On December 14, 2007 Judge Gaul presented University of Northern Virginia LLC’s president, Mr. Ho, to Myers’ students and the media at Myers University in Midtown, Cleveland, Ohio.
Mr. Ho’s English is a bit difficult to follow, but what I made out was that Mr. Ho had in the past been a professor, and he still considers his relationship to the various for profit schools he operates as that of a professor – Mr. Ho is not currently teaching as a professor, but is negotiating the take over of the Myers Board of Trustees. As of December 20 Mr. Ho had appointed eight of his candidates to the “Board” with Judge Gaul’s approval.
Mr. Ho (center with glasses), and his associate Mr. Lee (on right with glasses and striped tie) went on to say that it was their intention to expand the student population at Myers by attracting foreign students – with a goal of about 2,500 students.
But what Mr. Ho did not explain – nor did Judge Gaul or anyone else explain - is how the involvement of UNVA (a for profit school) with Myers University (a not for profit school) made bottom line sense. After the media event, I asked Mr. Ho's Cleveland attorney, what the motivation was behind UNVA's interest in Myers. The attorney wasn't clear, or wouldn't say.
Why would a guy from North Virginia ( Mr. Ho) “donate” 2 million dollars to Myers University? Where was the payback? [2500 students times $15,750 per student for 42 hour credit program = $39 million]
After checking out the UNVA web sites, and Googling to pick up chatter about UNVA (and there is very,very little chatter – too little chatter), I am of the opinion that UNVA is a mechanism for foreigners with money to be admitted immediately into the United States – with their dependant families if they wish – and let them get a job.
Here’s how it works:
F1 visas are student visas [1] An F1 visa allows a foreigner to come into the United States – with dependant spouse and children if desired – and work. Being able to work makes it much more palatable and possible to pay tuition – presently $15,750.00. An F1 visa allows a person to stay in the US as long as they are enrolled in school “full time”. This can be years and years. Any age person can come in on an F1 visa. No social security or Medicaid is deducted from the salary of a worker with an F1 visa, you can read a discussion about tax deductions here [2]
F1 visa holders are not allowed to attend public school – unless they reimburse the public schools the cost associated with their attendance. This public school restriction (payment) applies only to students holding F-1 visas. The restriction does not apply to students attending public school on derivative visas, such as F-2, J-2 or H-4 visas. The restrictions also do not apply to students attending private schools on F-1 visas.
This means that the dependant children of F1 visa holders can attend public school free.
this [3] is the Hobson's MBA overview link to UNVA. here [4] is the College Board web site for UNVA – note that it lists only 10 students enrolled, and here [5] is a link to UNVA’s Beijing office – which I bet is just a collection point as I bet the Prague site is also.
The UNVA site is here [6] – it’s server was down a few days ago and today the Praque University site [7] is down – “page cannot be found”. I spoke with a friend who knows the ropes in the Slavic countries – he said the University of Zagreb [8] is free to Czech students, and pointed out that no one from Czech would pay 11,000.00 euros (UNVA’s fee for foreigners) for schooling if there was not something more to it than “school”.
In order to make bottom line financial sense, UNVA could divide the “tuition” payments – some of the money (enough to cover costs of teachers and the campus) going to the non-profit Myers and the rest of the money going to UNVA for “logistics”.
I predict that fewer and fewer Clevelanders will attend Myers; for two reasons – it is too expensive, and because UNVA will want to fill the roster with foreigners who pay UNVA for the “logistical” costs of getting them into the USA.
If Myers University becomes an F1 Visa Factory, as I suggest above, is it appropriate that our County Port Authority leave their 5.7 million loan in place? Or, since that loan was in default under Mr. Scaldini, should the Authority pull the money out?
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Links:
[1] http://travel.state.gov/visa/temp/types/types_1268.html
[2] http://www.askmehelpdesk.com/advice/t-10971.html
[3] http://www.mba.hobsons.com/organisation/1770/university_of_northern_virginia/institutionProfile
[4] http://collegesearch.collegeboard.com/search/CollegeDetail.jsp?collegeId=4732
[5] http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded.php?Number=227514
[6] http://www.unva.edu/faculty.htm
[7] http://www.unva.edu/prague/living.htm
[8] http://www.unizg.hr/homepage/
[9] http://smtp.realneo.us/system/files/Mr.-Ho-at-Myers-University-.jpg