Alta College, Inc.

Alta College, Inc., headquartered in Denver,[1] is a company that owns three for-profit schools - Westwood College, Westwood College Online, and Redstone College. The college was founded in 1953, as Radio and Television Repair Institute and became the Denver Institute of Technology in 1974. Kirk Riedinger and Jamie Turner acquired the company in 1987 and began expanding into technical programs. The school opened its first campus outside of Denver in Los Angeles, California in 1999.

Westwood College now has 17 campuses across California, Colorado, Georgia, Illinois, Texas and Virginia, as well as an online campus. Westwood College has 27 degree programs, including in business, design, technology, industrial services, justice and health care. More than 20,000 students have graduated from Westwood College. “Over 75 percent of adult Americans don’t have bachelor’s degrees,” Alta College co-founder Kirk Riedinger told the Denver Business Journal[2] in June 2002. “We offer career-focused education to prepare students who are launching a career, changing a career or enhancing a career. Our curriculum is constantly updated based on the industry and the feedback we receive.”

Westwood College has been the subject of lawsuits alleging that it misleads students and publishes false statistic, among other allegations, brought by several US states and the federal government.

2009 Lawsuit Settlement

On April 20, 2009, the United States Department of Justice announced that Alta Colleges had agreed to pay the U.S. government $7 million to resolve allegations under the False Claims Act that Alta's Texas schools submitted false claims for federal student aid funds. The college admitted no wrongdoing and was not required to change any of its practices.[3]

In January 2012 the Illinois attorney general's office announced it would sue Westwood college for misleading students.[4]

References

  1. "About Us." Westwood College. Retrieved on June 27, 2010.
  2. Wilson, Terry (2001-06-21). "TRiedinger, Turner head the class with Alta College". The Denver Business Journal. Retrieved 2009-10-19.
  3. , Department of Justice press release, 2009-4-20.
  4. , Chicago Tribune, January 18, 2012.
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