A 32-year-old disabled vet thought ITT Tech was his ticket out of poverty — his story shows everything wrong with for-profit colleges
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(Brandon Straub; Skye Gould/Business Insider)

It’s not easy to reach Brandon Straub these days. The 32-year-old doesn’t own a cellphone, let alone a landline, and recently, his days revolve around finding buyers for the belongings he's selling on Craigslist. With $30,000 in student loans, among other debts, he’s planning to file for bankruptcy.

Straub, a veteran of the war in Afghanistan, is one of nearly 40,000 students affected by one of the largest collapses of a for-profit college. On September 6, ITT Technical Institute abruptly closed. Straub and his classmates became collateral damage of the school’s drive to increase enrollment and profits as it sought to take advantage of slackening federal regulations.

Now living in the Toledo, Ohio, suburb of Northwood, Straub collects disability payments for injuries he suffered during his service. He's attempting to provide a stable life for his six children and fiancé, and his enrollment at ITT was supposed to be his ticket out of poverty. Instead, he’s saddled with an associate's degree he’s not sure is worth anything.

Straub was especially looking forward to his graduation ceremony on October 4.

"I wanted my kids to be there so I can show them you can still go to school no matter how old you are — you can still get a degree. Give them a little bit of inspiration, you know?" he told Business Insider.

With ITT's doors locked, that ceremony will never take place.

ITT’s collapse is a stark example of an industry that grew to be worth about $35 billion, largely fueled by federal loans and aggressive marketing to poor, minority, and veteran students like Straub.

From the Air Force to ITT

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(Brandon Straub hugs one of his sons while home from serving time in the US Air Force.Brandon Straub)
Before Straub decided to head to ITT, he served in the Air Force from 2004 to 2013.

His time spent working on jets there left him with several injuries. His neck is full of titanium plates. His pain is chronic. His back hurts, as do his knees. And emotionally, he experiences symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder.

"I went to the VA. They told me I didn’t have PTSD," Straub said before explaining his disability payments do cover relief for clinical depression and anxiety.

He relies on these payments from the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) for a substantial portion of his income. He knew they wouldn’t be enough to support his family, though. So he began to think about his next steps in civilian life.

Straub has built every computer he's ever owned. So, while living with his parents after the service, a commercial for ITT Tech caught his eye. It touted its computer trade program. After attending the Community College of the Air Force, he was nine credit hours shy of completing an associate’s degree in mechanical sciences before being discharged. He wanted a less physically demanding tech profession. The ITT ad worked.