UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF
PRIVATE POSTSECONDARY SCHOOLS,
Plaintiff,
v.
Civil Action No. 17-999 (RDM)
ELISABETH DEVOS, in her official capacity
as Secretary of the U.S. Department of
Education, et al.,
Defendants,
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
This is not the first (and presumably not the last) chapter in a dispute about the fate of
regulations that the Department of Education promulgated in November 2016 to address
perceived deficiencies in the William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan Program (“Direct Loan
Program”), which allows students who attend participating schools to obtain federal loans. The
regulations were intended to “protect student loan borrowers from misleading, deceitful, and
predatory practices.” William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan Program (“2016 Rule”), 81 Fed.
Reg. 75,926 (Nov. 1, 2016). Shortly before the 2016 Rule was scheduled to take effect, Plaintiff
California Association of Private Postsecondary Schools (“CAPPS”) brought this action seeking
to set the rule aside in its entirety. Dkt. 1 at 75–76. About a week later, CAPPS moved
preliminarily to enjoin the implementation or enforcement of a single provision, which prohibits
participants in the Direct Loan Program from employing predispute arbitration clauses and class
action waivers in certain disputes with student-borrowers (“Arbitration and Class Action Waiver
Provision”). Dkt. 6. That motion was never fully briefed or decided, however, because the
Department of Education, on its own accord, stayed the effective date of most of the 2016 Rule
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. § 705 pending resolution of this case. William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan
Program (“Section 705 Stay”), 82 Fed. Reg. 27,621 (June 16, 2017).
The Department’s Section 705 Stay led to the next chapter of the dispute. Within weeks
of issuance of the stay, two student-borrowers and a coalition of nineteen states and the District
of Columbia filed separate lawsuits seeking to invalidate the stay. See Bauer v. DeVos, No. 17-
cv-1330 (D.D.C. filed July 6, 2017); Massachusetts v. Dep’t of Education, No. 17-cv-1331
(D.D.C. filed July 6, 2017). The Department subsequently issued an interim final rule on
October 24, 2017, staying the effective date of the 2016 Rule to July 1, 2018, and then issued a
final rule staying the effective date for another year. See William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan
Program (“Interim Final Rule”), 82 Fed. Reg. 49,114 (Oct. 24, 2017); William D. Ford Federal
Direct Loan Program (“Final Delay Rule”), 83 Fed. Reg. 6,458 (Feb. 14, 2018). With each new
rulemaking, the student-borrower and state plaintiffs amended their complaints to challenge the
new action. The Court consolidated the Bauer and Massachusetts cases and, on September 12,
2018, issued an opinion resolving the consolidated action. Bauer v. DeVos, No. 17-cv-1330,
2018 WL 4353656 (D.D.C. Sept. 12, 2018) (“Bauer I”). In that decision, the Court held that the
Section 705 Stay was arbitrary and capricious and thus unlawful under the Administrative
Procedure Act (“APA”); that the Interim Final Rule was, for the most part, moot; and that the
Final Delay Rule was issued in violation of the Higher Education Act’s negotiated rulemaking
requirement. Id. Five days later, the Court entered a remedial order vacating the Final Rule and
Section 705 Stay but staying vacatur of the Section 705 Stay until October 12, 2018. Bauer v.
DeVos, No. 17-cv-1330, 2018 WL 4483783 (D.D.C. Sept. 17, 2018) (“Bauer II”). On October
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12, 2018, the Court extended that stay until noon on October 16, 2018. Minute Order (Oct. 12,
2018), Bauer, No. 17-cv-1330.1
The Bauer I decision, in turn, opened the current chapter of the dispute. Two days after
issuing that decision, the Court held a status conference in this action and set a schedule for
CAPPS to renew its motion for a preliminary injunction to enjoin the 2016 Rule, which would go
into effect upon expiration of the Court’s stay. See Minute Order (Sept. 17, 2018). The Court
also granted the Bauer plaintiffs leave to intervene (“Bauer Intervenors”) and granted the
interested states and the District of Columbia leave to participate as amici (“State Amici”).2 See
Minute Entry (Sept 14, 2018); Minute Order (Sept. 18, 2018). On September 22, 2018, CAPPS
filed the pending motion for a preliminary injunction. Dkt. 65. This time, however, CAPPS has
sought preliminarily to enjoin four provisions of the 2016 Rule: (1) the Arbitration and Class
Action Waiver that it targeted in its original motion; (2) the “Financial Responsibility
Provision;” (3) the “Repayment Rate Provision;” and (4) the “Borrower Defense Provision.” Id.
at 17. The United States and Bauer intervenors filed briefs in opposition, and the states and the
District of Columbia filed an amicus brief in opposition. See Dkt. 67 (State Amici); Dkt. 68
(Bauer Intervenors); Dkt. 69 (United States). CAPPS filed a reply brief on October 8, 2018, Dkt.
72, and the Court held oral argument the following day, Minute Order (Oct. 9, 2018).
Each of the four provisions that CAPPS seeks to enjoin raises a distinct set of issues;
overall, CAPPS raises twenty-four challenges to the four provisions. As to most of the
1
The Department of Education now notes that it “will not publish by November 1, 2018 a final
rule rescinding the 2016 Rule,” but that “the Department remains committed to rescinding the
2016 Rule, for all of the reasons set forth in the 2018 NPRM.” Dkt. 69 at 2.
2
On September 22, 2018, CAPPS sought reconsideration of the Court’s decision granting the
Bauer plaintiffs leave to intervene based on new evidence. Dkt. 64. The motion has been fully
briefed, Dkt. 71, Dkt. 73, and is pending.
3
challenged provisions, CAPPS has failed to demonstrate that it has standing or that the dispute is
ripe for decision. Moreover, with respect to each of the four provisions, CAPPS has failed to
carry its burden of demonstrating that any one of its members is likely to suffer an irreparable
injury in the absence of an injunction. Because irreparable injury is the sine qua non for
obtaining a preliminary injunction, that flaw is dispositive. In light of these threshold obstacles,
the Court need not reach the merits of the plethora of substantive arguments that CAPPS raises—
and, indeed, concludes that it would not be prudent to do so on such an abbreviated schedule.
Those issues, in short, are for the next chapter.
The Court will, accordingly, deny the motion for a preliminary injunction and will set a
schedule for cross-motions for summary judgment.
I. BACKGROUND
Title IV of the Higher Education Act of 1965 (“HEA”), 20 U.S.C. § 1070 et seq.,
empowers the Secretary of Education “to assist in making available the benefits of postsecondary
education to eligible students . . . in institutions of higher education” through various types of
financial aid. Id. § 1070(a). The William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan Program (“Direct Loan
Program”) allows students who attend “participating institutions of higher education” to obtain
direct loans from the federal government to pay for their educational expenses. Id. § 1087a(a).
To participate in the Direct Loan Program, institutions of higher education must enter into
contracts, called Program Participation Agreements (“PPAs”), with the Secretary of Education
and agree to comply with the HEA, all applicable regulations, and certain other conditions. See
20 U.S.C. §§ 1087c(a), 1094(a)(4); 34 C.F.R. §§ 668.14, 685.300(b). These contracts may
include any provisions “the Secretary determines are necessary to protect the interests of the
United States and to promote the purposes of” the Direct Loan Program. 20 U.S.C.
4
§ 1087d(a)(6); see also id. § 1087c.
By statute, students who are harmed by a Title IV school’s violation of certain laws,
including prohibitions on fraud, may be entitled to relief from their federal Direct Loan
obligations through a process known as “borrower defense” to repayment. Id. § 1087e(h); see
also 34 C.F.R. § 685.206(c). In administering the Direct Loan Program, the Secretary must also
“specify in regulations which acts or omissions of an institution of higher education a borrower
may assert as a defense to repayment of a loan” made under the Direct Loan Program. 20 U.S.C.
§ 1087e(h). And more generally, the Secretary has authority “to make, promulgate, issue,
rescind, and amend rules and regulations governing the” Direct Loan Program. Id. § 1221e-3.
Pursuant to these authorities, in January 1994, the Secretary issued “standards, criteria,
and procedures governing the Federal Direct Student Loan . . . program,” including the first
iteration of the Borrower Defense Rule. Federal Direct Student Loan Program, 59 Fed. Reg.
472, 472 (Jan. 4, 1994). In December 1994, the Secretary amended the Direct Loan Program
regulations, including those governing borrower defenses, see William D. Ford Federal Direct
Loan Program, 59 Fed. Reg. 61,664, 61,696 (Dec. 1, 1994), and under those regulations,
borrowers were permitted to assert “as a defense against repayment, any act or omission of the
school attended by the [borrower] that would give rise to a cause of action against the school
under applicable State law.” 34 C.F.R. § 685.206(c)(1). The 1994 regulations (1) permitted a
student borrower to assert her school’s misconduct as a reason for nonrepayment, and (2) if the
borrower was successful, permitted the Department of Education to recoup the loan from the
school. Id. § 685.206(c)(2), (3).
The adequacy of the 1994 Borrower Defense Rule was tested by the collapse of
Corinthian Colleges in May 2015. See William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan Program (“June 16,
5
2016 Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (‘NPRM’)”), 81 Fed. Reg. 39,330, 39,330 (June 16, 2016).
Corinthian, a for-profit company that “operat[ed] numerous postsecondary schools that enrolled
over 70,000 students at more than 100 campuses nationwide,” id. at 39,335, filed for bankruptcy
in 2015. In the wake of Corinthian’s closure, the Department ultimately determined “that the
college had misrepresented its job placement rates.” Id. In the aftermath, “thousands of claims
for student loan relief” were filed, and Corinthian’s bankruptcy meant that there was “no other
party from which the Federal government [could] recover any losses.” 2016 Rule, 81 Fed. Reg.
at 76,022. The Department concluded, against this backdrop, that the 1994 borrower defense
rule was outdated and was no longer adequate to deal with the changed “landscape of higher
education.” June 16, 2016 NPRM, 81 Fed. Reg. at 39,335.
To address these perceived deficiencies, the Department commenced a rulemaking, and
on November 1, 2016, it published the final rule governing the Direct Loan Program that is at
issue in the present action. 2016 Rule, 81 Fed. Reg. at 75,926. In relevant part, the 2016 Rule:
(1) prohibits schools “participating in the Direct Loan Program from obtaining” or relying upon a
borrower’s “waive[r] [of] his or her right to initiate or participate in a class action lawsuit,” or
“from requiring students to engage in internal dispute processes before contacting accrediting or
government agencies” (“Arbitration and Class Action Waiver Provision”); (2) requires
“financially risky institutions [to be] prepared to take responsibility for the losses to the
government for discharges of and repayments for [f]ederal student loans” (“Financial
Responsibility Provision”); (3) adopts certain disclosure obligations for institutions “at which the
median borrower has not repaid in full, or made loan payments sufficient to reduce by at the least
one dollar the outstanding balance of the borrower’s loans received at the institution”
6
(“Repayment Rate Provision”); and (4) amends the standards and procedures applicable to the
borrower defense process (“Borrower Defense Provision”). Id. at 75,926–27.
CAPPS seeks preliminarily to enjoin the implementation of each of these provisions.
II. ANALYSIS
“A preliminary injunction is an extraordinary remedy never awarded as of right,” Winter
v. Natural Res. Def. Council, 555 U.S. 7, 24 (2008), but “only when the party seeking the relief,
by a clear showing, carries the burden of persuasion,” Cobell v. Norton, 391 F.3d 251, 258 (D.C.
Cir. 2004). To secure a preliminary injunction, a plaintiff “must establish that he is likely to
succeed on the merits, that he is likely to suffer irreparable harm in the absence of preliminary
relief, that the balance of equities tips in his favor, and that an injunction is in the public
interest.” Winter, 555 U.S. at 20. Although the moving party may rely on “evidence that is less
complete than in a trial on the merits,” NRDC v. Pena, 147 F.3d 1012, 1023 (D.C. Cir. 1998), he
nevertheless “bear[s] the burden of produc[ing] . . . credible” evidence sufficient to demonstrate
his entitlement to injunctive relief, R.I.L-R v. Johnson, 80 F. Supp. 3d 164, 173 (D.D.C. 2015)
(quotation marks omitted) (first alteration in original).
Before the Supreme Court’s decision in Winter, courts in this circuit applied a “sliding-
scale” approach to the preliminary injunction analysis under which “a strong showing on one
factor could make up for a weaker showing on another.” Sherley v. Sebelius, 644 F.3d 388, 392
(D.C. Cir. 2011). Since Winter, the D.C. Circuit has hinted on several occasions that “a
likelihood of success is an independent, freestanding requirement for a preliminary injunction,”
id. at 393 (quoting Davis v. Pension Benefit Guar. Corp., 571 F.3d 1288, 1296 (D.C. Cir. 2009)),
but it “has not yet needed to decide the issue,” League of Women Voters of United States v.
Newby, 838 F.3d 1, 7 (D.C. Cir. 2016); see also Am. Meat Inst. v. U.S. Dep’t of Agric., 746 F.3d
7
1065, 1074 (D.C. Cir. 2014), reinstated in relevant part by 760 F.3d 18 (D.C. Cir. 2014) (“This
circuit has repeatedly declined to take sides . . . on the question of whether likelihood of success
on the merits is a freestanding threshold requirement to issuance of a preliminary injunction.”)
(en banc); Sherley, 644 F.3d at 393 (reading “Winter at least to suggest if not to hold ‘that a
likelihood of success is an independent, free-standing requirement for a preliminary injunction’”
but declining to decide the issue (quoting Davis, 571 F.3d at 1296)).
But, regardless of whether the sliding scale approach applies, a party seeking a
preliminary injunction must clear two, non-negotiable hurdles. First, a court must—at each
successive stage of the proceeding—evaluate whether it has jurisdiction to provide the relief
sought, and it must do so through the lens of the standard applicable at that stage of the
proceeding. Lujan v. Defs. of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 561 (1992). As a result, “a party who fails
to show a ‘substantial likelihood’ of standing is not entitled to a preliminary injunction.” Food
& Water Watch, Inc. v. Vilsack, 808 F.3d 905, 913 (D.C. Cir. 2015) (citation omitted). That
same reasoning, moreover, extends to other jurisdictional prerequisites, such as ripeness.
Second, as Winter makes clear, a mere “possibility” of irreparable harm will not
suffice. Winter, 555 U.S. at 22. “Rather, a showing that irreparable injury is ‘likely’ is
the sine qua non for obtaining a preliminary injunction—it is what justifies the extraordinary
remedy of granting relief before the parties have had the opportunity fully to develop the
evidence and fully to present their respective cases.” Achagzai v. Broad. Bd. of Governors, No.
14-cv-768, 2016 WL 471274, at *3–4 (D.D.C. Feb. 8, 2016); see also Chaplaincy of Full Gospel
Churches v. England, 454 F.3d 290, 297 (D.C. Cir. 2006) (“A movant’s failure to show
any irreparable harm is therefore grounds for refusing to issue a preliminary injunction, even if
the other three factors entering the calculus merit such relief.”); Texas Children’s Hosp. v.
8
Burwell, 76 F. Supp. 3d 224, 241–42 (D.D.C. 2014); Trudeau v. FTC, 384 F. Supp. 2d 281, 296
(D.D.C. 2005), aff’d, 456 F.3d 178 (D.C. Cir. 2006). As a result, if the moving party fails to
demonstrate that it is likely to suffer an irreparable injury, the Court must deny the motion.
With these guideposts in mind, the Court will consider whether CAPPS has established
that there is a “substantial likelihood” that the Court has Article III jurisdiction to consider its
challenge to each of the four provisions at issue and whether it has shown that the association, or
one of its members, is likely to suffer an irreparable injury if the Court does not issue a
preliminary injunction.
A. Arbitration and Class Action Waiver
The first of the provisions that CAPPS seeks to enjoin adds conditions to the Direct Loan
Program Participation Agreements—or “PPAs”—that participating schools must enter with the
Secretary of Education in order to receive Title IV funding. 2016 Rule, 81 Fed. Reg. at 75,927.
To qualify as a “participating institution,” a school must enter a PPA promising to undertake an
array of responsibilities, such as estimating the needs of student-borrowers, reconciling certain
records on a monthly basis, and implementing a quality assurance system. 34 C.F.R. § 685.300.
As relevant here, the 2016 Rule amended this regulation to require that each participating school
must also agree that (1) it “will not seek to rely in any way on a predispute arbitration agreement
or on any other predispute agreement with a student who has obtained or benefited from a Direct
Loan, with respect to any aspect of a class action that is related to a borrower defense claim;” (2)
it “will not enter into a predispute agreement to arbitrate a borrower defense claim, or rely in any
way on a predispute arbitration agreement with respect to any aspect of a borrower defense
claim;” and (3) if the school has existing contracts with student-borrowers that include covered
predispute class action waivers or arbitration agreements, “the school must either ensure [that]
9
the agreement[s] [are] amended . . . or provide the student[s] with written notice” that it will not
“use” the predispute class action waivers or arbitration agreements. 2016 Rule, 81 Fed. Reg. at
76,087–88 (34 C.F.R. § 685.300(e)(1), (e)(3)(ii), (e)(3)(iii)(B), (f)(1), (f)(3)(ii), (f)(3)(iii)(B)).
According to CAPPS, these additional conditions “conflict with” the Federal Arbitration
Act (“FAA”), 9 U.S.C. § 2; exceed the Secretary’s authority under the HEA, 20 U.S.C. 1087d;
were promulgated in violation of the APA, 5 U.S.C. § 702(2); and violate the Due Process
Clause. See Dkt. 65 at 11–20. For present purposes, however, the Court does not reach these
questions but, instead, considers whether CAPPS has established standing to bring these claims
and, if so, whether it has established that at least one of its members is likely to suffer an
irreparable injury if the Court does not issue a preliminary injunction. The answer to the first
question is “yes,” but the answer to the second is “no.” As a result, the Court must deny
CAPPS’s motion for a preliminary injunction with respect to the Arbitration and Class Action
Waiver Provision.
1. Standing
As a first step, the Court must consider whether CAPPS has met its burden of
establishing a “substantial likelihood” that it has standing to challenge the Arbitration and Class
Action Waiver Provision. See Food & Water Watch, Inc., 808 F.3d at 913. When an
association, like CAPPS, seeks to establish standing, it may proceed in one of two ways: it may
show that the association has “organizational standing” to sue on its own behalf, or it may
demonstrate that it has “associational standing” to sue on behalf of its members. See Public
Citizen, Inc. v. Trump, 297 F. Supp. 3d 6, 17 (D.D.C. 2018). Here, CAPPS relies only on the
latter theory.
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Associational standing is premised on the theory that the plaintiff is not seeking a remedy
on its own behalf but, rather, is proceeding “as the representative of its members.” Warth v.
Seldin, 422 U.S. 490, 511 (1975). As such, the plaintiff need not establish that it has standing to
sue in its own right, but must show that (1) at least one of “its members would otherwise have
standing to sue in [her] own right,” (2) the interests that the association “seeks to protect” in the
litigation “are germane to the organization’s purpose,” and (3) “neither the claim asserted nor the
relief requested requires the participation of individual members in the lawsuit.” Hunt v. Wash.
State Apple Advert. Comm’n, 432 U.S. 333, 343 (1977). Viewed through the lens of the pending
motion, the Court has little difficulty in concluding that CAPPS is “likely” to satisfy the second
and third prongs of the Hunt test. According to the CAPPS’s executive director, Robert Johnson,
CAPPS provides its member schools with advice regarding compliance with regulatory mandates
and assists “in the drafting of enrollment agreements and arbitration provisions.” Dkt. 65-2 at 1
(Johnson Decl. ¶ 1). And this is not a case—like a damages action, for example—that requires
the participation of individual members. The first prong—the requirement that at least one
member have standing to sue—however, requires more detailed analysis.
The standing inquiry begins with the oft-quoted test articulated in Lujan v. Defenders of
Wildlife:
[T]he irreducible constitutional minimum of standing contains three elements.
First, the plaintiff must have suffered an “injury in fact”—an invasion of a
legally protected interest which is (a) concrete and particularized, . . . and (b)
“actual and imminent, not ‘conjectural’ or ‘hypothetical.’” . . . Second, there
must be a causal connection between the injury and the conduct complained
of—the injury has to be “fairly . . . trace[able] to the challenged action of the
defendant, and not . . . th[e] result [of] the independent action of some third
party not before the court.” . . . . Third, it must be “likely” as opposed to merely
“speculative,” that the injury will be “redressed by a favorable decision.”
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504 U.S. 555, 560 (1992) (alterations in original) (internal citations omitted). Because standing
must be evaluated on a claim-by-claim basis, Friends of the Earth, Inc. v. Laidlaw Envtl. Servs.,
Inc., 528 U.S. 167, 185 (2000), and because standing must be assessed in light of the standard
applicable at the relevant stage of the proceeding, Lujan, 504 U.S. at 561, this means that CAPPS
must establish a “substantial likelihood” that at least one of its members (1) will suffer an “actual
and imminent” injury, (2) that is “fairly traceable” to each of the challenged provisions, and (3)
that “the injury will be redressed by a favorable decision.” As explained below, the Court
concludes that CAPPS has met this burden with respect to its challenge to the Arbitration and
Class Action Waiver Provision.
Six of the seven declarations CAPPS offers in support of its motion at least briefly touch
on the question of arbitration. In the most extensive discussion, Johnson attests that “virtually all
CAPPS schools utilize arbitration agreements with their students,” and he identifies two such
member schools—Colleen O’Hara’s Beauty Academy and Pima Medical Institute—by name.
Dkt. 65-2 at 2 (Johnson Decl. ¶ 9). Johnson adds that the Arbitration and Class Action Waiver
Provision will require these schools “to send notices to their students” regarding the rule change,
“to amend their agreements[,] retrain their admissions staffs[,] and actually litigate new cases,
including class actions, in federal and state court.” Id. at 3 (Johnson Decl. ¶¶ 10–12). Declarants
from five member schools confirm that member schools “use[] arbitration provisions in [their]
enrollment agreements.” Dkt. 65-4 at 1 (Casanover Decl. ¶ 5); Dkt. 65-5 at 1 (Gourji Decl. ¶ 5);
Dkt. 65-6 at 1 (Wood Decl. ¶ 5); Dkt. 65-7 at 1 (Second Casanover Decl. ¶ 5); Dkt. 65-8 at 1
(Weerasuriya Decl. ¶ 5). Those declarants, moreover, attest to the efficiency and reduced
expense of resolving disputes through arbitration. Dkt. 65-4 at 1-2 (Casanover Decl. ¶¶ 6, 8–10);
Dkt. 65-5 at 1-2 (Gourji Decl. ¶¶ 6, 8–10); Dkt. 65-6 at 2 (Wood Decl. ¶¶ 6, 8–10); Dkt. 65-7 at
12
1–2 (Second Casanover Decl. ¶¶ 6, 8–10); Dkt. 65-8 at 2 (Weerasuriya Decl. ¶ 6–9). Finally,
three member schools assert: “We currently have disputes in arbitration and are not certain how
we could proceed with those disputes if the [2016 Rule] goes into effect.” Dkt. 65-4 at 2
(Casanover Decl. ¶ 11); Dkt. 65-7 at 2 (Second Casanover Decl. ¶ 11); Dkt. 65-8 at 2
(Weerasuriya Decl. ¶ 10).
The Court concludes that this showing is sufficient to establish that at least one CAPPS
member school has standing to challenge the Arbitration and Class Action Waiver Provision.
CAPPS has identified specific member schools that will likely suffer a concrete injury if the
challenged provision takes effect, and it is likely that the relief sought from the Court—including
a preliminary injunction—would redress that injury. To take the most obvious example, the
declarations establish that, if the Arbitration and Class Action Waiver Provision takes effect,
each of the identified schools would be required promptly to send a notice to students with
existing enrollment agreements informing them that the school will “not . . . use any predispute
arbitration agreement to stop [the student] from bringing a lawsuit concerning” the covered
conduct, 2016 Rule, 81 Fed. Reg. at 76,088 (new § 685.300(f)(3)(iii)(B)). Because “standing
does not depend on the size or quantum of harm to the party,” Animal Welfare Inst. v. Kreps, 561
F.2d 1002, 1008 (D.C. Cir. 1977), that imminent cost is sufficient to sustain CAPPS’s standing.
2. Irreparable Injury
A prospective injury that is sufficient to establish standing, however, does not necessarily
satisfy the more demanding burden of demonstrating irreparable injury. The D.C. Circuit “has
set a high standard for irreparable injury.” Chaplaincy of Full Gospel Churches, 454 F.3d at
297. The injury must be unrecoverable; it must be “both certain and great; [and] it must be
actual and not theoretical.” Wis. Gas Co. v. Fed. Energy Regulatory Comm’n, 758 F.2d 669, 674
13
(D.C. Cir. 1985). To be sure, economic loss sustained due to a federal administrative action is
typically “uncompensable” in the sense that federal agencies enjoy sovereign immunity, and the
waiver of sovereign immunity in the APA does not reach damages claims, 5 U.S.C. § 702
(permitting actions “seeking relief other than money damages”). But it proves too much to
suggest that “irreparable” injury exists, as a matter of course, whenever a regulated party seeks
preliminarily to enjoin the implementation of a new regulatory burden. See Air Transport Ass’n
of Am., Inc. v. Export-Import Bank, 840 F. Supp. 2d 327, 335–36 (D.D.C. 2012). Rather, an
asserted “economic harm” must “be significant, even where it is irretrievable because a
defendant has sovereign immunity.” Id. at 335. In other words, the loss “must . . . be serious in
terms of its effect on the plaintiff.” Gulf Oil Corp. v. Dep’t of Energy, 514 F. Supp. 1019, 1026
(D.D.C. 1981).
This conclusion is consistent with an array of decisions from this Court holding that
irreparable injury requires damage to a business “above and beyond a simple diminution in
profits,” Mylan Pharm., Inc. v. Shalala, 81 F. Supp. 2d 30, 43 (D.D.C. 2000), and that, even
where the United States is the defendant, “a plaintiff must establish that the economic harm is so
severe as to ‘cause extreme hardship to the business,”’ Coal. for Common Sense in Gov’t
Procurement v. United States, 576 F. Supp. 2d 162, 168 (D.D.C. 2008) (quoting Gulf Oil Corp.,
514 F. Supp. at 1025). The standard also requires more than conclusory assertions of potential
loss. To permit the Court to evaluate the nature and extent of the alleged irreparable injury, the
movant bears the burden of presenting “specific details regarding the extent to which [its]
business will suffer.” Nat’l Ass’n of Mortg. Brokers v. Bd. of Governors of the Fed. Res. Syst.,
773 F. Supp. 2d 151, 181 (D.D.C. 2011).
14
The declarations offered in support of CAPPS’s motion do not satisfy this “high
standard.” Chaplaincy of Full Gospel Churches, 454 F.3d at 297. Although they show that
specific member schools use arbitration agreements and that they will incur some presumably
imminent cost in providing the required notices to existing student-borrowers, they say nothing
about the extent of that cost.3 Likewise, although the Court understands that, if the Arbitration
and Class Action Waiver Provision takes effect, those schools will need to amend their
enrollment agreements, the declarations—once again—provide no meaningful information about
the extent of that cost. Rather, each simply recites the same boilerplate conclusion that
implementing the required “changes will be enormously burdensome and disruptive to [the
school’s] educational mission.” Dkt. 65-4 at 2 (Casanover Decl. ¶ 14); Dkt. 65-5 at 2 (Gourji
Decl. ¶ 13); Dkt. 65-6 at 2 (Wood Decl. ¶ 13); Dkt. 65-7 at 2 (Second Casanover Decl. ¶ 14);
Dkt. 65-8 at 2 (Weerasuriya Decl. ¶ 13); see also Dkt. 65-2 at 3 (Johnson Decl. ¶ 12) (referring
to “enormous cost”). It is well-established that such “‘broad conclusory statements’ about the
likelihood of harm” will not suffice. Guttenberg v. Emery, 26 F. Supp. 3d 88, 102 (D.D.C. 2014)
(quoting Cornish v. Dudas, 540 F. Supp. 2d 61, 65 (D.D.C. 2008)). In short, “[b]are allegations
of what is likely to occur are of no value;” the movant must, instead, “substantiate the claim that
irreparable injury is ‘likely’ to occur.” Wis. Gas Co., 758 F.2d at 674 (emphasis added).
3
Defendants respond to CAPPS’s allegations of harm with respect to this provision by pointing
out that a school could elect to forego Title IV funding and continue employing predispute
arbitration agreements and class action waiver provisions. Dkt. 68 at 28; Dkt. 69 at 11–12.
CAPPS, in turn, argues that this only serves to “severely exacerbate[] the prospect of irreparable
injury.” Dkt. 65 at 22. CAPPS has not suggested, however, that any one of its member schools
is likely to make this choice with respect to the Arbitration and Class Action Waiver Provision or
any other provision they have sought to preliminarily enjoin. The Court, accordingly, does not
consider whether the loss of Title IV funding would constitute irreparable harm.
15
Each of the five declarations from CAPPS member schools also refers to the “harm[]”
they will suffer due to “the absence of arbitration and class action provisions in [their]
enrollment agreements.” Dkt. 65-4 at 2 (Casanover Decl. ¶ 9); Dkt. 65-5 at 2 (Gourji Decl. ¶ 9);
Dkt. 65-6 at 2 (Wood Decl. ¶ 9); Dkt. 65-7 at 2 (Second Casanover Decl. ¶ 9); Dkt. 65-8 at 1
(Weerasuriya Decl. ¶ 8). But, even putting aside the question whether requiring parties to litigate
in court, as opposed to before an arbitrable tribunal, constitutes irreparable harm, none of the
declarations says anything about when, if at all, such injury is likely to occur. Specifically, they
say nothing about how often they are confronted by covered legal claims brought by their
students, about the nature of those claims, or about actual expense of litigating those cases, if
any. Such “theoretical” or “[un]certain” losses, once again, will not suffice. Wis. Gas Co., 758
F.2d at 674.
As noted above, three declarations do assert, in identical language: “We currently have
disputes in arbitration and are not certain how we could proceed with those disputes if the [2016
Rule] goes into effect.” Dkt. 65-4 at 2 (Casanover Decl. ¶ 11); Dkt. 65-7 at 2 (Second Casanover
Decl. ¶ 11); Dkt. 65-8 at 1 (Weerasuriya Decl. ¶ 10). Notably, however, these declarations stop
short of saying that the arbitrations would be affected by the rule; they merely assert that they are
uncertain about how they could proceed. By definition, uncertainty falls short of the type of
actual and imminent threat needed to show irreparable injury. Wis. Gas Co., 758 F.2d at 674.
One source of uncertainty, of course, is that nothing in the 2016 Rule prevents the parties to an
existing dispute from agreeing to arbitrate, and, to the extent any pending case is on the eve of
arbitration, it is not difficult to imagine that all parties might have an interest moving forward as
planned. The Court, of course, can only speculate about what might happen because these three
declarations devote only single, qualified sentence to matters “currently . . . in arbitration.” Dkt.
16
65-4 at 2 (Casanover Decl. ¶ 11); Dkt. 65-7 at 2 (Second Casanover Decl. ¶ 11); Dkt. 65-8 at 1
(Weerasuriya Decl. ¶ 10). Because those declarations say nothing about the number of
arbitrations, the nature of the disputes, whether the disputes clearly fall within the scope of the
2016 Rule (or whether the declarants are merely “[un]certain” about that question, Wis. Gas Co.,
758 F.2d at 674), whether the opposing parties would agree to continue the arbitrations, the cost
of litigating the disputes, or even about the stage of the proceedings, they fail to advance the ball
in any meaningful way.4
At oral argument, CAPPS offered a further theory of irreparable injury—the CAPPS
schools will sustain “reputational injury” stemming from the need to “zigzag” in their dealings
with students. Dkt. 75 at 21. Today, member schools employ arbitration clauses and class action
waivers; if the 2016 Rule takes effect, they will need to notify their students that they will not
use these agreements; and, if the 2016 Rule is set aside, they will want to shift back to using
arbitration clauses and class action waivers. To be sure, “[i]njury to reputation can, at least at
times, rise to the level necessary to support the issuance of an injunction.” Atlas Air, Inc. v. Int’l
Bhd. of Teamsters, 280 F. Supp. 3d 59, 103 (D.D.C. 2017). This, however, is not such a time.
To start, the declarations from the individual schools that CAPPS submitted in support of its
4
The declarations of all five member schools also make the qualified claim that, if they “cannot
include arbitration provisions in [their] enrollment agreements, the agreements will be difficult if
not impossible to amend at a future date” to reincorporate predispute arbitration agreements and
class action waivers. Dkt. 65-4 at 2 (Casanover Decl. ¶ 12); Dkt. 65-5 at 2 (Gourji Decl. ¶ 12);
Dkt. 65-6 at 2 (Wood Decl. ¶ 12); Dkt. 65-7 at 2 (Second Casanover Decl. ¶ 12); Dkt. 65-8 at 1
(Weerasuriya Decl. ¶ 11). Again, the qualification bears consideration. The declarations notably
stop short of asserting that it would, in fact, be impossible to amend the agreements at a future
date, presumably because they want to keep that option open. “Difficult” is very different from
“impossible,” yet the declarations offer no insight into what might be required. They do not
indicate, for example, whether it would be permissible for the schools to include fallback
language in their enrollment agreements that would become operative when, and if, the
Arbitration and Class Action Waiver Provision is set aside.
17
motion make no mention of reputational harm. Moreover, the schools have a ready answer to
any criticism they may face based on changes to their contracts; the changes are not a matter of
whim, but rather, they are compelled by federal law. A preliminary injunction requires far more
than the indefinite prospect that some students might mistakenly blame one or more CAPPS
schools for the “zigzag” required by implementation of the 2016 Rule.
Finally, CAPPS argues that the arbitration and class action waiver provision “violates the
Due Process Clause through its retroactive application to current contracts” and that a
constitutional violation is per se irreparable. Dkt. 65 at 36. CAPPS is, of course, correct that
“suits for declaratory and injunctive relief against the threatened invasion of a constitutional right
do not ordinarily require proof of any injury other than the threatened constitutional deprivation
itself.” Davis v. District of Columbia, 158 F.3d 1342, 1346 (D.C. Cir. 1998). But, even
assuming that this principle extends to constitutional claims of the type at issue here, the mere
assertion of a constitutional violation is not sufficient to establish irreparable injury. Because the
alleged irreparable injury is the constitutional violation itself, the Court must consider whether
the movant has established that it “is likely to suffer [that] harm”—that is, the constitutional
injury—“in the absence of preliminary relief.” Winter, 555 U.S. at 20.
CAPPS does not come close to clearing that hurdle. It devotes just two sentences to its
due process argument, Dkt. 65 at 33, and for good reason: To prevail on a due process challenge
to retroactive application of an economic law, the movant must show that the government action
bears no rational and legitimate relationship to the interest the government seeks to support. See
E. Enters. v. Apfel, 524 U.S. 498, 549 (1998) (Kennedy, J., concurring). Indeed, in the words of
the only majority opinion CAPPS cites, “[i]t is by now well settled that legislative Acts adjusting
the burdens and benefits of economic life come to the Court with a presumption of
18
constitutionality, and that burden is on one complaining of a due process violation to establish
that the [government] has acted in an arbitrary and irrational way.” Pension Benefit Guar. Corp.
v. R.A. Gray & Co., 467 U.S. 717, 729 (1984). CAPPS offers no basis to conclude that the
Department has crossed that deferential constitutional line by imposing a new condition on
schools that participate in the Direct Loan Program, even though that condition extends to
existing contracts.
The Court, accordingly, concludes that CAPPS has failed to carry its burden of
demonstrating that it, or one of its members, is likely to incur some irreparable injury if the
Arbitration and Class Action Waiver Provision is not preliminarily enjoined.
B. Financial Responsibility Provision
CAPPS also asks that the Court preliminarily enjoin the Financial Responsibility
Provision of the 2016 Rule. That provision amends the standards that the Department uses to
determine whether a participating school is “financially responsible.” See 20 U.S.C.
§ 1094(c)(1). The Secretary makes this determination by considering whether an institution is
able (1) to provide the services described in its official publications and statements; (2) to
provide necessary administrative resources; and (3) to meet all of its financial obligations. 20
U.S.C. § 1099c(c)(1). Pursuant to this authority, the Secretary has promulgated “financial ratios”
regulations, which assign a school a “composite score” based on a calculation of various
indicators of an institution’s financial viability. See 34 C.F.R. § 668.172. Under the composite
score methodology, a school that achieves a score of 1.5 or greater may continue to participate in
the Title IV programs without providing financial protection to the Department, while an
institution with a score of less than 1.0 is deemed “not financially responsible” and must provide
financial protection in order to participate. See 2016 Rule, 81 Fed. Reg. at 75,983. Those
19
schools that are between 1.0 and 1.5 may continue to participate, but are “subject to increased
reporting and monitoring.” Id.
In response to concerns about identifying financial problems at participating schools at an
early enough stage to ensure financial protection for the Department and taxpayers, see June 16,
2016 NPRM, 81 Fed. Reg. at 39,361, the 2016 Rule adds various events that can, either directly
or indirectly, “trigger a requirement that a school provide financial protection, such as a letter of
credit, to insure against future borrower defense claims and other liabilities to the Department,”
2016 Rule, 81 Fed. Reg. at 75,927.
First, there are a small number of triggers that automatically require a school to obtain a
letter of credit without regard for any recalculation of its composite score. The “automatic”
triggers apply if (1) the school “did not derive at least 10 percent of its revenue from sources
other than Title IV, HEA program funds” in the most recent fiscal year; (2) a publicly traded
school fails to file required reports with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”), is
warned that it “may be suspended from trading” by the SEC or has been delisted by the exchange
on which it trades, or “is not in compliance with exchange requirements;” or (3) the school has a
“cohort default rate,” which measures the extent to which students default on their loans, of
greater than thirty percent. 2016 Rule, 81 Fed. Reg. 76,074. The Department has emphasized
that these triggers automatically require financial protection because they so clearly indicate that
an institution is financially at risk. For example, “[a]n institution that fails the requirement to
derive at least 10 percent of its revenues from non-[T]itle IV sources is so dependent on [T]itle
IV, HEA funds as to make the loss of those funds almost certainly fatal . . . [ . ] That risk requires
financial protection regardless of the most recent composite score achieved by the institution.”
Id. at 75,984.
20
Second, there are a number of events that require the Department to recalculate an
institution’s composite score. Id. at 76,073. These triggers include (1) a requirement to pay any
debt or “liability arising from a final judgment in a judicial” or administrative proceeding or
settlement; (2) a suit brought “by a Federal or State authority for financial relief on a claim
related to the making of the Direct Loan for enrollment at the school or the provision of
educational services,” but only if “the suit has been pending for 120 days;” (3) a suit that has
made it past a motion for summary judgment (or the deadline for moving for summary
judgment) or that is scheduled for a pretrial conference or trial; (4) a circumstance in which the
school “was required to submit a teach-out plan . . . that covers the closing of the [school] or any
of its branches or additional locations;” (5) a Department calculation shows that the school’s
“gainful employment programs . . . could become ineligible . . . for the next award year” based
on calculations of graduates’ debt-to-earnings rates; or (6) “any withdrawal of owner’s equity . . .
by any means” if the school operates for profit and its composite score is less than 1.5.5 Id. If
the recalculated “composite score” is less than 1.0, the school must provide a letter of credit or
other financial protection. Id.
CAPPS challenges this provision on various grounds, arguing that it exceeds the
Secretary’s authority under the HEA, 20 U.S.C. 1087d; violates the APA, 5 U.S.C. 702(2); and
violates the Due Process Clause. Dkt. 65 at 25–28. The Court concludes that CAPPS has failed
to establish standing or irreparable injury and, thus, does not reach the merits of CAPPS’s
arguments.
5
The 2016 Rule also recognizes certain “discretionary” triggers, which require a school to
provide letters of credit when the “Secretary demonstrates that there is an event or condition that
is reasonably likely to have a material adverse effect on the financial condition, business, or
results of operations of the institution.” Id. at 76,074 (providing a non-exhaustive list of
examples, such as failure of a financial stress test and high annual dropout rates).
21
1. Standing
Although “there is ordinarily little question” that a plaintiff who “is himself an object” of
a regulatory action has sustained some “injury” and thus has standing to sue, Lujan, 504 U.S. at
561–62, the question presented here is not so easy. The problem that CAPPS faces is that,
“[w]hen a petitioner claims associational standing, it is not enough to aver that unidentified
members have been injured.” Chamber of Commerce v. EPA, 642 F.3d 192, 199 (D.C. Cir.
2011). Rather, “an organization bringing a claim based on associational standing must show that
at least one specifically-identified member has suffered [or will suffer] an injury-in-fact.” Am.
Chemistry Council v. Dep’t of Transp., 468 F.3d 810, 820 (D.C. Cir. 2006). Here, however, not
one of the declarations that CAPPS submitted from its member schools makes any mention of
the Financial Responsibility Provision. Dkt. 65-4 (Casanover Decl.); Dkt. 65-5 (Gourji Decl.);
Dkt. 65-6 (Wood Decl.); Dkt. 65-7 (Second Casanover Decl.); Dkt. 65-8 (Weerasuriya Decl.).
No identified member even hints that it might be subject to one or more of the triggers that
CAPPS seeks to challenge, and not one has indicated that it has incurred any compliance cost
related to those triggers. Cf. State Nat’l Bank of Big Spring v. Lew, 795 F.3d 48, 53 (D.C. Cir.
2015) (regulated party alleged that it incurred costs in monitoring the program). In short, there is
not even a passing reference to any present or future injury that any identified CAPPS member
has or will sustain due to the Financial Responsibility Provision.
The only relevant evidence that CAPPS has offered appears in the Johnson and
Gunderson declarations. Both declarations assert that CAPPS member schools will be subject to
the triggers, but they do so without reference to a single member school. Absent the
identification of a member likely to suffer an injury, these declarations fail to satisfy an essential
requirement for establishing associational standing. That omission, moreover, is not simply a
22
technical error. Without any evidence about how an identified member school is likely to be
affected by the provision, the Court cannot determine whether the risk is minimal or substantial,
whether the prospective loss is minor or great, or whether the school may have an alternative
remedy, such as an APA action. CAPPS may well be able to cure this deficiency but, on the
present record, the Court is left to conclude that CAPPS has failed “to show a substantial
likelihood of standing” and, thus, “is not entitled to a preliminary injunction.” Food & Water
Watch, Inc., 808 F.3d at 913 (internal citation omitted).
The Court need not, however, premise its decision on this ground alone because CAPPS
has also failed to carry its burden of showing that a specific member—or, indeed, any member—
is likely to sustain an irreparable injury if the financial responsibility provision is not
preliminarily enjoined.
2. Irreparable Injury
The Court’s conclusions with respect to injury-in-fact extend with even greater force to
the question of irreparable injury. As explained above, not one of the declarations offered by a
CAPPS member school so much as mentions the Financial Responsibility Provision. The
Johnson and Gunderson declarations do address the provision, but they fail to show that any
member will suffer any harm that is “certain and great,” “actual and not theoretical,” and
“beyond remediation.” Chaplaincy of Full Gospel Churches, 454 F.3d at 297 (citations and
quotation marks omitted). Johnson and Gunderson each attest that, if the rule takes effect,
“CAPPS members w[ill] be subject to [the] triggers;” that some CAPPS members are currently
defending lawsuits, and others “have been required to submit teach-out plans;” that CAPPS
schools “have gainful employment programs that could become ineligible for Title IV;” that the
triggers “would cause CAPPS members to post letters of credit;” and that “[o]btaining letters of
23
credit or other financial protection” would require schools to incur “substantial fees and
expenses,” Dkt. 65-2 at 5 (Johnson Decl. ¶¶ 20–25); Dkt. 65-3 at 3–4 (Gunderson Decl. ¶¶ 11–
16). Johnson notes that these consequences would pose a particular hurdle for the “smaller
institutions” that make up most of CAPPS’s membership. Dkt. 65-2 at 5 (Johnson Decl. ¶ 26).
As to much of this, Johnson and Gunderson do not say when it is likely to occur. Each
merely says, in conclusory terms and without explanation, that CAPPS members will be required
to post letters of credit, but they do not indicate whether that is likely to happen in the next weeks
or months or at some time years from now. Moreover, neither declaration provides any basis to
conclude that any CAPPS school is likely to face a trigger that would automatically require a
member school to obtain a letter of credit; they do not say, for example, that a CAPPS member
has a cohort default rate in excess of thirty percent or is likely to be delisted from the exchange
on which it trades. Even with respect to those triggers that simply require that the Department
recalculate the school’s “composite score,” moreover, the Johnson and Gunderson declarations
fail to establish any imminent threat of irreparable harm. Johnson says, for example, that
“[m]any CAPPS schools are listed as defendants in lawsuits,” Dkt. 65-2 at 5 (Gunderson Decl. ¶
21), but he does not indicate whether those lawsuits have pending motions for summary
judgment or whether the size of the claim for monetary relief in any of those cases is likely to
push an otherwise acceptable “composite score” into the range requiring the posting of a letter of
credit. 2016 Rule, 81 Fed. Reg. at 76,073. See also Dkt. 65-3 at 3 (Gunderson Decl. ¶ 12)
(making similarly general assertions). Similarly, although Johnson asserts that CAPPS schools
“have been required to submit teach-out plans” in the past, Dkt. 65-2 at 5 (Johnson Decl. ¶ 22),
he does not say that any such demand is “likely” in the near future or that, even if it was, that the
re-calculation of that school’s “composite score” would require the posting of a letter of credit.
24
See also Dkt. 65-3 at 3 (Gunderson Decl. ¶ 13) (same). And, finally, he asserts that CAPPS
“schools have gainful employment programs that could become ineligible for Title IV,” Dkt. 65-
2 at 5 (Johnson Decl. ¶ 23) (emphasis added); see also Dkt. 65-3 at 3 (Gunderson Decl. ¶ 14)
(same), but that assertion is—on its face—too speculative to support preliminary relief. See Wis.
Gas Co., 758 F.2d at 674.
CAPPS has failed to demonstrate, moreover, that its members would be without a remedy
if subject to an unlawful or arbitrary and capricious direction to post a letter of credit. At oral
argument, CAPPS did not dispute that the APA, 5 U.S.C. § 706(2), would provide a cause of
action, but argued that “the mere recalculation of the composite score requires notifying state
agencies with possibly profound consequences” and added that “there [is] no guarantee the state
agencies will [be willing to] wait until the outcome of” the APA action before taking adverse
action against a school with an unacceptable composite score. Dkt. 75 at 36. That concern—
without evidence that any CAPPS member will likely receive an unacceptable “composite score”
due to the operation of the 2016 Rule and that a state agency will likely take adverse action
before the school can obtain relief under the APA—is far too speculative to support a finding
that any CAPPS member is “likely” to sustain an irreparable loss if the financial responsibility
provision is not preliminarily enjoined. Chaplaincy of Full Gospel Churches, 454 F.3d at 297–
98 (“speculative” injury insufficient to support preliminary injunction).
Finally, CAPPS argues that the automatic triggers violate the rights of its members to
procedural due process, Dkt. 65 at 41, and that any related injury is, accordingly, “per se
irreparable,” id. at 43. On the present record, however, it is far from clear that an aggrieved
school would lack any opportunity to contest or to refute the Department’s conclusions. See,
e.g., 2016 Rule, 81 Fed. Reg. at 76,074 (discussing challenges relating to the cohort default rate);
25
id. at 76,006 (“an institution may show (1) that a reportable event no longer exists, has been
resolved, or that it has insurance that will cover debts and liabilities that arise at any time from
that triggering event; or (2) that the amount claimed in a lawsuit . . . exceeds the potential
recovery the claimant may receive”). Indeed, CAPPS merely asserts that “the ability to contest a
trigger exists on very narrow grounds” and “only for some, not all, of the triggers.” Dkt. 72 at
25. That may be true, but the Court cannot discern whether any CAPPS member faces an
imminent threat that it will be forced to post a letter of credit based on some set of facts that
might escape review under the Financial Responsibility Provision. And, even if CAPPS had
shown that at least one of its members might be required to obtain a letter of credit without an
opportunity to contest the Secretary’s decision, it has not shown that its members have the type
of interest in participating in the Title IV program that even implicates the Due Process Clause.
See Ass’n of Accredited Cosmetology Schs. v. Alexander, 979 F.2d 859, 867 (D.C. Cir. 1992)
(noting that a “Program Participation Agreement confers upon member schools no legally
protectible interest in . . . continued eligibility” for a Title IV program). Absent any such
evidence, or argument, the Court cannot conclude that CAPPS has demonstrated that it, or any of
its members, is likely to suffer an imminent constitutional injury.
The Court, accordingly, concludes that CAPPS has failed to carry its burden of showing
that it, or one of its members, is entitled preliminarily to enjoin the Financial Responsibility
Provision.
C. Repayment Rate Provision
Next, CAPPS seeks preliminarily to enjoin the Repayment Rate Provision. Under that
provision, “the Secretary calculates a proprietary [school’s] loan repayment rate[] for the cohort
of borrowers who entered repayment on their [Title IV loans] at any time during the two-year
26
cohort period.” 2016 Rule, 81 Fed. Reg at 76,070. If that calculation shows “that the median
borrower has not either fully repaid . . . or made loan payments sufficient to reduce by at least
one dollar the outstanding balance of each of the borrower’s [Title IV loans] received for
enrollment [at] the [school], the [school] must, in all of its promotional materials that are made
available to prospective or enrolled students, . . . include a loan repayment warning in a form,
place, and manner prescribed by the Secretary in a notice published in the Federal Register.” Id.
at 76,071. Unless otherwise specified in the forthcoming regulation, the warning language must
provide: “U.S. Department of Education Warning: A majority of recent student loan borrowers at
this school are not paying down their loans.” Id. To date, the Department has yet to promulgate
a rule specifying the form, place and manner for the required notice. Dkt. 69 at 15 (noting that
“the Department has not yet published any notice that specifies the form, place, and manner that
would be required for such warnings”).
CAPPS raises a host of challenges to this provision, both statutory and constitutional. It
argues that the Secretary lacked statutory authority to adopt the rule; that it was adopted in
violation of the APA; and that it will violate the First Amendment rights of those schools
required to provide the mandated warning. See Dkt. 65 at 31–35. Once again, however, the
Court declines to reach the merits because CAPPS has failed to establish that it has standing or
that it or any member faces an imminent threat of irreparable injury.
1. Standing
As with the Financial Responsibility Provision, in order to establish associational
standing to challenge the Repayment Rate Provision, CAPPS must show that “at least one
specifically-identified member has suffered [or will suffer] an injury-in-fact.” Am. Chemistry
Council, 468 F.3d at 820. At the preliminary injunction stage, this means that CAPPS bears the
27
burden of establishing “a ‘substantial likelihood’” that it will be able to prove that an identified
member will suffer an injury as a result of the Repayment Rate Provision. Food & Water Watch,
Inc., 808 F.3d at 913. It has failed to do so.
CAPPS submitted seven declarations in support of its motion, yet only one—the Johnson
declaration—even mentions the Repayment Disclosure Pule, and that declaration fails to meet
CAPPS’s burden. It merely asserts (1) that the 2016 Rule requires for-profit, participating
schools, “in certain circumstances[,] to include in all promotional materials a loan repayment rate
warning,” and (2) that “[a]ny visitor of a school’s website or reader of its promotional materials
will unjustifiably view the institution[] as being financially unstable and ill-equipped to prepare
[its] students to succeed financially upon graduation.” Dkt. 65-2 at 6 (Johnson Decl. ¶¶ 29–30).
The declaration does not identify a single member school with a repayment rate that is
sufficiently low that the school faces a concrete threat that it will be required to provide the
mandated notice. And, indeed, the declaration does not even posit that some unidentified
member school faces such a threat. Because CAPPS has failed to offer any evidence that any
specific member school is likely to be subject to the challenged provision, it has failed to carry
its burden of establishing a substantial likelihood that it has standing to challenge the Repayment
Rate Provision.
2. Irreparable Injury
CAPPS’s claim to irreparable injury is on even weaker ground. To start, absent evidence
that any specific CAPPS member is likely to find itself subject to the new rule, CAPPS cannot
establish irreparable injury. At oral argument, moreover, the Department removed any doubt
regarding the risk that a CAPPS member school is likely to be harmed if the Court does not
preliminarily enjoin the Repayment Rate Provision. As noted above, the 2016 Rule expressly
28
contemplates that the Department will publish a notice in the Federal Register regarding the
form, place, and manner of the required notice. See 2016 Rule, 81 Fed. Reg. at 76,071 (noting
that the warning will be “in a form, place, and manner prescribed by the Secretary in a notice
published in the Federal Register). At oral argument, the Court asked whether the Department
would enforce the Repayment Rate Disclosure Provision before that notice is issued, and the
Department represented—in unqualified terms—that it will not take any enforcement action
before the notice issues. Dkt. 75 at 122–23. That is unlikely to occur anytime soon, moreover,
because the Department further represented the notice will “go through notice and comment
rulemaking,” id. at 52, and will not take effect for at least thirty days following the promulgation
of a final notice. See 5 U.S.C. § 553(d).
Plaintiff asserts three potential injuries relevant to this provision: “reputational injury,
financial harm, and deprivation of their constitutional rights.” Dkt. 65 at 35. All of these harms,
however, turn on the premise that at least one member school will be subject to the Repayment
Rate Provision, and on the (incorrect) premise that the Department will enforce the provision in
the near future. At oral argument, CAPPS suggested that First Amendment harms are sui generis
and that the mere risk of future enforcement may be enough to pose an irreparable injury. Dkt.
75 at 28. But the cases that recognize that type of harm are premised on the chilling effect that a
speech-regulating rule might have. See, e.g., Chaplaincy of Full Gospel Churches, 454 F.3d at
301 (in order to make out claim of irreparable harm, “moving parties must also establish they are
or will be engaging in constitutionally protected behavior to demonstrate that the allegedly
impermissible government action would chill allowable individual conduct”). A risk of criminal
prosecution for marching in parade, for example, might dissuade plaintiffs from attending, and
that chill could provide a basis for seeking preliminary relief. This case, however, is different in
29
kind: CAPPS has failed to even identify any speech that could be chilled by the Repayment Rate
Provision. In short, no substantial First Amendment issue will be presented until a member
school faces some risk that it will be required to issue the warnings, and that risk is non-existent
at least until the Department promulgates the required notice.
The Court, accordingly, concludes that CAPPS has not made the requisite showing to
entitle it to a preliminary injunction with respect to the Repayment Rate Disclosure Provision.
Borrower Defense Provision
The final portion of the 2016 Rule that CAPPS seeks to enjoin is the Borrower Defense
Provision. As State Amici note, the parties at times conflate two distinct processes. Dkt. 67 at
49. The first process is addressed in the 2016 Rule, and it amends the way in which student
borrowers may assert “defenses” to repayment of loans made to them by the Department under
Title IV, see 20 U.S.C. § 1087e(h). Under the 2016 Rule, student-borrowers may now raise
“defenses” to repayment affirmatively; that is, they need not default on a loan and wait to assert a
defense to repayment in a collection action. 2016 Rule, 81 Fed. Reg. at 76,083. In addition, the
2016 Rule changes the standard for what constitutes a defense to repayment. In the past, student-
borrowers could only invoke defenses to repayment premised on violations of state law. 34
C.F.R. § 685.206(c)(1). But, under the 2016 Rule, they may now rely on a new, federal standard
applicable to loans dispersed on or after July 1, 2017. 2016 Rule, 81 Fed. Reg. at 76,083. That
new standard is available if (1) “the borrower . . . has obtained against the school a nondefault,
favorable contested judgment based on State or Federal law in a court or administrative
tribunal;” (2) “the school the borrower received a Direct Loan to attend failed to perform its
obligations under the terms of a contract with the student;” or (3) “the school or any of its
representatives . . . made a substantial misrepresentation . . . that the borrower reasonably relied
on to the borrower’s detriment when the borrower decided to attend, or to continue attending, the
30
school or decided to take out a Direct Loan.” Id. Finally, the new Borrower Defense Provision
authorizes “the Secretary [to] initiate a process to determine whether a group of borrowers,
identified by the Secretary, has a borrower defense.” Id. at 76,084.
The second process begins where the first ends and contemplates that the Department,
having relieved a student-borrower, in whole or in part, of his or her obligation to repay a Direct
Loan, may seek to recover the amount due from the student’s school. 34 C.F.R. § 685.206(c)(3).
Among other potential theories of recoupment, the 2016 Rule provides that “the borrower is
deemed to have assigned to, and relinquished in favor of, the Secretary any right to a loan refund
(up to the amount discharged) that the borrower may have by contract or applicable law with
respect to the loan or the contract for educational services for which the loan was received,
against the school.” NPRM, 81 Fed. Reg. at 39,353. As the Department explained in the final
2016 Rule, it intends to “undertake any action to recover against a school under specific
procedures that are being developed and will ensure an opportunity for the school to present its
defense and [to] be heard.” 2016 Rule, 81 Fed. Reg. at 75,960. Those procedures “will be
comparable to that provided” under existing regulations “for actions to find, or to limit, suspend
or terminate participation of, a school;” “[t]he hearing will be conducted by a Department
official who is independent of the component of the Department bringing the action;” and “[a]ny
decision reached in these proceedings would be reviewable under section 706 of the APA.” Id.
Although the 2016 Rule permits “the school of the borrower” to offer certain “evidence or
argument” in the proceeding between the student-borrower and the Secretary, id. at 76,084, the
Department has represented to the Court that it will not invoke collateral estoppel to bind the
school with respect to findings made in that proceeding, Dkt. 75 at 83–84.
31
CAPPS challenges both processes. It challenges the Department’s authority to adopt the
new Borrower Defense Provision and argues that, in any event, the provision is arbitrary and
capricious and not the product of reasoned decision making under the APA. Dkt. 65 at 38–43.
And it argues that both steps in the process violate the Due Process Clause, Article III, and the
Seventh Amendment “because Department officials are responsible for both prosecuting and
hearing cases,” and because “agency officials” are authorized “to adjudicate what in essence is a
private right.” Id. at 43. Once again, however, the Court declines to reach the merits of
CAPPS’s arguments because it has yet to demonstrate that CAPPS has standing to challenge any
final rule and has not carried its burden of establishing irreparable injury.
1. Standing and Ripeness
To the extent CAPPS challenges the standards and procedures applicable to the
proceeding between the student-borrower and the Secretary, it has yet to show that it has
standing. As clarified at oral argument, that proceeding is not binding on the relevant school; it
binds only the student-borrower. Dkt. 75 at 6–8. The question, then, is—if the new rules
governing the process between the student-borrower and the Department are not set aside—what
“concrete and particularized” and “actual and imminent” injury, Lujan, 504 U.S. at 560, will any
CAPPS member likely suffer? Or, more precisely because we are at the preliminary injunction
phase, what has CAPPS offered to show that there is a “substantial likelihood” that it will be able
to carry its burden of proving that at least one identified CAPPS member will suffer a concrete
and imminent injury? Food & Water Watch, Inc., 808 F.3d at 913.
At least at this stage of the proceeding, CAPPS has failed to carry this burden. Notably,
not one of the seven declarations that CAPPS has submitted so much as mentions the Borrower
Defense Provision. Not a single school has indicated that the rule will affect its conduct in any
32
way or that a proceeding between a student-borrower and the Secretary is likely to have any
effect on the school. It is possible that CAPPS might eventually show that the proceeding
between a student-borrower and the Secretary—which is not binding on the school—will cause a
member school some cognizable injury-in-fact. Thus far, however, it has not done so.
To the extent that CAPPS, instead, challenges the Department’s authority to bring a
recoupment action against a CAPPS member school, that challenge faces both standing and
ripeness difficulties. Ripeness is a justiciability doctrine designed “‘to prevent the courts,
through avoidance of premature adjudication, from entangling themselves in abstract
disagreements over administrative policies.’” Nat’l Park Hospitality Ass’n v. Dep’t of the
Interior, 538 U.S. 803, 807–08 (2003) (quoting Abbott Labs. v. Gardner, 387 U.S. 136, 148–49
(1967)); see also Devia v. Nuclear Regulatory Comm’n, 492 F.3d 421, 424 (D.C. Cir. 2007).
“The ripeness doctrine is ‘drawn both from Article III limitations on judicial power and from
prudential reasons for refusing to exercise jurisdiction.’” Nat’l Park Hospitality Ass’n, 538 U.S.
at 808 (quoting Reno v. Catholic Social Servs., Inc., 509 U.S. 43, 57, n. 18 (1993)).
“Determining whether an administrative action is ripe for judicial review requires” the Court to
“evaluate (1) the fitness of the issues for judicial decision and (2) the hardship to the parties of
withholding court consideration.” Id. (citing Abbott Labs, 387 U.S. at 149).
For the most part, the standing and ripeness issues raised by CAPPS’s challenge to the
Department’s recoupment authority overlap. As the Department explained in the final 2016
Rule, it is still “develop[ing]” procedures to govern actions “to recover against a school” based
on loan obligations the Department decides to relieve under the new Borrower Defense
Provision. 2016 Rule, 81 Fed. Reg at 75,960. Before such an action could commence, a student-
borrower from a CAPPS member school would need to institute a borrower-defense action; the
33
Department would need to decide that action in favor of the student; the Department would need
to develop procedures governing a recoupment action; and the Department would need to bring
such an action. The Court cannot discern on the present record whether—and, if so, when—a
CAPPS member would be subject to a proceeding to recoup amounts foregone in a borrower-
defense proceeding.
Even putting this threshold difficulty aside, CAPPS has yet to demonstrate that its
challenge to the recoupment process is ripe for decision. To take one example, with the evidence
now before it, the Court cannot determine whether the Department might seek to recover from a
participating school based on a violation of the new, federal standard, or whether it would simply
seek to recover based on the theory that it is subrogated to, or has been assigned, whatever rights
the student borrower may have had against the school under state law. See 2016 Rule, 81 Fed.
Reg. at 76,086. To take another example, CAPPS argues that the recoupment procedure is
unconstitutional because the same “Department officials are responsible for both prosecuting and
hearing cases,” Dkt. 65 at 65, but the Court cannot evaluate that premise before the Department
has finalized the rules that will govern those proceedings, see 2016 Rule, 81 Fed. Reg at 75,960.
Because these questions and others that bear on CAPPS’s challenge remain unanswered, the
Court concludes that CAPPS has not shown a “substantial likelihood” that it will be able to
establish that the challenge is fit for review.6
6
To be sure, portions of CAPPS’s challenge might be; to the extent CAPPS argues that the
Department is entirely without authority to seek recoupment, for example, a challenge to the
provision assigning the borrower’s right to a loan refund to the Secretary might be fit for
adjudication. But, even as to that more limited challenge, CAPPS has not carried its burden of
showing that an identified member school faces an actual threat of injury.
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Finally, given the undisputed availability of APA review of any final recoupment
decision, see 2016 Rule, 81 Fed. Reg. at 95,960, it has not shown that the association or its
members will face a significant “hardship” if review is postponed.
2. Irreparable Injury
Even if CAPPS has standing to bring a ripe challenge to some portion of the Borrower
Defense Provision, CAPPS makes no plausible claim to irreparable injury. As noted above, none
of CAPPS’s declarations even mentions the Borrower Defense Provision and, as far as the Court
can discern on the current record, there is no prospect that the Department will initiate a
recoupment action against a CAPPS member school in the near future. Moreover, even if the
Department were to do so, CAPPS does not dispute that the Department’s decision would be
subject to APA review, and a harm that can be remedied under the APA is not irreparable.7
At oral argument, CAPPS suggested that, even if the result of a proceeding between a
student-borrower and the Secretary is not binding on the student’s school, a finding by the
Secretary that the student should be relieved of its obligation to repay a student loan due to a
breach of contract or a misrepresentation by the school “would obviously have a reputational
damage” to the school. Dkt. 75 at 9. That assertion, however, is once again unsupported by any
evidence and is far from self-evident. Indeed, when asked at oral argument, the Department
represented that its decisions in proceedings between student-borrowers and the Department will
not be published in the Federal Register. Dkt. 75 at 84; see also id. at 9. And, although it is
7
CAPPS does assert in its brief that the provision will require CAPPS member schools to
“expend substantial transition costs to comply with these new regulations;” which will cause a
“diversion of resources from schools’ mission of educating students;” and will cause a
“regulatory whiplash,” if the Department later rescinds the rule. Dkt. 65 at 43–44. None of that,
however, is supported by any evidence, nor is it self-evident that any CAPPS members will
sustain any loss related to the Borrower Defense Provision in the near future.
35
possible that such a decision might be subject to a FOIA request, id. at 84, it is speculative—at
best—to suggest that a student from an unidentified CAPPS member school might someday
bring a successful borrower defense claim that reflects poorly on that school; that someone
would obtain that decision under FOIA or some other disclosure statute; and that the disclosure
of the decision would cause the school some material, reputational damage above and beyond
whatever accusations of wrongdoing are already public. At least on the present record, this
theory does not demonstrate that type of “actual and not theoretical” harm necessary to support a
preliminary injunction. Wis. Gas Co., 758 F.2d at 674.
The Court, therefore, must deny CAPPS’s motion with respect to the Borrower Defense
Provision.
* * *
In sum, the Court concludes that CAPPS has failed to carry its burden of demonstrating
that it is entitled to the “extraordinary remedy” of a preliminary injunction. Winter, 556 U.S. at
24. With respect to many of CAPPS’s challenges, the Court is not convinced that the association
has shown a “substantial likelihood” that it has standing to sue. Food & Water Watch, Inc., 808
F.3d at 913. With respect to some challenges, that conclusion is clear, while it is less certain as
to others. But, as to each of the challenges that CAPPS raises in the pending motion, it falls well
short of the “high standard for irreparable injury” that the Court of Appeals “has set.”
Chaplaincy of Full Gospel Churches, 454 F.3d at 297. Because the likelihood that the movant
will suffer an irreparable injury is the sine qua non for issuance of a preliminary injunction, that
flaw is dispositive. See, e.g., Chaplaincy of Full Gospel Churches, 454 F.3d at 297; Achagzai,
2016 WL 471274, at *3–4; Texas Children’s Hosp., 76 F. Supp. 3d at 241–42; Trudeau v. FTC,
36
384 F. Supp. 2d at 296. The Court will, accordingly, deny CAPPS’s motion for a preliminary
injunction and set a schedule for cross-motions for summary judgment.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Plaintiff’s renewed motion to for preliminary injunction, Dkt.
65, is hereby DENIED.
SO ORDERED.
/s/ Randolph D. Moss
RANDOLPH D. MOSS
United States District Judge
Date: October 16, 2018
37