)(2)(iii), and 668.175(g)(2)(i) until the Department publishes 
in the Federal Register the control number assigned by the Office of 
Management and Budget (OMB) to these information collection 
requirements.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For general information contact Mr. 
John Kolotos or Mr. Lloyd Horwich, U.S. Department of Education, 600 
Independence Avenue, S.W., Room 3045, ROB-3, Washington, D.C. 20202, 
telephone (202) 708-8242. For information regarding accounting and 
compliance issues, an institution should contact the Department's 
Institutional Participation and Oversight Service (IPOS) Case 
Management Team for the state in which it is located:

IPOS Case Management Team Contacts

Boston Team, (617) 223-9338 (covering Connecticut, Maine, 
Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont)
New York City Team, (212) 264-4022 (covering New Jersey, New York, 
Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands)
Philadelphia Team, (215) 596-0247 (covering Delaware, District of 
Columbia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia)
Atlanta Team, (404) 562-6315 (covering Alabama, Florida, Georgia, 
Mississippi, North Carolina and South Carolina)
Chicago Team, (312) 886-8767 (covering Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, 
Minnesota, Ohio and Wisconsin)
Dallas Team, (214) 880-3044 (covering Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, 
Oklahoma and Texas)
Kansas City Team (816) 880-4053 (covering Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, 
Missouri, Nebraska and Tennessee)
Denver Team, (303) 844-3677 (covering Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, 
South Dakota, Utah and Wyoming)
San Francisco Team, (415) 437-8276 (covering Arizona, California, 
Hawaii, Nevada, American Samoa, Guam, Federated States of Micronesia, 
Palau, Marshall Islands and Northern Marianas)
Seattle Team, (206) 287-1770 (covering Alaska, Idaho, Oregon and 
Washington).

    Individuals who use a telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD) 
may call the Federal Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 1-800-877-8339 
between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m., Eastern standard time, Monday through 
Friday.
    Individuals with disabilities may obtain a copy of this document in 
an alternate format (e.g. Braille, large print, audiotape, or computer 
diskette) by contacting Mr. John Kolotos or Mr. Lloyd Horwich.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

    The following is an ordered list of the key topics covered in this 
preamble:
    * Overview of the Standards and Provisions of Financial
Responsibility.
    * Community Involvement in the Regulatory Process.
    * The Secretary's Responsibility for Assessing the Financial
Condition of Participating Institutions.
    * Need for Revising the Rules.
    * The Final Rule.
    * Provisions for Public Institutions.
    * The Ratio Methodology for Private Non-Profit and
Proprietary Institutions.
    * Overview of the Methodology.
    * Issues Raised in the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking and
other Department Publications.
    * Substantive Changes to the NPRM.
    * Analysis of Comments and Changes.
    On September 20, 1996, the Secretary published in the Federal 
Register a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) addressing a variety of 
topics, including a ratio methodology that would be used in part to 
determine whether an institution is financially responsible (61 FR 
49552-49574). The NPRM also included financial responsibility standards 
for third-party servicers that enter into a contract with a lender or 
guaranty agency, and provisions for submitting financial statement and 
compliance audits, adding additional locations, and changes of 
ownership that result in a change of control (61 FR 49552-49574). On 
November 29, 1996, the Secretary published final regulations governing 
submissions of financial statement and compliance audits and other 
aspects of financial responsibility, but delayed establishing final 
standards regarding the ratio methodology and other proposed provisions 
(including changes of ownership and additional locations), pending 
further comment, study, and review (61 FR 60565-60577).
    The Secretary provided an extensive opportunity for public 
involvement and comment on these final regulations. On December 18, 
1996, the Secretary reopened the comment period until February 18, 1997 
for the delayed standards and provisions (61 FR 66854). On February 18, 
1997, the Secretary extended that comment period until March 24, 1997 
(62 FR 7333-7334). On March 20, 1997, the Secretary again extended the 
comment period until April 14, 1997 (62 FR 13520).
    These regulations establish under a new Subpart L the provisions 
and standards of financial responsibility that an institution must 
satisfy to begin or continue to participate in the title IV, HEA 
programs. Furthermore, these regulations amend certain sections of 
Subparts B and K to harmonize the requirements under those sections 
with the provisions and standards under Subpart L. As discussed more 
fully under Parts 4 and 15 of the Analysis of Comments and Changes, 
these regulations do not establish new standards of financial 
responsibility for lender or guaranty agency third-party servicers, or 
new provisions regarding additional locations and changes of ownership.

Overview of the Standards and Provisions of Financial 
Responsibility

    As provided under section 498 of the HEA, the Secretary determines 
whether an institution is financially responsible based on the extent 
to which an institution satisfies three statutory components, which are 
illustrated below.

[[Page 62831]]



            Statutory Components of Financial Responsibility            
------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Financial obligations       Administration of    Financial condition
    (provisions for debt        the title IV, HEA     (ratio standards) 
   payments, refunds, and        programs (past    ---------------------
         repayments)             performance and                        
-----------------------------  program compliance                       
                                   provisions)                          
                             ----------------------     HEA sections    
  HEA sections 498(c)(1)(C)       HEA sections          498(c)(1)(A)    
                                498(c)(1)(B) and                        
                                     498(d)                             
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The extent to which an        The extent to which   The extent to which 
 institution:                  an institution or     an institution has 
  (1) Satisfies its            the persons or        the resources      
   obligations to students     entities that         necessary to:      
   and to the Secretary,       exercise               (1) Provide and to
   including making refunds    substantial control     continue to      
   to students in a timely     over the                provide the      
   manner and repaying         institution             education and    
   program liabilities to      administer properly     services         
   the Secretary; and          the title IV, HEA       described in its 
  (2) Is current in its debt   programs.               official         
   payments.                                           publications; and
                                                      (2) Continue to   
                                                       satisfy its      
                                                       financial        
                                                       obligations.     
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The current standards and provisions under 34 CFR 668.15 relating 
to an institution's financial obligations and administration of title 
IV, HEA programs are detailed in the above chart and carried forward in 
these regulations, under Secs. 668.171 and 668.174, respectively. These 
regulations focus on establishing a ratio methodology that provides a 
comprehensive measure of the financial condition of proprietary and 
private non-profit institutions.
    The current regulations employ three independent tests for 
assessing the financial condition of an institution, and require an 
institution to satisfy the minimum standard established for each of 
those separate tests to be considered financially responsible.
    In contrast, these regulations employ a ratio methodology under 
which an institution need only satisfy a single standard--the composite 
score standard. Unlike the current tests that treat different measures 
of an institution's financial condition without reference to each 
other, the ratio methodology takes into account an institution's total 
financial resources and provides a combined score of the measures of 
those resources along a common scale (from negative 1.0 to positive 
3.0). This new approach is more informative and allows a relative 
strength in one measure to mitigate a relative weakness in another 
measure.
    Under these regulations, the Secretary considers a proprietary or 
private non-profit institution to be financially responsible based on 
its composite score. If an institution achieves a composite score of at 
least 1.5, it is financially responsible without further oversight. An 
institution with a composite score in the zone from 1.0 to 1.4 is 
financially responsible, subject to additional monitoring, and may 
continue to participate as a financially responsible institution for up 
to three years.
    An institution that does not satisfy either the composite score or 
zone standards, or that fails to meet its financial obligations or 
satisfy other standards of financial responsibility, may be allowed to 
participate in the title IV, HEA programs by qualifying under the 
provisions of an alternative standard. The alternative standards are 
described under Sec. 668.175 of these regulations and illustrated in 
the following table.

                          Alternative Standards                         
------------------------------------------------------------------------
         Alternative               Used when:            Provisions     
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Letter of credit \1\ for a    An institution that   The institution may 
 new institution.              seeks to              begin to           
                               participate in the    participate by     
                               title IV, HEA         submitting a letter
                               programs for the      of credit for at   
                               first time does not   least 50 percent of
                               satisfy the           the title IV, HEA  
                               composite score       program funds that 
                               standard but          the Secretary      
                               satisfies all other   determines the     
                               applicable            institution will   
                               standards and         receive during its 
                               provisions.           initial year of    
                                                     participation, as  
                                                     provided under Sec.
                                                      668.175(b).       
Letter of credit for a        A participating       The institution may 
 participating institution.    institution does      continue to        
                               not satisfy one or    participate as a   
                               more of the           financially        
                               standards of          responsible        
                               financial             institution by     
                               responsibility        submitting a letter
                               (including the        of credit for at   
                               composite score       least 50 percent of
                               standard) or the      the title IV, HEA  
                               institution's         program funds the  
                               auditor expresses     institution        
                               an adverse,           received during its
                               qualified, or         last completed     
                               disclaimed opinion,   fiscal year, as    
                               or the auditor        provided under Sec.
                               expresses doubt        668.175(c).       
                               about the continued                      
                               existence of the                         
                               institution as a                         
                               going concern.                           
Provisional certification...  A participating       The institution may 
                               institution:.         participate under a
                                (1) Does not         provisional        
                                 satisfy the         certification by   
                                 composite score     submitting a letter
                                 standard or any     of credit for at   
                                 provision           least 10 percent of
                                 regarding its       the title IV, HEA  
                                 financial           program funds the  
                                 obligations; or     institution        
                                (2) Has or had a     received during its
                                 program             last completed     
                                 compliance          fiscal year and    
                                 problem as          meeting other      
                                 provided under      provisions         
                                 Sec.  668.174 but   described under    
                                 satisfied or        Sec.  668.175(f).  
                                 resolved that                          
                                 problem.                               
Provisional certification     The persons or        The institution may 
 for an institution where      entities that         continue to        
 persons or entities owe       exercise              participate under a
 liabilities.                  substantial control   provisional        
                               over the              certification if it
                               institution owe a     satisfies the      
                               liability for a       provisions         
                               violation of a        described under    
                               title IV, HEA         Sec.  668.175(g).  
                               program requirement.                     
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ A letter of credit is a financial instrument, typically issued by a 
  commercial bank, whereby the bank guarantees payment to the Secretary 
  for an amount up to the amount of the letter of credit.               


[[Page 62832]]

    A public institution demonstrates that it is financially 
responsible under these regulations by providing a letter from an 
official of the State or other government entity confirming the 
institution's status as a public institution.
    Although the Secretary proposed to treat independent hospital 
institutions slightly differently under the ratio methodology, the 
Secretary now believes that any differences between these institutions 
and institutions in the other sectors relate primarily to control. 
Under these regulations, therefore, an independent hospital institution 
must satisfy the provisions of the ratio methodology established for a 
proprietary institution if it is a for-profit entity, or the provisions 
established for a private non-profit institution if it is a non-profit 
entity. If an independent hospital institution is a public entity, it 
must satisfy the requirements established for public institutions.

Community Involvement in the Regulatory Process

    The Secretary sought to maximize the postsecondary education 
community's participation in this regulatory initiative. In developing 
the initial study on which the NPRM was based, the Department's 
contractor, KPMG Peat Marwick LLP (KPMG), consulted with a task force 
representing various sectors of the community. To ensure that the 
community was given sufficient time to analyze and comment on the 
proposed rules, the Secretary reopened the original comment period and 
then extended that comment period twice, so that the total comment 
period was 207 days. In response, the Secretary received approximately 
850 comments during the original and extended comment periods.
    Between December 18, 1996 and the publication of these final 
regulations, the Department took the following actions to supplement 
the original empirical work on which the NPRM was based, and to solicit 
questions, suggestions, and other comments regarding the proposed ratio 
methodology:
    * The Department again engaged KPMG to assist the Department
in reexamining the proposed ratio methodology, considering public 
comments and suggestions to change and improve the methodology, and 
conducting additional empirical studies of financial statements and 
other sources of information. Much of this additional work was based on 
suggestions made by the community.
    * The Department held meetings with more than 20
representatives of higher education associations and institutions on 
February 5, 1997 and March 11, 1997, with nine representatives of 
proprietary institutions on February 27, 1997, and with four 
representatives of higher education associations and public 
institutions on April 4, 1997. The Department also conducted a number 
of other meetings with parties representing individual institutions or 
groups of institutions.
    * For purposes of public consideration and comment, the
Department published on the Office of Postsecondary Education's World-
Wide Web site, minutes of the meetings with representatives of 
postsecondary education associations, information regarding possible 
changes to the proposed ratio methodology, and the results of some of 
the empirical studies. The Department also made available, for viewing 
on-line, the KPMG report on which the Department based the proposed 
ratio methodology.
    Many commenters expressed their appreciation to the Secretary for 
the open, collaborative, and cooperative nature of this rulemaking 
process and for the extensive opportunities for public and community 
involvement. The Secretary in turn appreciates the commenters' 
thoughtful and constructive contributions to this process.

The Secretary's Responsibility for Assessing the Financial Condition of 
Participating Institutions

    The statute and the legislative record show that Congress expects 
the Secretary to determine whether institutions participating in the 
title IV, HEA programs are financially sound and administratively 
capable of providing the education they advertise (Higher Education 
Amendments of 1992, Report of the Committee on Education and Labor, 
House of Representatives, One Hundred Second Congress, Second Session, 
p. 74). Congress authorized the Secretary (at that time, the 
Commissioner) to establish financial responsibility standards with the 
passage of the Education Amendments of 1976 (Pub. L. 94-482), and 
reinforced that authority in subsequent amendments to the HEA. In those 
amendments, but particularly in the legislative history leading to the 
1992 Amendments, Congress made clear that the Secretary should 
scrutinize closely the financial condition of institutions with regard 
to their capacity to fulfill their educational and administrative 
responsibilities, and thus expected the Department to ``play a more 
active role'' in the gatekeeping process (i.e., determining whether 
institutions should begin to participate in the title IV, HEA programs 
and overseeing participating institutions to determine whether those 
institutions should continue to participate).
    In keeping with the statute and congressional intent, the Secretary 
establishes in these regulations the standards and provisions that a 
postsecondary institution must satisfy to demonstrate that it is 
financially sound enough for students to confidently invest their time 
and money in programs offered by the institution, and for the Federal 
government, on behalf of taxpayers, to provide that institution with 
access to substantial amounts of public funds. The Department is 
committed to carrying out the Secretary's gatekeeping and oversight 
responsibilities in a manner that ensures accountability and program 
integrity but that provides as much flexibility to, and places as 
little burden on, institutions as possible.

Need for Revising the Rules

    The current regulations have enabled the Department to identify and 
take action against many financially weak problem institutions that 
drew the attention of Congress. The Secretary nevertheless believes 
that problems still exist that call for continued close scrutiny, and 
undertook an extensive process to develop more effective regulations 
for the following reasons.
    First, the Secretary believes that the standards need to be revised 
to provide a more comprehensive measure of an institution's financial 
condition. As previously noted, the current standards provide discrete 
measures of certain aspects of an institution's financial condition. 
Those aspects are measured by three independent tests--an acid test 
ratio, a test for operating losses, and a test of tangible net worth. 
However, because each test provides a measure of financial health 
without regard to the other tests or to other resources available to an 
institution, the assessment made under each of these tests does not 
always reflect the overall financial condition of an institution.
    Second, because the current standards do not consider the extent to 
which an institution satisfies or fails to satisfy the tests, the 
Department cannot readily make distinctions among (1) institutions that 
are clearly not financially healthy, (2) institutions that are 
financially sound enough to participate in the title IV, HEA programs, 
and (3) institutions whose financial health is questionable. 
Consequently, a more considered approach is needed to evaluate the 
relative level of financial health of institutions to more closely tie 
the Department's gatekeeping and oversight efforts to the corresponding 
risk to the

[[Page 62833]]

Federal interest posed by institutions at various levels.
    Third, the Secretary believes that the current standards must be 
improved to properly address the different accounting, financial, and 
operating characteristics that exist between proprietary and private 
non-profit institutions.
    Finally, based on KPMG's original study and the additional analysis 
performed during the extended comment period, the Secretary is prepared 
to carry out a commitment made to representatives of the postsecondary 
education community in the context of the promulgation of the 1994 
financial responsibility regulations, that instead of establishing 
independent tests, the Department would assess the institutions' 
financial responsibility based on blended test scores.

The Final Rule

Provisions for Public Institutions

    The Secretary initially proposed to apply the ratio methodology to 
public institutions, but, based on public comment, the Secretary has 
decided not to use the methodology to determine the financial 
responsibility of those institutions for two primary reasons. First, 
these institutions are subject to more public oversight and scrutiny 
than private non-profit and proprietary institutions. The Secretary 
believes that it is the responsibility of the State or responsible 
government entity to make available the resources necessary for those 
institutions to provide the education and services expected by students 
who enroll at those institutions and the residents of the State or 
locality whose funds support the institutions. Second, the legal and 
financial relationships between public institutions and their 
respective State or local governments vary widely, impacting in 
different ways the assets and liabilities reported on those 
institutions' financial statements. Thus, the ratio methodology would 
not treat all public institutions equitably.
    In view of these and other reasons noted by the commenters (see 
Analysis of Comments and Changes, Part 4), the Secretary does not 
establish in these regulations a composite score standard for public 
institutions. Rather, the Secretary will rely on the statutory 
alternative that, in lieu of satisfying the general standards of 
financial responsibility (including the composite score standard), a 
public institution is financially responsible if its debts and 
liabilities are backed by the full faith and credit of the State or 
other government entity. The Secretary will consider that a public 
institution has that backing if the institution provides a letter from 
the cognizant State or government entity confirming the institution's 
status as a public institution. The Secretary takes this approach in 
implementing the full faith and credit provision under section 
498(c)(3)(B) of the HEA to eliminate technical and other problems 
experienced by public institutions in demonstrating their compliance 
with this provision under the current regulations.

The Ratio Methodology for Private Non-Profit and Proprietary 
Institutions

    In developing the final regulations, the Secretary sought to 
address all of the needs for revising the current rules by formulating 
a ratio methodology, and provisions relating to the methodology, that 
would be fair, easily understood by institutions, and efficiently 
administered by the Department.
    Based on the additional analysis performed by the Department and 
KPMG during the extended comment period, and the many helpful comments 
and suggestions made by the community, the Department establishes by 
these final regulations a ratio methodology for proprietary and private 
non-profit institutions that:
    (1) Provides a comprehensive measure of financial health (the 
composite score) by using ratios that take into account all of the 
resources of an institution and employing an approach under which the 
financial strength demonstrated in one ratio mitigates a financial 
weakness in another ratio;
    (2) Provides the Department the means to assess the relative health 
of all institutions along a common scale; and
    (3) Takes into account the key differences between these sectors of 
postsecondary institutions.
    In so doing, the ratio methodology enables the Department to use 
more effectively the case management system implemented by IPOS. Under 
this system, case teams responsible for particular institutions have 
access to all of the data available to the Department regarding those 
institutions, including financial, compliance, and programmatic 
information. The case teams use this information to identify 
institutions whose level of financial health, or whose conduct in 
administering the title IV, HEA programs, or both, indicates that those 
institutions (1) need technical assistance, (2) must be monitored more 
closely, or (3) pose a risk to the Federal interest that requires the 
Department to initiate an adverse action.
    Furthermore, in the interest of treating all institutions fairly 
and equitably, the Department will calculate the ratios under the 
methodology by using only the information contained in an institution's 
audited financial statements that are prepared in accordance with 
generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) and by removing the 
effects of questionable accounting treatments.
    The Secretary is committed to ensuring a smooth transition and to 
helping institutions understand the ratio methodology and other 
provisions established in these regulations by offering technical 
assistance, both initially and as case teams identify institutions in 
need of further assistance.

Overview of the Methodology

    The methodology is an arithmetic means of combining different but 
complementary measures (ratios) of fundamental elements of financial 
health that yields a single measure (the composite score) representing 
an institution's overall financial health. Under the methodology, the 
composite score is calculated by:
    (1) Determining the value of each ratio;
    (2) Calculating a strength factor score for each of the ratios;
    (3) Calculating a weighted score by multiplying the strength factor 
score by its corresponding weighting percentage; and
    (4) Adding together the weighted scores to arrive at the composite 
score.
    In the first step of the methodology, the values of the Primary 
Reserve, Equity, and Net Income ratios are calculated from information 
contained in an institution's audited financial statement. These ratios 
together measure the five fundamental elements of financial health: 
financial viability, liquidity, ability to borrow, capital resources, 
and profitability. The strength factor scores are calculated using 
linear algorithms (equations) and those scores reflect along a common 
scale the degree to which an institution in a particular sector 
demonstrates strength or weakness in the fundamental elements. The 
weighting percentages for each of the ratios make it possible to 
compare institutions across sectors by accounting for the relative 
importance that the fundamental elements have for institutions in each 
sector. In the final step of the methodology, the weighted scores are 
added together. The resulting value, the composite score, represents an 
overall measure of an institution's financial health.

[[Page 62834]]

    Each step of calculating the composite score under the ratio 
methodology is illustrated in Appendices F and G of these regulations 
and discussed more fully in the following sections.
Step 1: Financial Ratios
    The methodology employs three ratios that measure the same elements 
of financial health but are customized to reflect the accounting 
differences between the sectors. The values of the ratios are 
determined from information contained in an institution's audited 
financial statement and are generically defined as follows:
    For proprietary institutions:
    [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR25NO97.020
    
    For private non-profit institutions:
    [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR25NO97.021
    
    A detailed description of the components of the numerators and 
denominators of the ratios is provided under Appendix F of these 
regulations for proprietary institutions and under Appendix G for 
private non-profit institutions.
    In view of the public comment and the empirical work performed by 
KPMG, the Secretary selected these ratios because together they take 
into account the total financial resources of an institution and 
provide broad measures of the following fundamental elements of 
financial health:
    1. Financial viability: The ability of an institution to continue 
to achieve its operating objectives and fulfill its mission over the 
long-term;
    2. Profitability: Whether an institution receives more or less than 
it spends during its fiscal year;
    3. Liquidity: The ability of an institution to satisfy its short-
term obligations with existing assets;
    4. Ability to borrow: The ability of an institution to assume 
additional debt; and
    5. Capital resources: An institution's financial and physical 
capital base that supports its operations.
    In identifying these fundamental elements, the Secretary relied on 
KPMG's extensive experience in analyzing the financial condition of 
postsecondary institutions and the work of the community task force 
assembled to assist the Department and KPMG in developing the ratio 
methodology.
    The Primary Reserve ratio provides a measure of an institution's 
expendable or liquid resource base in relation to its overall operating 
size. It is, in effect, a measure of the institution's margin against 
adversity. The Primary Reserve ratio measures whether an institution 
has financial resources sufficient to support its mission--that is, 
whether the institution has (1) sufficient financial reserves to meet 
current and future operating commitments, and (2) sufficient 
flexibility in those reserves to meet changes in its programs, 
educational activities, and spending patterns. Thus, the Primary 
Reserve ratio provides a measure of two of the fundamental elements of 
financial health--financial viability and liquidity.
    The Equity ratio provides a measure of the amount of total 
resources that are financed by owners' investments, contributions or 
accumulated earnings, depending on the type of institution, or stated 
another way, the amount of an institution's assets that are subject to 
claims of third parties. Thus, the ratio captures an institution's 
overall capitalization structure, and by inference its ability to 
borrow. With respect to the fundamental elements of financial health, 
the Equity ratio measures capital resources, ability to borrow, and 
financial viability.
    The Net Income ratio provides a direct measure of an institution's 
profitability or ability to operate within its means and is one of the 
primary indicators of the underlying causes of a change in an 
institution's financial condition.
    A more thorough description of the ratios is provided under part 4 
of the Analysis of Comments and Changes.
Step 2: Strength Factor Scores
    The strength factor score reflects the degree to which an 
institution demonstrates strength or weakness in the fundamental 
elements as measured by the ratios. That strength or weakness is 
assigned a point value of not less than negative 1.0 nor more than 
positive 3.0, where a negative 1.0 indicates a relative weakness in the 
fundamental elements and a positive 3.0 indicates relative strength in 
those elements. The point values are assigned by a linear algorithm 
(equation) developed for each ratio.
    For example, the linear algorithm for calculating the strength 
factor score for the Equity ratio of a proprietary institution is ``6 X 
Equity ratio result.'' A proprietary institution with an Equity ratio 
equal to -0.167 would have a strength factor score of negative 1.0 (6 X 
-0.167=-1.002).
    The linear algorithms developed for each ratio are contained in 
Appendix F for proprietary institutions and Appendix G for private non-
profit institutions. The algorithms are explained in greater detail 
under Part 6

[[Page 62835]]

of the Analysis of Comments and Changes.
    In developing the algorithms, the Department, having consulted with 
KPMG, determined the value of each ratio at three critical points along 
the scoring scale:
    (1) The point at which an institution begins to demonstrate a 
minimal level of strength;
    (2) The point at which an institution demonstrates no strength; and
    (3) The point at which an institution demonstrates relative 
strength.
    The algorithms were then constructed to yield, at these relative 
levels of financial health, strength factor scores of 1.0, zero, and 
3.0, respectively. For example, as calculated under the algorithms, a 
strength factor score of 1.0 indicates that an institution has a 
minimal level of expendable reserves (Primary Reserve ratio), is just 
beginning to demonstrate equity (its assets are greater than its 
liabilities, but not by much) (Equity ratio), and broke even (Net 
Income ratio). A strength factor score of zero indicates that an 
institution has no expendable reserves or equity, and incurred a small 
loss. On the upper end of the scale, a strength factor score of 3.0 
indicates that an institution has a healthy level of expendable 
reserves and equity (its assets are substantially greater than its 
liabilities) and generated operating surpluses that added to its 
overall wealth.
    The Secretary considered carefully the comments made by the 
community regarding the proposed scoring scale and the impact of the 
proposed methodology on an institution's ability to satisfy its mission 
objectives. In view of these comments and the empirical work performed 
by KPMG during the extended comment period, the Secretary revised the 
scoring scale to make greater distinctions among institutions on the 
lower end of the scale and to consider more fairly the actual financial 
health of institutions as measured by the methodology. Since the 
strength factor scores reflect the degree to which an institution 
demonstrates strength or weakness in the fundamental elements as 
measured by the ratios, these scores enable the Department to assess 
the extent to which an institution has the financial resources to:
    (1) Replace existing technology with newer technology;
    (2) Replace physical capital that wears out over time;
    (3) Recruit, retain, and re-train faculty and staff (human 
capital); and
    (4) Develop new programs.
    A more thorough discussion of the revisions to the scoring process 
and strength factor scores is provided under Part 6 of the Analysis of 
Comments and Changes.
Step 3: Weighting Percentages
    The weighting percentages for each of the ratios make it possible 
to compare institutions across sectors by accounting for the relative 
importance that the fundamental elements have for institutions in each 
sector. For example, expendable resources (as measured by the Primary 
Reserve ratio) are more important to private non-profit institutions 
than to proprietary institutions--proprietary institutions generally 
have greater access to capital markets, and owners, unlike trustees, 
may invest cash as needed to support operations, or may increase 
expendable resources by leaving earnings in the institution. On the 
other hand, non-profit institutions are generally dependent on 
contributions from donors as their primary source of additional 
capital.
    In this step of the methodology, the strength factor score is 
multiplied by a weighting percentage. For example, the weighting 
percentage for the Primary Reserve strength factor score of a 
proprietary institution is 30 percent. To determine the weighted score 
for a proprietary institution with a Primary Reserve strength factor 
score of 1.2, the institution would multiply 1.2 by 30 percent, for a 
weighted score of 0.36 (1.2  x  30 percent = 0.36).
    The regulations revise the proposed weighting percentages to 
account for the effect of replacing the proposed Viability ratio with 
the Equity ratio and to reflect more accurately the importance of each 
ratio. These revisions, and the rationale for establishing the 
weighting percentages, are discussed more fully under Part 7 of the 
Analysis of Comments and Changes.
Step 4: Composite Score
    In the final step of the methodology the weighted scores are added 
together to arrive at the composite score. Because the weighted scores 
reflect the strengths and weaknesses represented by the ratios and take 
into account the importance of those strengths and weaknesses, a 
strength in the weighted score of one ratio may compensate for a 
weakness in the weighted score of another ratio. Thus, the composite 
score reflects the overall financial health of an institution and 
provides a cardinal ranking of all institutions along a common scale 
from negative 1.0 to positive 3.0.
    A sample calculation of a composite score is illustrated in the 
following chart.

                             Calculating a Proprietary Institution's Composite Score                            
                                                                                                                
            Step 1                           Step 2                              Step 3               Step 4 \1\
Calculate the ratio results    Calculate strength factor score by  Calculate weighted score                     
                                use of the appropriate algorithm    (multiply strength factor score             
                                                                    by weighting percentage)                    
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Primary reserve ratio = .06..  .06  x  20 = 1.20                   1.20  x  30% = 0.36000                       
Equity ratio = .27...........  .27  x  6 = 1.620                   1.620  x  40% = 0.64800                      
Net income ratio = .029......  (.029  x  33.3) + 1 = 1.9657        1.9657  x  30% = 0.58971                     
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Step 4: Add the weighted scores (=1.59771) and round the total of the weighted scores to one digit after the
  decimal point to arrive at the composite score = 1.6.                                                         

    While institutions may achieve the same composite score in 
different ways (by having different ratio results), institutions with 
the same scores are similarly situated with respect to the resources 
that they can bring to bear to satisfy their obligations to students 
and to the Secretary.

The Regulatory Standard of Financial Responsibility

    As noted previously, an institution must satisfy the standards and 
provisions under each component of financial responsibility. With 
respect to its financial condition, an institution must achieve a 
composite score of at least 1.5 (the composite score standard).
    In determining the minimum composite score that an institution

[[Page 62836]]

would need to achieve to demonstrate that it is financially 
responsible, the Department, having consulted with KPMG, formulated the 
algorithms to establish the point along the scoring scale below which 
an institution is clearly not financially healthy, i.e., a composite 
score of 1.0. From that point, the Secretary determined the level of 
financial health that indicates that an institution has the resources 
necessary not only to continue operations, but to fund to some extent 
its mission objectives.
    An institution with a composite score of 1.0 should be able to 
continue operations but does not have the financial resources to meet 
its operating needs without difficulty, or the financial reserves 
necessary to deal with adverse economic events without having to rely 
on additional sources of capital. Moreover, because it has very limited 
resources, the institution will have difficulty funding its technology, 
capital replacement, and program needs. Below this level, an 
institution will have even more difficulties, if not serious 
difficulties, in meeting its operating needs without additional revenue 
or support, and in funding any of its technology, capital replacement, 
human capital, or program needs.
    A composite score of 1.5 generally characterizes an institution 
that has some margin against adversity, is funding its historical 
capital replacement costs, and has the resources to provide funding for 
some investment in human and physical capital. However, the institution 
has no excess funds to support new program initiatives or major 
infrastructure upgrades.
    The composite score reflects the relative financial health of 
institutions along the scoring scale from negative 1.0 to positive 3.0. 
Stated another way, any given composite score along this scale reflects 
the degree of uncertainty that an institution will be able to continue 
operations and meet its obligations to students and to the Secretary; 
the uncertainty that an institution will be able to continue operations 
and meet its obligations increases as its composite score decreases. 
Thus, if the Secretary's sole aim for these regulations had been to 
accept the lowest level of uncertainty, only institutions achieving the 
highest composite score would be considered financially responsible. 
The Secretary notes that a significant number of institutions in the 
samples examined by the Department and KPMG attained composite scores 
of 3.0 (44 percent of the institutions in the private non-profit 
sample, and 13 percent of the institutions in the proprietary sample). 
However, the Secretary believes that a composite score of 1.5 reflects 
a level of financial health that is in keeping with the statutory 
requirements and the Secretary's goals in determining that institutions 
are financially responsible. This level balances the need to minimize 
uncertainty with the need to minimize regulatory burdens on 
institutions that are likely to remain in business, provide educational 
services at a satisfactory level, and administer properly the title IV, 
HEA programs.

Institutions With Composite Scores in the Zone

    As noted previously, provided that an institution satisfies the 
standards relating to its debt payments and its administration of the 
title IV, HEA programs, an institution demonstrates that it is 
financially responsible by achieving a composite score of at least 1.5, 
or by achieving a composite score in the zone from 1.0 to 1.4 and 
meeting certain provisions.
    The ratio methodology is designed to identify the point along the 
scoring scale where an institution is financially sound enough (a 
composite score of at least 1.5) to continue to participate in the 
title IV, HEA programs without any additional monitoring arising from a 
review of its financial condition, and the point below which (a 
composite score of less than 1.0) there is considerable uncertainty 
regarding an institution's ability to continue operations and meet its 
obligations to students and to the Secretary. For institutions scoring 
below 1.0, additional monitoring and surety are required immediately to 
protect the Federal interest.
    The Secretary considers institutions with composite scores in the 
zone between these two points (i.e., a composite score of 1.0 to 1.4) 
to be financially weak but viable, and therefore allows these 
institutions up to three consecutive years to improve their financial 
condition without requiring surety. The provisions for institutions 
scoring in the zone are contained in Sec. 668.175(d) of these 
regulations under the zone alternative.
    Under those provisions, an institution qualifies initially as a 
financially responsible institution by achieving a composite score 
between 1.0 and 1.4, and continues to qualify by achieving a composite 
score of at least a 1.0 in each of its two subsequent fiscal years. If 
an institution does not achieve at least a 1.0 in each of its 
subsequent two fiscal years or does not sufficiently improve its 
financial condition so that it satisfies the 1.5 composite score 
standard by the end of the three-year period, the institution may 
continue to participate in the title IV, HEA programs by qualifying 
under another alternative.
    Institutions scoring in the zone should generally be able to 
continue operations in the short-term, absent any adverse economic 
events. However, even though the resources of institutions scoring in 
the zone are notably greater than the resources of institutions scoring 
below 1.0, those resources provide only a limited margin against 
adversity. Moreover, because zone institutions have notably less 
resources than institutions scoring above the zone, their ability to 
fund necessary mission objectives is similarly limited. In view of the 
limited resources of zone institutions, and the uncertainty regarding 
the ability of those institutions to continue operations and satisfy 
their obligations to students and to the Secretary in times of fiscal 
distress, the Secretary believes it is necessary to monitor more 
closely the operations of zone institutions, including their 
administration of title IV, HEA program funds.
    Accordingly, the regulations require an institution in the zone to 
provide timely information regarding certain accrediting agency actions 
that may adversely effect the institution's ability to satisfy its 
obligations to students and to the Secretary, and certain financial 
events that may cause or lead to a deterioration of the institution's 
financial condition. In addition, the Secretary may require the 
institution to submit its compliance and financial statement audits 
soon after the end of its fiscal year.
    With regard to the administration of title IV, HEA program funds, 
the Secretary provides those funds to a zone institution, or to an 
institution with a composite score of less than 1.0, under the 
reimbursement payment method or under a new payment method, cash 
monitoring. The Secretary establishes as part of these regulations the 
cash monitoring payment method in view of the public comment that the 
reimbursement payment method is burdensome or that it may be 
inappropriate for some institutions. Under either the reimbursement or 
cash monitoring payment method, to help ensure that title IV, HEA 
program funds are used for their intended purposes, an institution must 
first make disbursements to eligible students and parents before it 
requests or receives funds for those disbursements from the Secretary. 
However, unlike reimbursement, where an institution must provide 
specific and detailed documentation for each student to whom it made a 
disbursement, before

[[Page 62837]]

the Department provides title IV, HEA programs funds to the 
institution, the Department provides funds to an institution under the 
cash monitoring payment in one of two less burdensome ways. The 
Department either requires an institution to make disbursements to 
eligible students or parents before drawing down title IV, HEA program 
funds for the amount of those disbursements, or requires the 
institution to submit some documentation identifying the eligible 
students and parents to whom a disbursement was made before the 
Secretary provides funds to the institution for those disbursements. 
Although the Secretary anticipates that the documentation requirements 
under cash monitoring will be minimal for most institutions, the Case 
Teams have the flexibility under these regulations to tailor the 
documentation requirements on a case-by-case basis. In addition, the 
Secretary expects that institutions with composite scores of less than 
1.0 will continue to receive funds under the reimbursement payment 
method if those institutions are provisionally certified (in rare 
instances, however, the Secretary may provide funds under the cash 
monitoring payment method to an institution based in part on its 
compliance history and the amount of the letter of credit submitted to 
the Department).
    The Secretary notes that the future implementation of the just-in-
time payment method--which the Secretary intends to implement as soon 
as possible--may reduce or eliminate the use of the cash monitoring 
payment method. Any changes to the cash monitoring payment method 
arising from the implementation of the just-in-time payment method will 
be addressed in a future proposed regulation, and the Secretary will 
invite public comment on those changes. (For more information on Cash 
Monitoring, see the discussion under part 9 of the Analysis of Comments 
and Changes).
    In developing these provisions, the Secretary intended to achieve 
three objectives. First, the Secretary wished to provide a reasonable 
amount of time for institutions to improve their financial condition 
without increasing the risks to the Federal interest. Second, the 
Secretary did not wish to interfere unnecessarily in the operations of 
institutions seeking to improve their financial condition. Third, the 
Secretary wished to provide as much flexibility as possible to the 
Department's case teams in determining the appropriate level of 
monitoring and oversight required of institutions in the zone.

Alternative Ways of Demonstrating Financial Responsibility

    Section 498(c)(3) of the HEA provides alternatives under which the 
Secretary must consider an institution to be financially responsible if 
it fails to satisfy one or more of the components of financial 
responsibility. These alternatives are described under Sec. 668.175 of 
the regulations. This section also contains alternatives under which 
the Secretary will permit an institution that does not demonstrate that 
it is financially responsible under the statutory provisions to 
continue to participate in the title IV, HEA programs.
    An institution that does not achieve a composite score of 1.5, or 
qualify under the zone alternative, may demonstrate that it is 
financially responsible by submitting to the Secretary a letter of 
credit for at least 50 percent of the title IV, HEA program funds the 
institution received in its last fiscal year. If the institution's 
composite score is less than 1.0, it may continue to participate as a 
financially responsible institution by submitting the 50 percent letter 
of credit, or the institution may submit a smaller letter of credit (at 
least 10 percent of the amount of its prior year title IV, HEA program 
funds) and participate under a provisional certification.
    As noted previously, the ratio methodology is designed to consider 
all of an institution's resources. In particular, the Primary Reserve 
and Equity ratios together reflect all of the resources accumulated 
over time by an institution that are available to the institution to 
support its current and future operations. For this and other reasons 
discussed under Part 7 of the Analysis of Comments and Changes, these 
two ratios account for 70 percent of the composite score for 
proprietary institutions and 80 percent for non-profit institutions.
    Institutions that do not satisfy the composite score standard that 
would otherwise participate under the zone alternative or be required 
to provide a letter of credit may find that it is less costly to take 
the steps necessary to improve their financial condition. Based on an 
analysis of the data compiled by KPMG, the Secretary notes that a 
number of institutions scoring below the zone (i.e., have composite 
scores of less than 1.0) may qualify under the zone alternative by 
making relatively small capital infusions or increasing modestly their 
unrestricted net assets. For some of these institutions, the amount of 
the cash infusion or increase in net assets that would be necessary to 
achieve a composite score of 1.0 is less than five percent of total 
revenue because that infusion or increase is reflected positively in 
both the Primary Reserve and Equity ratios. Alternatively, institutions 
may choose to retain more earnings. In either case, the cost to many 
institutions of improving their financial condition is less, sometimes 
far less, than the cost of securing a letter of credit.
    Institutions that qualify under the zone alternative may find that 
by taking similar actions they can improve sufficiently their financial 
condition to achieve a composite score of 1.5. A zone institution that 
achieves a composite score of 1.5 at the end of any year in the zone or 
by the end of the three-year period, avoids the costs that it would 
otherwise incur in securing a letter of credit under the available 
alternatives.
    More importantly, the resources that would otherwise be used, by a 
zone institution or an institution scoring below the zone, to secure 
the letter of credit would now be available to the institution to 
support its mission objectives. The Secretary anticipates that 
financially weak institutions will move into and out of the zone as 
those institutions demonstrate a commitment to improve their financial 
health. Furthermore, the Secretary expects that institutions will seek 
to improve their financial health in the manner that most benefits 
students.

Collective Guarantees

    Several commenters suggested that the Secretary revise the final 
regulations to include an alternative under which a group of 
institutions could (under some type of insurance-pooling arrangement) 
collectively provide a letter of credit, or other financial instrument, 
that would serve to cover the potential liabilities of any institution 
in the group. The merits of this alternative are that all of the 
institutions in the group could continue to participate in the title 
IV, HEA programs as financially responsible institutions at a lower 
cost than if any one of those institutions posted a letter of credit on 
its own. In the meetings held during the extended comment period, some 
participants noted that the potential interest in such an alternative 
would depend on the nature of the final regulations.
    Although the Secretary did not revise the regulations to include 
this suggested alternative (primarily because the commenters and 
meeting participants did not provide any details regarding insurance-
pooling arrangements or alternative financial instruments, and because 
the Secretary is uncertain about the continued community interest in

[[Page 62838]]

this alternative), the Secretary will consider collective guarantee or 
insurance-pooling requests on a case-by-case basis.

Issues Raised in the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking and Other Department 
Publications

    The September 20, 1996 NPRM included a discussion of the major 
issues surrounding the proposed regulations (as well as a summary of 
the August 1996 report by KPMG) that will not be repeated here. The 
following list summarizes those issues and identifies the pages of the 
preamble to the NPRM (61 FR 49552-49563) on which the discussion of 
those issues can be found:
    * The scope and purpose statement of the new subpart L (p.
49556).
    * A proposal to modify the precipitous closure alternative
to demonstrating financial responsibility, and a clarification of the 
types of alternatives to demonstrating financial responsibility 
available to new institutions (pp. 49557-49558).
    * Financial responsibility standards and other requirements
for institutions undergoing a change of ownership (p. 49558).
    * Past performance standards (p. 49559).
    * An outline of additional requirements and administrative
actions, including requirements for institutions that are provisionally 
certified, and an outline of administrative actions taken when an 
institution fails to demonstrate financial responsibility (p. 49559).
    * The contents of the proposed Appendix F (p. 49559).
    The following list summarizes the areas of discussion that were 
posted on the Department's World-Wide Web site. This site is located at 
(http://www.ed.gov/offices/OPE/PPI/finanrep.html). This web site will 
remain active at least until the regulations are fully effective.
    * The possibility of using in the ratio analysis an Equity
ratio either as an additional ratio, or as a substitute for the 
Viability ratio; and a discussion of the components of, and possible 
strength factor scores for, that ratio.
    * Possible adjustments to the threshold factors to take into
account new data of the effects of Financial Accounting Standards Board 
(FASB) Statements 116 and 117 on private non-profit institutions, and 
to take into account additional data on proprietary institutions.
    * Possible modifications to the weighting percentages of the
ratios, including the weighting for the proposed Equity ratio.
    * Possible modifications to the calculation of composite
scores from the ratio analysis to eliminate ``cliff effects,'' 
including the possible use of a linear algorithm or the addition of 
more strength factor categories to linearize the composite scores.
    * Possible modifications to the scoring scale, including
truncating the upper end of the scale to eliminate unnecessary 
differentiation of institutions that attain high composite scores.
    * Community suggestions regarding the treatment of goodwill
in the calculation of the ratios.
    * Community suggestions for a secondary tier of analysis,
and suggested changes to the alternative means of demonstrating 
financial responsibility for those institutions that fail the ratio 
test.
    * Discussions of the utility of using a cash flow analysis.
    * Discussions of the treatment of institutional grants and
other fully-funded operations in the calculation of the ratios.
    * Discussions of donor income with regard to determining the
financial responsibility of non-profit institutions, and in particular 
of institutions that have continued for many years on tight budgets 
with a minimal financial cushion.
    * The treatment of debt in the proposed ratio methodology,
including concerns that the proposed ratio methodology could penalize 
institutions for taking on necessary amounts of debt to expand or to 
invest in infrastructure, and suggestions for the evaluation of 
institutions that remain debt-free.
    * Community suggestions for altering the proposed standards
for changes of ownership.
    * Discussions of the utility and practicality of using a
trend analysis rather than a snapshot approach, and community 
suggestions that financial responsibility need not be determined 
annually, at least for stronger institutions.
    * Community suggestions for revising the ``full faith and
credit'' alternative for public institutions.

Substantive Changes to the NPRM

    The following discussion reflects substantive changes made to the 
NPRM in the final regulations.
    * The proposed ratio standards for public institutions have
been eliminated in favor of a revised approach in implementing the 
statutory alternative that an institution is financially responsible if 
it is backed by the full faith and credit of a State or equivalent 
government entity.
    * The proposed Viability ratio has been replaced by the
Equity ratio.
    * The proposed scoring scale has been modified to range from
negative 1.0 to positive 3.0, rather than from 1.0 to 5.0. The low end 
of the range, below 1.0, indicates the poorest financial condition. At 
the high end, a score of 3.0 indicates financial health.
    * The proposed strength factor tables have been replaced by
linear algorithms.
    * The proposed ratio results necessary to earn points along
the scoring scale have been lowered to reflect a time frame of 12-to-18 
months rather than 3-to-4 years.
    * As a result of revising the scoring scale and the strength
factor scores, and the change in focus from 3-to-4 years to 12-to-18 
months, the minimum composite score for establishing financial 
responsibility has been changed from the proposed standard of 1.75 (on 
a scale of 1.0 to 5.0) to 1.5 (on a scale of negative 1.0 to positive 
3.0).
    * The proposed precipitous closure alternative has been
modified and implemented in these regulations as the zone alternative. 
Under the zone alternative, an institution whose composite score is 
less than 1.5 but equal to at least 1.0 may participate in title IV, 
HEA programs as a financially responsible institution for up to three 
consecutive years.
    * As part of the modifications to the proposed precipitous
closure alternative, the provision requiring owners or persons 
exercising substantial control over an institution to provide personal 
financial guarantees is eliminated. Instead, an institution whose 
composite score is less than 1.5 is required to provide information 
regarding certain oversight and financial events, and the Department 
provides title IV, HEA program funds to that institution under the 
reimbursement payment method or under a new, less burdensome payment 
method, Cash Monitoring (discussed above and under part 9 of the 
Analysis of Comments and Changes).
    * The proposal to apply the ratio methodology to third-party
servicers entering into a contact with lenders and guaranty agencies 
has been withdrawn. The financial standards currently under Sec. 668.15 
continue to apply to those entities.
    * The proposed revisions to the procedures relating to
changes of ownership have been withheld pending further review and 
comment.

Executive Order 12866

    These final regulations have been reviewed as significant in 
accordance with Executive Order 12866. Under the

[[Page 62839]]

terms of the order, the Secretary has assessed the potential costs and 
benefits of this regulatory action.
    The potential costs associated with the final regulations are those 
resulting from statutory requirements and those determined by the 
Secretary to be necessary for administering the title IV, HEA programs 
effectively and efficiently.
    In assessing the potential costs and benefits--both quantitative 
and qualitative--of these regulations, the Secretary has determined 
that the benefits of the regulations justify the costs.
    The Secretary has also determined that this regulatory action does 
not unduly interfere with State, local, and tribal governments in the 
exercise of their governmental functions.

Summary of Potential Costs and Benefits

    The potential costs and benefits of these final regulations are 
discussed elsewhere in this preamble under the heading Final Regulatory 
Flexibility Analysis (FRFA), and in the information previously stated 
under Supplementary Information and in the following Analysis of 
Comments and Changes.

Analysis of Comments and Changes

    In response to the Secretary's invitation to comment on the NPRM, 
approximately 850 parties submitted comments. An analysis of the 
comments and of the changes in the regulations since the publication of 
the NPRM follows.
    The Department received comments on these regulations from 
September 20, 1996 through April 14, 1997. Although the Department 
received and considered comments on all of the topics included in the 
NPRM, the comments discussed here are primarily those which address the 
changes to the NPRM made by these final regulations.
    Major issues are discussed under the section of the regulations to 
which they pertain. Comments concerning the new Subpart L are grouped 
by topic or issue. Technical and other minor changes--and suggested 
changes the Secretary is not legally authorized to make under 
applicable statutory authority--are not addressed. An analysis of the 
comments received regarding the Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis 
(IRFA) can be found elsewhere in this preamble under the heading Final 
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA).

Section 668.23--Compliance Audits and Audited Financial Statements

    Comments: Several commenters noted that the requirements under 
Sec. 668.23(f)(3) (previously codified under Sec. 668.24), are not 
always possible to meet. Under this section, an institution's or 
servicer's response to the Secretary regarding notification of 
questioned expenditures must be based on an attestation engagement 
performed by the institution's or servicer's auditor. The commenters 
maintained that an attestation engagement is proper only when the 
subject of the attestation is capable of being evaluated based on 
reasonable, objective criteria, and that some responses to 
notifications of questioned expenditures may be based on grounds that 
could not be so evaluated, i.e., the contention that an auditor 
misinterpreted or misapplied a regulatory requirement when the auditor 
questioned the institution's or servicer's compliance or expenditure.
    Discussion: The Secretary agrees that there are cases in which the 
institution's response to an audit does not have to be based on an 
attestation engagement. This provision was intended to inform 
institutions that new information or documentation that was not 
available during the original audit should be accompanied by the 
auditor's attestation report, when that report is submitted to the 
Secretary. Without the auditor's report, the resolution of the audit 
may be delayed or the data may not be considered reliable. However, the 
Secretary agrees that the necessity for the attestation engagement is 
determined by the nature of the response being made, and may not be 
required in all cases.
    The Secretary also has determined that the procedures described in 
Sec. 668.23(f)(1)-(3) are redundant with requirements under OMB 
Circulars A-128 and A-133 and the Office of Inspector General Audit 
Guide, and that redundancy may cause confusion for some institutions. 
The OMB Circulars and the Audit Guide each contain requirements that a 
Corrective Action Plan, which includes the institution's responses to 
the audit findings and questioned costs, be submitted with the audit. 
If the institution disagrees with the findings or believes corrective 
action is not needed, it provides the rationale for that belief in the 
Corrective Action Plan.
    Normally, an institution submits information in its Corrective 
Action Plan, in response to a specific request from the Secretary, or 
as part of an appeal under 34 CFR 668 subpart H. The Secretary 
establishes whether an attestation report is required as part of the 
Secretary's request for information; the Hearing Official evaluates the 
reliability of information submitted with an appeal. To avoid 
duplication and unnecessary audit work and because few institutions 
submit additional data as described in paragraph (f), the Secretary 
removes this paragraph.
    Changes: The Secretary removes paragraph (f) under Sec. 668.23.

Subpart L--Financial Responsibility

Part 1. General Comments Regarding the Proposed Ratio Methodology
    Comments: Many participants involved in the discussions conducted 
by the Secretary during the extended comment period expressed the view 
that the manner in which those discussions were conducted demonstrated 
the Department's commitment to public and community involvement in the 
rulemaking process and should serve as a model for future rulemaking.
    Several commenters maintained that the Secretary cannot change the 
current standards of financial responsibility without first convening 
regional meetings to obtain public involvement in the development of 
proposed regulations as provided under the negotiated rulemaking 
process described in section 492 of the HEA. One commenter opined that 
absent a negotiated rulemaking process the Secretary could not 
promulgate regulations that would have legal force and effect.
    Several commenters argued that the proposed ratio methodology is 
contrary to statutory provisions under section 498 of the HEA because 
the proposed ratios do not include the type of ratios specified by the 
HEA.
    Other commenters maintained that any attempt by the Secretary to 
promulgate financial responsibility standards was duplicative, and that 
for reasons of efficiency and regulatory relief the Secretary should 
rely upon standards used by financial institutions and accrediting 
agencies.
    Discussion: The Secretary appreciates the participants' remarks and 
thanks those persons for their valuable input regarding the direction 
and development of these rules. The Secretary disagrees that negotiated 
rulemaking is required under the HEA to implement these regulations. In 
accordance with section 492 of the HEA, the Secretary conducted 
regional meetings to obtain public involvement in the preparation of 
draft regulations for parts B, G and H of the HEA as amended by the 
Higher Education Amendments of 1992. As required under section 492, 
those draft regulations were then used in a negotiated rulemaking 
process that was subject to specific time limits connected with the 
enactment of the 1992

[[Page 62840]]

Amendments. The negotiated rulemaking requirement was therefore 
anchored at one end by the statutorily required regional meetings that 
followed the enactment of the 1992 Amendments, and at the other end by 
fixed time limits for the final regulations created by that process. 
Subsequent regulatory changes to these sections cannot be tied to those 
requirements for negotiated rulemaking because the regional meetings 
and statutory timeframes for those regulations have already passed. The 
HEA does not restrict the Secretary's authority to make additional 
regulatory changes in this area, and changes to the regulations may 
therefore be made without using negotiated rulemaking.
    Even though negotiated rulemaking was not required for these 
regulations, the Secretary believes that the opportunities afforded to 
the higher education community during the extended comment period to 
provide input regarding the proposed regulations are consistent with 
the spirit of cooperation that underlies the negotiated rulemaking 
process. In the numerous meetings held during the extended comment 
period with representatives from institutions, higher education 
associations, and other interested parties, the meeting participants 
identified many areas in the proposed regulations that the Secretary 
has since modified and improved to more accurately measure the relative 
financial health of institutions.
    The Secretary disagrees that section 498(c)(2) of the HEA requires 
the Secretary to utilize particular ratios in determining financial 
responsibility. That section of the HEA merely provides examples of 
ratios that the Secretary may use in determining whether an institution 
is financially responsible, e.g., the statutory reference to an ``asset 
to liabilities'' ratio is a generic rather than a specific reference or 
requirement. Moreover, the Secretary believes that the ratio 
methodology established by these regulations not only incorporates the 
same aspects of financial health as the ratios illustrated in the HEA, 
but does so in a more comprehensive manner.
    With respect to the comments that the Secretary should rely on 
financial determinations made by accrediting agencies or financial 
institutions, the Secretary notes that section 498(c) of the HEA 
requires the Secretary to make those determinations for institutions 
participating in the title IV, HEA programs. In addition, because the 
financial standards used by other parties reflect the mission of those 
parties or are used by those parties to initiate or continue a business 
relationship, there is no assurance that determinations made under 
those standards by those parties will have a direct bearing on whether 
an institution is financially responsible for the purposes required 
under HEA, i.e., that the institution is able to (1) provide the 
services described in its official publications, (2) administer 
properly the title IV, HEA programs in which it participates, and (3) 
meet all of its financial obligations to students and to the Secretary. 
Moreover, and absent any provision in the statute that permits the 
Secretary to delegate financial responsibility determinations to other 
parties, if the Secretary adopted the commenters' suggestion, similarly 
situated institutions would be treated differently depending on the 
party making the determination.
    Changes: None.
Part 2. Comments Regarding the Timing and Implementation of New 
Financial Standards
    Comments: Several commenters recommended that the Secretary 
postpone any changes to the financial responsibility standards until 
after reauthorization of the HEA. The commenters argued that if new 
standards are implemented now, these standards might be changed during 
the reauthorization process or the statute may be amended to include 
other requirements, thus potentially subjecting institutions to several 
different requirements within a few years. Another commenter suggested 
that the proposed standards form the starting point for discussions 
between the Secretary and the higher education community on 
reauthorization issues involving financial responsibility.
    Many commenters believed that the reporting requirements under FASB 
116, Accounting for Contributions Received and Contributions Made, and 
FASB 117, Financial Statements of Not-for-Profit Organizations, are too 
recent to be thoroughly understood. In particular, the commenters 
maintained that since the impact of these FASB requirements on the 
proposed ratio methodology is not known, the Secretary should delay 
publishing final rules. Along the same lines, commenters representing 
proprietary institutions maintained that the Secretary should not 
promulgate the ratio methodology because it is untested and its impact 
on the community is not known.
    Discussion: The Secretary believes that changes to the current 
financial responsibility standards are necessary for the reasons cited 
in the preamble to this regulation (see the discussion under the 
heading Need for Revising the Rules in the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION 
section of these regulations).
    With regard to new accounting standards under FASB Statements 116 
and 117, since most private non-profit colleges and universities 
adopted the new FASB standards for their fiscal years that ended June 
30, 1996, only a limited number of financial statements prepared under 
those standards were available for examination at the time the NPRM was 
published. Based on that limited number of financial statements, the 
proposed strength factors for the Primary Reserve ratio were set 
approximately 66 percent higher than strength factors for institutions 
under a fund accounting model (AICPA Audit Guide financial reporting 
model). This increase in the strength factors was intended to reflect 
the fact that under FASB 116/117 realized and unrealized gains on 
investments held as endowments are included in unrestricted or 
temporarily restricted net assets, whereas under fund accounting these 
gains were generally treated as nonexpendable assets. Therefore, it was 
anticipated that the expendable net assets of all institutions would 
increase significantly.
    During the extended comment period KPMG conducted an analysis of 
financial statements from 395 non-profit institutions that adopted FASB 
116/117 and found that the impact of the new accounting standards is 
not uniform across the private non-profit sector. The anticipated 
impact that expendable net assets would increase significantly occurred 
only among institutions holding large endowments; the impact was 
negligible for institutions with little or no endowment. Based on the 
more thorough KPMG analysis, the Secretary revises the strength factors 
for the Primary Reserve ratio for private non-profit institutions in a 
manner that discounts the effects of the new FASB standards for all 
non-profit institutions.
    Changes: See the discussion of the strength factor score for the 
Primary Reserve ratio, Analysis of Comments and Changes, Part 6.
    Comments: A commenter representing proprietary institutions 
questioned the manner in which the KPMG study was conducted. The 
commenter believed that small business interests were not considered 
since no representatives of small proprietary institutions were among 
those institutional representatives that assisted with the KPMG study. 
Moreover, the commenter implied that the Secretary did not consider the 
comments submitted by a group of CPAs on behalf of proprietary 
institutions regarding the KPMG report, and therefore may have violated 
the

[[Page 62841]]

requirement in the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) that the Secretary 
confer with representatives of small businesses.
    Discussion: The Secretary notes that the suggestions of the group 
of CPAs referenced by the commenters were considered in developing 
these final regulations. More significantly, however, during the 
extended comment period the Secretary sought and obtained the views and 
comments of individuals and organizations with diverse experience in 
higher education finance. Specifically, the Secretary met with 
organizations representing proprietary institutions and directly with 
persons from proprietary institutions, including representatives from 
small institutions. In addition the Secretary provided on the 
Department's web site a summary of the views expressed by the 
participants at those meetings and additional information regarding the 
ratio methodology.
    Changes: None.
Part 3. Comments Regarding Annual Determinations of Financial 
Responsibility
    Comments: Many commenters from private non-profit institutions 
maintained that institutions should not be subjected to annual 
determinations of financial responsibility. The commenters believed 
that annual determinations are unnecessarily burdensome, and represent 
an inefficient use of the Secretary's resources, particularly in cases 
in which an institution has been recently recertified. The commenters 
opined that when a determination is made during the recertification 
process that an institution is financially responsible, the Secretary 
has sufficiently discharged his oversight responsibilities in this 
area.
    Discussion: The Secretary believes that it is not prudent to ignore 
the financial condition of many institutions for the three- to four-
year period between recertification cycles for several reasons. First, 
the financial condition of an institution may deteriorate, increasing 
unnecessarily the risks to students and taxpayers that the institution 
will close or will otherwise be unable to meet its obligations. Second, 
many institutions prepare an annual audited financial statement for 
other purposes, so the only burden that may result from an annual 
determination stems from the institution's failure to satisfy the 
standards of financial responsibility. Lastly, if the Secretary were to 
adopt the commenters' suggestion by establishing longer term financial 
standards for all institutions, those standards would necessarily need 
to be much higher than the standards in these regulations, resulting in 
more institutions failing the standards and creating additional burdens 
for those institutions and the Secretary. Nevertheless, the Secretary 
may in the future explore the possibility of determining the financial 
responsibility of certain institutions less often or only during the 
recertification process.
    Changes: None.
Part 4. Comments Regarding the Adequacy and Appropriateness of the 
Proposed Ratio Methodology
    General comments: Many commenters from a variety of sectors 
supported the direction taken by the proposed regulations, including 
customizing the ratios for each sector. The commenters agreed with the 
Secretary that the proposed methodology provides a better assessment of 
an institution's financial condition than the regulatory tests 
currently in place. However, the commenters believed that some changes 
should be made to the proposed regulations.
    Several commenters asserted that the proposed ratio methodology is 
inadequate because it does not consider other factors, such as 
enrollment trends, used by credit rating agencies like Moody's or 
Standard and Poor's. The commenters suggested that along with using the 
proposed methodology, the Secretary should consider an institution's 
Moody's or Standard and Poor's credit rating, and the institution's 
history of handling Federal funds, before the Secretary determines 
whether the institution is financially responsible.
    Similarly, one commenter from a non-profit institution argued that 
credit rating agencies place a significant emphasis on the strength of 
an organization's revenue stream, but the proposed ratios virtually 
ignore this variable. The commenter stated that in assessing the 
revenue strength of educational institutions, the rating agencies 
typically review such data as average SAT scores and student acceptance 
rates. It was the commenter's view that a revenue strength score should 
be part of the evaluation process and should carry no lesser weight 
than that associated with expenses.
    Other commenters from non-profit institutions maintained the ratio 
methodology is not valid because it is not based on traditional 
measures of financial strength, and did not take into account the 
institution's total financial circumstances as required by the HEA. 
Another commenter from the non-profit sector argued that the proposed 
rules, because of their emphasis on profitability, appeared to be 
designed for proprietary institutions. The commenter urged the 
Secretary to amend the rules to reflect the difference in each sector. 
Several other commenters from private non-profit institutions asserted 
that the proposed ratio methodology is deficient because it does not 
take into account specific missions of institutions.
    Several commenters believed that the proposed methodology is too 
restrictive, arguing that it is too heavily biased in safeguarding the 
Secretary from events that are very rare.
    Several other commenters representing proprietary institutions 
maintained that the new methodology was incomplete because it contained 
no way to measure the effectiveness of an institution's management.
    Other commenters believed that many small institutions with good 
educational and compliance records that pass the current standards 
would fail the standards proposed in the NPRM. The commenters opined 
that this outcome points to a flaw in the manner in which the 
methodology treats small institutions. An accountant for a proprietary 
institution argued that because the proposed methodology does not 
provide an adjustment for size, it is unfair to compare an institution 
with $10 million in tuition revenue to an institution with $500,000 in 
tuition revenue by applying the same standards and criteria to both 
institutions.
    Several commenters maintained that the proposed methodology is 
complex and difficult to understand. The commenters argued that the 
proposed rules will require institutions to rely more heavily on CPAs, 
thus increasing their costs.
    Discussion: The Secretary thanks the commenters supporting the 
approach taken under these rules to establish better, more 
comprehensive financial standards and appreciates the cooperation and 
effort of commenters and other participants in the rulemaking process 
for sharing their views and concerns with the Secretary during the 
initial and extended comment periods.
    With regard to the concerns raised by the commenters about the 
adequacy of the ratio methodology, the Secretary wishes to make the 
following points. First, the ratio methodology is designed to make 
appropriate, albeit broad, distinctions between the sectors of higher 
education institutions. The Secretary acknowledges that the methodology 
does not directly consider intra-sector differences nor does it take 
into account all of the variables or elements suggested by the 
commenters regarding the mission or organizational

[[Page 62842]]

structure of institutions. To do so would create an enormously complex 
model that as a practical matter would be impossible to implement. 
Rather, the methodology focuses on key ratios and differences between 
the sectors that the Secretary believes are the most critical in 
evaluating fairly the relative financial health of all institutions 
along a common scale.
    Second, the adequacy of the ratio methodology should be judged in 
the context of both its design objectives and the associated regulatory 
provisions that complement those objectives. In developing these 
regulations the Secretary sought to minimize two potential errors--that 
a financially healthy institution would fail the ratio standard and be 
inappropriately subject to additional requirements and burdens, and 
that a financially weak institution would satisfy the ratio standard 
and later fail to carry out its obligations at the expense of students 
and taxpayers. The ratio methodology, in combination with the 
alternative standards established by these regulations (see Analysis of 
Comments and Changes, Part 9), reflects the Secretary's decision to err 
on the side of allowing some financially weak institutions to 
participate in the title IV, HEA programs but in a manner that protects 
the Federal interest.
    Third, the Secretary disagrees that the ratio methodology is flawed 
because it does not provide an adjustment for the size of an 
institution. To the contrary, an adjustment for size is unnecessary 
because a ratio converts amounts into a metric that is relative to an 
institution's own size, making possible a comparison of that 
institution to other institutions regardless of the size of those 
institutions. This comparative analysis is the basic design element of 
the ratio methodology that enables the Secretary to evaluate the 
relative financial health of all institutions along a common scale.
    Similarly, the Secretary disagrees that the methodology favors 
large or publicly traded institutions. Presumably, the commenters are 
referring to a situation where a large institution is not dependent 
upon a single revenue stream or has access to wider donor bases or more 
capital markets than a small institution. While this flexibility may 
advantage a large institution, the Secretary believes that flexibility 
is inherent to the institution and beyond the scope of the methodology. 
The fact that a large institution may be able to improve its financial 
condition by managing its resources effectively also holds true for a 
small institution, particularly since the ratios account for an 
institution's performance relative to its size.
    With regard to the comment from the non-profit sector that the 
proposed ratio methodology appeared to be designed for proprietary 
institutions because it emphasized profitability, the Secretary notes 
that the measure of profitability (the Net Income ratio) accounted for 
50 percent of the composite score for proprietary institutions, but for 
only 10 percent of the composite score for non-profit institutions. As 
discussed more fully under Part 7 of the Analysis of Comments and 
Changes (Comments regarding the weighting of the proposed ratios), the 
Secretary has revised the proposed percentages for the Net Income ratio 
to more accurately reflect the differences between the sectors of 
postsecondary institutions.
    The Secretary disagrees that the methodology will require 
institutions to rely more heavily on CPAs. As illustrated in the 
appendices to these regulations, an institution can readily calculate 
its composite score from its audited financial statements, provided 
that those statements are prepared in accordance with GAAP. 
Furthermore, by limiting the number of ratios, the Secretary believes 
that it should not be difficult for any institution to determine the 
impact that its business and programmatic decisions have or will have 
on its financial condition as measured by the methodology.
    Changes: None.
    Comments regarding alternative ratios: Several commenters argued 
that the proposed ratio methodology is limited and arbitrary, 
suggesting alternative ratios that should be used instead, including: 
the acid test ratio; a debt to equity ratio; a title IV, HEA loan 
program default ratio; a debt to revenue ratio; a longevity ratio; a 
debt service coverage ratio; and a measure of working capital.
    Several commenters believed that the Primary Reserve ratio 
disadvantages institutions that converted short-term liabilities into 
long-term debt to meet the acid test ratio requirement.
    A commenter from an accrediting agency asserted that the composite 
score based on the proposed ratio methodology is inadequate in 
assessing an institution's financial health, and that other measures 
such as operating income, debt levels, availability of working capital, 
and significant items contained in notes to the financial statements 
should be used instead.
    Discussion: The Secretary considered a number of ratios that could 
be used in addition to or in place of the proposed ratios, including 
the ratios suggested by the commenters, but decided to replace only the 
proposed Viability ratio, with an Equity ratio. As discussed below, 
while the ratios suggested by the commenters are valid measures, taken 
individually or as a whole they measure the financial health of an 
institution more narrowly than do the ratios established by these 
regulations. In selecting the ratios, the Secretary considered the 
extent to which those ratios provided broad measures of the following 
fundamental elements of financial health:
    1. Financial viability: The ability of an institution to continue 
to achieve its operating objectives and fulfill its mission over the 
long-term;
    2. Profitability: Whether an institution receives more or less than 
it spends during its fiscal year;
    3. Liquidity: The ability of an institution to satisfy its short-
term obligations with existing assets;
    4. Ability to borrow: The ability of an institution to assume 
additional debt; and
    5. Capital resources: An institution's financial and physical 
capital base that supports its operations.
    The Secretary believes that the ratios used in the methodology, 
Primary Reserve, Equity, and Net Income, not only measure these 
fundamental elements well, but that they do so in a manner that takes 
into account the total resources of an institution. With respect to the 
ratios suggested by the commenters, the Secretary wishes to make the 
following points.
    The Secretary agrees that the acid test ratio (cash and cash 
equivalents divided by current liabilities) is a useful measure of 
highly liquid assets available to meet current obligations, and it is 
used in the current regulations as a test of financial responsibility. 
However, the acid test is not included in the ratio methodology for 
several reasons. First, it has been the Department's experience that 
certain institutions manipulate the ratio elements to satisfy the 1:1 
acid test standard, such as by reclassifying current liabilities as 
long-term liabilities. Second, the information needed to calculate the 
ratio is difficult to extract from the financial statements prepared 
for non-profit institutions because that information is not a required 
disclosure (assets and liabilities are not necessarily classified on 
those financial statements as current and noncurrent). Moreover, 
expendable capital (as measured by the Primary Reserve ratio) is a 
broader and more important element of financial health than highly 
liquid capital, because it mitigates the effects of differing cash 
management and investment strategies used by institutions. For example, 
an

[[Page 62843]]

institution that invests excess cash in other than short-term 
instruments may fail the acid test requirement, whereas that excess 
cash, regardless of how it is invested, is considered an expendable 
resource under the Primary Reserve ratio. For these same reasons, 
Working Capital ratios (working capital is the difference between 
current assets and current liabilities) are not included in the 
methodology.
    With respect to Cash Flow ratios, the Secretary considered several 
measures of cash provided from operations to cover debt payments. 
However, cash flow (taken directly from the Cash Flow Statement) can be 
easily manipulated. For example, delaying payment to creditors by 
simply extending the normal payment terms to 120 days would give the 
appearance that cash has been provided by operations. Therefore, the 
Secretary decided to retain the Net Income ratio which, as an accrual-
based measure, recognizes expenses when they are incurred, not when 
they are paid.
    The Secretary considered an Operating Income ratio that would 
measure income from operations as a percentage of net revenue, but the 
results of that ratio would only partially address the question of 
whether an institution operated within its means during its fiscal 
year. By comparison, the Net Income ratio measures net income as a 
percentage of net revenues after operations and other non-operating 
items and thus provides a more complete measure of whether an 
institution spent more than it brought in during the fiscal year.
    The Secretary also considered adjusting the Net Income ratio for 
non-cash items, but decided instead to make an allowance for the 
largest non-cash item--depreciation expense--in the strength factors 
for this ratio (see Analysis of Comments and Changes, part 6).
    With regard to the Debt to Equity ratio and the other suggested 
Debt ratios, the Secretary notes that, like the proposed Viability 
ratio, these ratios cannot be applied universally. Based on the audited 
financial statements reviewed by KPMG during the extended comment 
period, approximately 35 percent of proprietary institutions and 13 
percent of private non-profit institutions have no debt. In addition, 
Debt to Revenue and Debt Service Coverage ratios, while providing 
insight as to how the institution is managing its debt, are less 
important than a measure of leverage itself. For these and other 
reasons, the Secretary includes in the ratio methodology an Equity 
ratio (tangible equity divided by tangible total assets) as the primary 
measure of leverage.
    The Secretary is not convinced that the utility of a Longevity 
measure or ratio is on par with the utility of the ratios used in the 
methodology. Unlike the ratios used in the methodology that measure the 
actual financial condition of an institution, it is not clear how a 
Longevity measure could be used as part of the methodology. A Longevity 
measure merely implies that an institution that has been operating for 
many years will continue to operate, but provides no insight regarding 
the institution's current financial condition or its ability to satisfy 
its obligations. Moreover, a Longevity measure cannot be used as an 
independent test because it has no predictive value at the 
institutional level. Based on data obtained from Dun & Bradstreet
regarding the probabilities of credit stress and bankruptcy, the 
Secretary found that institutions that have been in existence for more 
than 30 years have on average more likelihood of enduring credit stress 
and less likelihood of going bankrupt than institutions that are less 
than 30 years old. However, there were a significant number of 
institutions in the data group that have been in existence for more 
than 30 years that were rated by Dun & Bradstreet as representing high
risks of late payments or financial failure. In addition, the Secretary 
reviewed the files of closed institutions and found that a significant 
percentage of those institutions (12 percent) were in existence for 
more than 25 years.
    With regard to the notes to financial statements and independent 
accountants' reports, the Secretary wishes to clarify that these notes 
and reports are reviewed by the Secretary to determine if an 
institution complies with other standards or elements of financial 
responsibility. For example, if an auditor expresses a ``going-
concern'' opinion, the institution is not financially responsible even 
if it satisfies all other standards. However, the information contained 
in the notes and reports does not always constitute a sufficient basis 
on which the Secretary makes or can make a determination of financial 
responsibility.
    Changes: The proposed ratio methodology is revised, in part, by 
replacing the Viability ratio with the Equity ratio.
    Comments regarding the use of ratios: One commenter from the 
proprietary sector argued that the proposed ratio methodology should 
not be used to determine that an institution is not financially 
responsible. The commenter stated that the AICPA CPA/MAS Technical 
Consulting Practice Aid No. 3 warns of the shortcomings of ratio 
analysis, including improper comparisons that do not take into account 
size, geographical location and business practices, and other variables 
such as depreciation and number of years considered by that analysis. 
Based on these shortcomings, the commenter concluded that a financially 
strong institution may fail to achieve the required composite score 
requirement or be forced to make unsound business decisions solely to 
meet the requirement. Although the commenter believed that the proposed 
ratio methodology could be used to determine that an institution is 
financially responsible, the commenter recommended that the Secretary 
allow an institution that fails to achieve the composite score to 
demonstrate its financial strength without imposing the letter of 
credit requirement.
    Discussion: The Secretary disagrees. The practice aid is 
specifically designed to provide a consulting or accounting 
practitioner illustrative examples of the use of financial ratio 
analysis techniques in performing a comparative analysis of a client 
organization with other appropriate organizations.
    The ``shortcomings'' referred to by the commenter relate to factors 
that should be considered by the practitioner in understanding the 
differences that may occur between comparable companies and explaining 
those differences to the client. To the extent practicable, the ratio 
methodology developed for these regulations mitigates these differences 
by evaluating the financial health of an institution relative to other 
institutions, and by measuring an institution's financial health 
against a minimum standard established by the Secretary. In addition, 
the individual ratio definitions are constructed to account for 
reporting and accounting differences between the sectors of higher 
education institutions. While other factors, such as operating 
structure, could affect an institution's performance, the consequences 
of those factors reflect management decisions that fall outside the 
scope of the Secretary's review.
    Changes: None.
    Comments regarding public institutions: One commenter argued that 
there is no need for Federal financial standards for public 
institutions for several reasons.
    First, the commenter maintained that there is no danger of a 
``precipitous closure'' of a public institution because, in his State, 
the closure of a State college or university requires the approval of 
the State General Assembly. Moreover, the commenter believed that

[[Page 62844]]

in authorizing a closure, the General Assembly would be careful to 
protect the interests of students and all creditors. In any event, the 
commenter opined that the Secretary could recover any monies due from a 
closed State institution by offset against future aid to other State 
institutions. For local public institutions (community colleges), the 
commenter stated that, in his State, a closure would have to be 
approved in a general election. However, the closure of a local 
institution cannot adversely affect student refunds or other 
liabilities of the institution because State law requires the 
continuance of property tax assessments until all debts of the 
institution are paid in full.
    Second, the commenter noted that public institutions are subject to 
far more official oversight than private or proprietary institutions. 
In his State, the activities of State institutions are monitored by, 
among others, the State Controller, the State Auditor, and the State 
Commission on Higher Education.
    Third, the commenter pointed out that public institutions are 
subject to more public scrutiny than are private and proprietary 
institutions, i.e., public institutions conduct their affairs in 
public, publish budgets, hold governing board meetings that are open to 
the public, and make their financial statements available for public 
inspection. The commenter believed strongly that this scrutiny enhances 
the financial responsibility of public institutions.
    Fourth, the commenter noted that the 1973 AICPA Audit Guide is 
obsolete for colleges and universities under FASB jurisdiction and will 
soon be obsolete for other public institutions. The commenter stated 
that the Government Accounting Standards Board (GASB) intends to 
publish an exposure draft on its Colleges and Universities Reporting 
Model at the end of March 1997 and a final Statement of Financial 
Reporting Standards in the second quarter of 1988. According to the 
commenter, since the proposed reporting model makes major changes to 
public institutions' financial statements, it is unlikely that any 
ratio definitions based on the 1973 AICPA Audit Guide will be useful 
when the new model takes effect (probably the fiscal year starting in 
2000). The commenter suggested therefore that the Secretary delay 
promulgating financial ratio standards for public institutions until 
the new GASB standards are in effect.
    Next, the commenter argued that the proposed methodology's reliance 
on profits and expendable fund balances is inappropriate for public 
institutions, and may be contrary to State public policy. The commenter 
believed that unlike private non-profit and proprietary institutions 
that need to have sufficient reserves (or be able generate the profits 
necessary to accumulate sufficient reserves) to continue operations 
during economic fluctuations, public institutions have much less need 
for reserves because their major funding sources are less susceptible 
to those fluctuations.
    In addition, the commenter stated that in his State, public policy 
prohibits State institutions from accumulating large expendable funds 
balances. The State General Assembly appropriates funds for the purpose 
of meeting the immediate education needs of State residents and not for 
creating institutional reserves. The commenter continued that 
consistent with this policy, the State does not fund colleges and 
universities for the long-term compensated absence liabilities that 
those institutions are required to accrue under GASB Statement No. 16 
(the State funds these liabilities when they become due). Consequently, 
the commenter believed that the existence of these liabilities 
virtually guarantees that smaller State institutions will fail the 
proposed ratio standards. Moreover, the commenter argued that the 
proposed ratio standards do not sufficiently recognize the differences 
between public sector financial reporting requirements (GASB) and 
private sector requirements (FASB).
    Several other commenters maintained that some State institutions 
would not achieve the required composite score if they are required to 
include in the calculation of the proposed ratios, items that are 
beyond the control of those institutions. Therefore, the commenters 
suggested that it would be fairer to allow State institutions to 
exclude from the ratio analysis items such as plant debt and certain 
employee benefits that are the obligation of the State or funded by the 
State.
    For several reasons, commenters representing public institutions 
believed that the Secretary should amend proposed Sec. 668.174(a)(1). 
Under this section, an institution that fails to achieve the required 
composite score may demonstrate to the Secretary that it is 
nevertheless financially responsible if the institution's liabilities 
are backed by the full faith and credit of the State or by an 
equivalent government entity. First, the commenters recommended that 
the Secretary qualify the term ``liabilities'' by adding the phrase 
``that may arise from the institution's participation in the title IV, 
HEA programs.'' In support of this recommendation, the commenters noted 
that in both of the other alternatives under this section, liabilities 
are either based on or limited to the amount of title IV, HEA program 
funds received by an institution. Moreover, the commenters argued that 
if the Secretary interprets ``liabilities'' to mean all balance sheet 
liabilities of an institution, the State would have to accept these 
liabilities as General Obligations of the State. According to the 
commenters, since most States have constitutional prohibitions against 
general obligation debt, States would be prohibited from providing the 
required backing for any institution that has revenue bonds or similar 
debt outstanding.
    Next, the commenters recommended that the Secretary amend the term 
``equivalent government entity'' by adding the phrase ``including local 
governments or separate districts with taxing authority'' to clarify 
that the guarantee required under Sec. 668.174(a)(1) may be provided by 
any entity that has the taxing power to validate its guarantee.
    Discussion: The Secretary agrees with many of the points made by 
the commenters and therefore does not establish in these regulations a 
composite score standard for public institutions. Instead of satisfying 
the composite score standard, an institution must notify the Secretary 
that it is designated as a public institution by the State, local or 
municipal government entity, tribal authority, or other government 
entity that has the legal authority to make that designation, and 
provide a letter from an official of that State or government entity 
confirming that it is a public institution.
    Changes: The composite score standard and Primary Reserve 
requirements proposed under Sec. 668.172(a)(1)(i) and (ii) for public 
institutions are eliminated. The replacement provisions described above 
are relocated under Sec. 668.171(c).
    Comments regarding third-party servicers: Several commenters 
believed strongly that the proposed regulations are unsuitable for 
third-party servicers, noting that the KPMG study did not include an 
analysis of third-party servicers. The commenters argued that the 
servicer business sector is fundamentally different from any type of 
institutional educational sector, pointing out that the contractual 
obligations and legal structures of servicers are different than those 
of institutions.
    In addition, the commenters contended that while the proposed 
requirements regarding alternative financial standards and the actions 
the

[[Page 62845]]

Secretary may take against entities that fail to satisfy the standards 
may be appropriate for institutions, these alternate standards and 
actions are not applicable or appropriate for third-party servicers. 
For these reasons, the commenters requested the Secretary to put aside 
the proposed rules and work with third-party servicers to formulate 
new, more applicable rules.
    Several other commenters representing third-party servicers argued 
that since the proposed methodology favors entities with high equity 
and low debt, it is inappropriate for third-party servicers that have 
low equity and high debt but generate high income streams. Moreover, 
the commenters noted that while the Secretary consulted with third-
party servicers in establishing the current regulations (as part of the 
Negotiated Rulemaking process), third-party servicers were not 
consulted before these proposed rules were published. Therefore, the 
commenters recommended that the Secretary continue to evaluate third-
party servicers under the current regulations.
    Several commenters representing third-party servicers maintained 
that the alternative of submitting a letter of credit of up to 50 
percent of title IV, HEA program funds does not apply to third-party 
servicers. The commenters suggested instead that third-party servicers 
that are collection agencies for FFELP funds post a fidelity bond in 
the amount equal to the amount held each month by the agency in its 
trust account on behalf of the guarantors prior to remittance to the 
guarantor. These commenters argued that such a standard represents the 
current industry practice to protect guaranty agencies with which a 
collection agency contracts, from loss caused by the agency's actions.
    Discussion: The Secretary agrees to develop in the future financial 
standards solely for third-party servicers. In the meantime, those 
servicers must comply with the requirements under 34 CFR Parts 668 and 
682.
    Changes: The third-party servicer requirements under proposed 
Sec. 668.171(b) are removed.
Part 5. General Comments Regarding the Proposed Ratios
    Comments regarding the Primary Reserve ratio: Many commenters 
opposed the requirement that public and private non-profit institutions 
must have a positive Primary Reserve ratio to meet the general 
standards of financial responsibility. The commenters maintained that 
this requirement represents a separate, single standard, contradicting 
both the intent of proposed ratio methodology and the statutory 
requirement that the Secretary consider an institution's total 
financial condition.
    Several commenters from non-profit institutions believed that the 
Primary Reserve ratio favors colleges and universities that accumulate 
resources to safeguard Federal funds rather than expend those resources 
to provide student services. The commenters argued that this preference 
is not only contrary to the operation and mission of most colleges and 
universities, it will result in inflationary pressures that create 
tuition increases.
    Several commenters argued that institutions will be forced to 
reduce teaching and other staff to attain adequate scores for the 
Primary Reserve ratio. The commenters reasoned that reducing ``total 
expenses'' to improve the ratio score necessarily reduces salaries and 
wages for teachers and staff because salaries and wages comprise the 
largest component of ``total expenses'' at most institutions.
    A commenter from a non-profit institution argued that expended 
title IV, HEA program funds should be subtracted from ``total 
expenses'' because these funds are not included in ``total unrestricted 
income.'' Likewise, the commenter believed that revenues expended from 
restricted endowments should not be included in ``total expenses'' if 
those funds are not counted in ``total unrestricted income.''
    Other commenters opined that the Primary Reserve ratio treats non-
profit institutions unfairly because the numerator excludes most 
restricted assets, but the denominator does not exclude the expenses 
attributable to those assets.
    Some commenters suggested that the Secretary refine the term 
``expenses'' in several ways. First, it should be adjusted so that it 
reflects cash consumption rather than non-cash accounting charges--such 
non-cash charges as depreciation and amortization expense should be 
eliminated, while principal repayments on debt should be added. Second, 
expenses associated with sponsored programs should be eliminated. These 
commenters, and other commenters, maintained that sponsored program 
expenses, such as those associated with the U.S. Government-sponsored 
scientific research programs, are a function of those research programs 
and can generally be eliminated upon termination of those programs 
(during the course of the program, expenses are funded by revenues 
received from the sponsoring agency). The commenters concluded that the 
Secretary should not penalize an institution whose researchers are 
capable of generating significant grants.
    Discussion: The Primary Reserve ratio provides a measure of an 
institution's expendable or liquid resource base in relation to its 
overall operating size. It is, in effect, a measure of the 
institution's margin against adversity. Specifically, the Primary 
Reserve ratio measures whether an institution has financial resources 
sufficient to support its mission--that is, whether the institution has 
(1) sufficient financial reserves to meet current and future operating 
commitments, and (2) sufficient flexibility in those reserves to meet 
changes in its programs, educational activities, and spending patterns. 
Therefore, the Secretary continues to believe that an institution with 
a negative Primary Reserve ratio has serious financial difficulties.
    If an institution's Primary Reserve ratio is negative, expendable 
net assets are in a deficit position. In those cases the institution 
will need to generate surpluses to replenish the deficit, or may be 
forced to draw on other resources or sell off assets to make ends meet, 
thus increasing the uncertainty that the institution will be able to 
meet its obligations. However, because an Equity ratio is now included 
in the methodology, the Secretary eliminates the proposed provision 
that a non-profit institution is not financially responsible if it has 
a negative Primary Reserve ratio. The Equity ratio measures the amount 
of total resources that are financed by owners' investments, 
contributions, or accumulated earnings (or conversely, the amount of 
total resources that are subject to claims of third parties) and thus 
captures an institution's overall capitalization structure and, by 
inference, its overall leverage. Because the Equity ratio supplements 
the measure of the amount of expendable reserves provided by the 
Primary Reserve ratio with a measure of other capital resources 
available to support the institution, it provides a measure of 
resources that could mitigate the effects of a negative Primary Reserve 
ratio.
    With regard to the comments about total expenses, those expenses, 
including salaries paid to faculty and staff, are part of the 
commitment of an institution to provide services to students. The 
relative size of each component in an institution's annual operating 
budget is a management decision. In addition, the Secretary notes that 
based on the AICPA Audit Guide for Not-for-Profit Organizations issued 
on June 1, 1996, most title IV,

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HEA program funds will not be included in total expenses of colleges 
and universities. For example, payments made to those institutions 
under the Direct Loan, Federal Family Education Loan, Federal Pell 
Grant, and Federal Supplementary Educational Opportunity Grant programs 
are not included in total expenses reported on the statement of 
activities. In addition, the Audit Guide will require scholarship 
expenses to be netted against tuition income in the revenue portion of 
the statement.
    The Secretary disagrees that the definition of the term 
``expenses'' as used in the Primary Reserve ratio should exclude non-
cash charges such as depreciation and amortization and, except in 
certain circumstances, sponsored program expenses. The Primary Reserve 
ratio measures an institution's expendable or liquid resource base in 
relation to its overall operating size. Operating size is the total of 
all expenses incurred by the institution in the course of its business 
and is a key financial element because it provides the best view of the 
size of its programmatic activities and commitments. Because 
depreciation expense represents a charge to operations that reflects 
the future replenishment of the existing plant (and replaces the actual 
cash outlays for equipment and repairs formerly in the revenue and 
expenditures statement of private non-profit institutions under the 
fund accounting model), it represents a commitment of capital resources 
to the institution and reflects its overall operating size.
    The Secretary disagrees that an institution can eliminate expenses 
relating to U.S. Government-sponsored scientific research programs 
immediately upon the termination of those programs. To the contrary, 
because many universities require highly specialized facilities and 
equipment to conduct research under those programs, they will likely 
incur significant upfit and other costs in re-deploying their research 
facilities in the event of a loss in program funding. Therefore, the 
Secretary considers scientific research expenditures to be an 
appropriate component of the operating size of an institution since the 
institution is committed to making those expenditures until adjustments 
can be made.
    However, the Secretary agrees that in certain instances sponsored 
program expenses should be excluded from the ratio calculations. The 
Secretary believes that an institution that receives HEA grant program 
funds, especially those associated with programs that strengthen 
institutions or expand access to higher education, should not fail the 
composite score standard solely because of the expenditure of those 
funds. Therefore, the amount of HEA funds that an institution reports 
as expenses in its Statement of Activities for a fiscal year are 
excluded from the ratio calculations but only if these reported 
expenses alone are responsible for the institution's failure to achieve 
a composite score of 1.5 for that fiscal year.
    Changes: The Secretary eliminates the requirement proposed under 
Sec. 668.172(a)(1)(ii) that a public or private non-profit institution 
must have a positive Primary Reserve ratio.
    Proposed Sec. 668.173(e), describing the items that are excluded 
from the ratio calculations, is relocated under Sec. 668.172(c) and 
revised, in part, to provide that the Secretary may exclude from the 
ratio calculations reported expenses of HEA program funds under the 
conditions described previously.
    Comments regarding the Viability ratio: A commenter from a non-
profit institution maintained that the implicit assumption of the 
Viability ratio is that an institution should minimize or eliminate 
debt in order to preserve the accumulation of assets. The commenter 
opined that such a philosophy would lead to institutions avoiding the 
creation of revenue-creating assets, such as residence halls. 
Accordingly, the commenter believed that the correct measurement should 
be the amount of risky loans that an institution undertakes, and 
recommended therefore that the amount of loans secured by collateral be 
eliminated from the denominator of the Viability ratio.
    Similarly, many commenters opined that the proposed definition of 
adjusted equity will discourage institutions from financing property, 
plant and equipment from current revenues. The commenters believed that 
institutions will elect instead to assume long-term debt even if the 
assumption of long-term debt is contrary to good business practice.
    For several reasons, many commenters opposed the proposed 
adjustment for proprietary institutions that would limit the threshold 
factor for the Viability Ratio to the threshold factor for the Primary 
Reserve ratio in cases where the institution's Primary Reserve ratio 
threshold factor is a one or a two. First, these commenters maintained 
that such an adjustment defeats the purpose of measuring financial 
responsibility on the basis of three ratios. Second, the commenters 
argued that if the reason for this adjustment is to circumvent possible 
abuse and manipulation of the Viability ratio, then there may be 
something wrong with using the ratio as part of the methodology. Third, 
the commenters argued that it is arbitrary and unfair to assume, based 
on the premise that the institution has manipulated its financial 
report, that an institution's Viability ratio will always be higher 
than its Primary Reserve ratio. Rather, the commenters maintained that 
an institution could achieve a high Viability ratio through careful 
financial management. The commenters recommended therefore that the 
Secretary use this adjustment only if the reason for using it is 
consistent with the concepts underlying the proposed ratio methodology. 
Similarly, commenters maintained that this adjustment is unfair to non-
profit institutions that have no debt, because the weighting for the 
Primary Reserve ratio increases from 55 percent to 90 percent.
    One commenter suggested that if an institution has no debt, the 
Secretary should allow an institution to show the amount of long-term 
debt that it would be able to obtain, such as, by demonstrating to the 
Secretary that the institution has a line of credit, or by providing to 
the Secretary a letter from a bank indicating the bank's willingness to 
make a long-term loan to the institution.
    Many other commenters from the proprietary sector believed the 
Secretary should reward an institution that has no debt for its sound 
management practices, rather than penalize that institution by 
increasing the weighting for its Primary Reserve ratio from 20 percent 
to 50 percent. These commenters, and other commenters, suggested 
instead that for an institution that has no debt the Secretary should 
assign a threshold factor of 5.0 on its Viability ratio, or weight the 
Viability ratio at 30 percent, or both. Another commenter maintained 
that the amount of equity needed to achieve a strength factor score of 
3.0 on the Viability Ratio is excessive and penalizes an institution 
for using leverage prudently. This commenter proposed that the amount 
of equity that results in achieving a strength factor score of 3.0 
should instead yield a strength factor score of 5.0.
    Another commenter suggested that an institution's Viability ratio 
strength factor be limited to two times the Primary Reserve strength 
factor in cases where the institution has a Primary Reserve strength 
factor score of 1.0 or 2.0. According to the commenter, this weighting 
scheme would allow an institution with no debt, but with a reasonable 
Primary Reserve ratio score,

[[Page 62847]]

to pass the ratio standards if it has a bad year (i.e., achieves only a 
strength factor score of 1.0 on the Net Income ratio). The commenter 
further stated that under this approach, a similarly situated 
institution with a Primary Reserve ratio strength factor score of 1.0 
would not pass the ratio standards.
    Several commenters from proprietary institutions asserted that 
eliminating the Viability ratio for institutions that have no debt is 
particularly unjust because the current acid test ratio compels 
institutions to remain debt-free. One of the commenters argued that the 
proposed adjustment to the Viability ratio acts to raise the Primary 
Reserve weighting for proprietary institutions to a level required of 
non-profits despite the real differences between these sectors. The 
commenter asserted that this methodology would only encourage 
institutions to take out debt in order to use the Viability ratio, 
rather than discourage that practice. The commenter suggested that if 
the Secretary chooses to keep this methodology, the Net Income and 
Primary Reserve ratios should be weighted at 80 percent and 20 percent, 
respectively.
    Discussion: The Secretary proposed the Viability ratio because it 
measures one of the most basic elements of clear financial health: the 
availability of expendable resources (resources which can be accessed 
in short order) to cover debt should the institution need to settle its 
obligations. As such, it is useful in measuring the financial condition 
of most institutions. However, the Secretary has decided to remove the 
Viability ratio from the ratio methodology established in these 
regulations for the following reasons.
    First, in linking the results of the Viability and Primary Reserve 
ratios the Secretary sought to discourage an institution from 
manipulating its Viability ratio by taking on a small amount of debt 
solely to inflate its composite score. However, linking the two ratios 
may result in a composite score that understates the financial health 
of an institution that legitimately carries a small amount of debt.
    Second, based on analyses conducted by KPMG during the extended 
comment period of 507 audited financial statements from proprietary 
institutions and 395 audited financial statements from private non-
profit institutions, the Secretary found that 35 percent of those 
proprietary institutions and 13 percent of those non-profit 
institutions had no long-term debt. Accordingly, the Viability ratio 
could not be applied to a significant number of institutions in each 
sector--the composite score for those institutions would therefore be 
determined solely on the results of the Primary Reserve and Net Income 
ratios. The Secretary agrees that this was a shortcoming in the 
proposed methodology, and includes in the ratio methodology established 
by these regulations only ratios that can be applied to all 
institutions.
    In view of the public comments, the Secretary agrees that certain 
aspects of the prop