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Photo Institute Faces Possible Closure Over Recruiting Claims

A school with campuses in Ventura and Santa Barbara misled students about future jobs and salaries, a California consumer agency says.

July 21, 2005|Steve Chawkins, Times Staff Writer

A state consumer agency has threatened to shut down the Brooks Institute of Photography, a well-known school with campuses in Santa Barbara and Ventura, for allegedly lying to students about the amount of help they could expect from the school in finding jobs and about the amount of money they could make.

After a review that included an undercover visit, the Bureau for Private Postsecondary and Vocational Education told Brooks to prepare for closure in 2007 if it does not meet a number of conditions, including giving an undetermined sum in restitution to students who have attended since 1999.


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Brooks officials, noting that the school is fully functioning, said Wednesday that they plan to challenge the findings at a public hearing.

"We welcome the opportunity to present the facts," said Tracy Lorenz, a spokeswoman for Career Education Corp., the school's Illinois-based owner. Lorenz said she could not comment on specific allegations in a 19-page letter that was sent by the agency last week to Greg Strick, the school's president.

Although still preliminary and subject to negotiation, the state's action has rocked an institution that was founded in 1945 by Ernest H. Brooks, a former photographer for seed companies. Over the years, it has attracted students from around the globe and has been a center for specialties as diverse as underwater photography and the investigation of the Shroud of Turin, believed by many to be the burial cloth that was draped around the body of Jesus.

The state's report also was another shot of bad news for Career Education Corp., which has been targeted in an investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission, as well as by a number of lawsuits.

In its review, the state concluded that Brooks routinely inflated claims of its graduates' success in order to draw new students. Posing as a fledgling photographer, an agency employee was told by an admissions counselor earlier this year that she could expect to make $50,000 to $150,000 in her first year out of school.

"The sky's the limit," the counselor told her, according to the state's report.

But agency officials contend that the limit is considerably lower, saying their investigation found that only 45 of the school's 151 graduates from the class of 2003 are working full time. They make an average of about $26,000 and owe $74,000 in loans, according to the state's report.

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