Being the DOA of a for-profit college, it is imperative that we as a college are staying in compliance. Not even for the fact of "getting caught" but like it said in the training (paraphrasing) students base their decisions on the reputation of the college. That being said, full disclosure shouldn't be a punishment but an asset. If a college, non-profit or for-profit, has trained faculty, staff and administrators, there isn't anything to hide and, in most occasions, has a strong program/curriculum to offer students. Doing the right thing always pays off in the end. Does anyone else believe that some schools should be excluded from certain criteria as far as regulations is concerned...based on profit status? I understand that some colleges do not have the same strict regulations or guidelines as for-profit institutions. Quite frankly, and this is totally my opinion, but I'm glad we are regulated like we are. It weeds out the institutions that are in this for the wrong reasons...and it keeps colleges on their toes to give the students what they need to succeed. Sorry for the novel.