Surety Bonds for Louisiana Proprietary Schools

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Louisiana proprietary schools

Louisiana proprietary schools are private businesses offering vocational or occupational courses, and students do not receive academic degrees. These schools need to be licensed and bonded to operate legally.

The state of Louisiana’s Board of Regents regulates proprietary schools and issues their licenses. Anyone who represents the school, also called solicitors, agents, or recruiters, also needs to be licensed by the Board. While proprietary schools can’t issue academic degrees, they can award certificates or diplomas. Proprietary schools accredited by a federally recognized accreditation body can offer Associate in Occupational Studies degrees.

Applicants for a proprietary school license need to submit all the information listed on the Board’s checklist, including:

  • Completed application form PSC-1
  • Notarized commitment statement, form PSC-2
  • Appropriate documentation from the Secretary of State validating business’s legal structure
  • Current audited financial sheet prepared by a licensed CPA
  • List of equipment available for use in classes
  • Copies of enrollment agreements and refund policies approved by the Proprietary Schools Commission
  • Copies of all advertising materials and diplomas or certificates
  • School catalog
  • $10,000 surety bond for Certificate of Registration, form PSC-3
  • Blanket surety bond for all solicitors, or individual solicitor bonds
  • $2,000 license fee
  • $100 fee per solicitor
  • Outline and fee schedule for each course of study

This is not a complete list�the Board’s website contains all the information you need to submit, including application and bond forms. Applications must be submitted at least 60 days prior to the next scheduled Board meeting, which they list on their website.

Louisiana proprietary schools need a $10,000 surety bond as protection for their students. Should the school close before students complete their course of study, resulting in losses of tuition and fees, they can file a claim against the surety bond to recover those losses. Similarly, school recruiters need a bond of $1,000—or a blanket bond covering all the school’s solicitors—to protect students should the recruiter misrepresent the school or the credentials it offers consumers. If a proprietary schools opts for a blanket bond, each recruiter needs $1,000 of coverage—five recruiters means a $5,000 bond is required.

See the Board of Regents’ website to get familiar with laws for proprietary schools and solicitors to ensure you don’t engage in any practices that may result in a claim against your surety bond.

Ready to get bonded in Louisiana? Single Source Insurance can help!�

Photo by�Mikael Kristenson on Unsplash

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