Born in Mexico and brought to the US by her parents when she was 1, Sara has lived in California most of her life. As an undocumented alien, you pay American tuition rates at East Los Angeles College at East Los Angeles College – $619 per semester, a fraction of the $5,286 charged to outgoing students.
Because of her immigration status, Sara is ineligible for Pelt grants and other student aid. Under the 2001 state law and the California Dream Act – Sara pays the state’s minimum tuition and receives college financial aid – she was able to pay for her education. Upon receiving his associate’s degree, he intends to transfer to a campus setting or UC Campus and major in business administration.
But Friday his dreams felt more, after the Trump Administration surprised California, Appending the State Laws that provide in-state tuition rates and financial aid to unregistered students are illegal. The suit threatens the higher education goals of about 80,000 undocumented college students, many of whom came to the state as children.
“After I get my degree, I want to use it to work in California and contribute to my community,” said Sara, who asked not to give her last name because she fears federal prosecution. “How does it hurt anyone?”
The Department of Justice on Thursday California and its three public higher education programs, seeking to overturn a decades-old law that maintains the low tuition provided by the state’s high schools. The Trump administration has also sued to repeal the California Dream Act, which is alleged to have given illegal preferential financial aid to non-citizens.
The move is the latest in a series of similar legislative actions the federal government has taken this year against state-run jurisdictions including Texas, Kentucky, Illinois, Oklahoma and Minnesota.
US Attyry. Gen. Pam Bondi said the government took action because California has a law that “cannot be honored by federal law.”
The country’s leaders agreed, saying they would protect the laws.
“The DoJ has filed three dramatic, politically motivated lawsuits against California in one week. Lucky, lucky, izyy Gardon, said Gov. Gavin Newloom’s spokesman. The other suits challenge the proposed 50-year renewal effort and the state’s law to prevent federal agents from hiding their identities with masks.
While other states have faced similar suits, California — with the largest number of undocumented students in the nation — stands as Trump’s biggest test case. California has already prided itself on its public higher education system and its pioneering support of immigrant communities.
“It’s another attack on immigrants. So not surprising,” said Attyry. Gen. Rob Bonta, who says he will “review the case and identify any appropriate responses to it.” Bonta noted that with education policies and support services, California is ‘making its own decision. We have 10 kingdoms. ” He said that the state “uses our money and follows all the rules, and that Trump “really wants to flow the policy of cities and countries.”
In 2001, lawmakers passed Ab 540, which provides car tuition rates to all students who graduate from California high schools after attending at least three years. The California Dream Act passed a decade later and opened state aid, including CAL grants, to undocumented students. It was later expanded to include students who were citizens but had an undocumented parent.
The Trump Administration’s challenge to California’s Tuition and aid regulations centers on a Federal law that states that US citizens without an educational permit if they are a citizen of the United States or the United States are eligible to be a citizen or a national.
Legal experts have debated whether the Federal law affects California’s welfare and welfare laws because the price tags apply to citizens and non-citizens.
Critics of Trump’s actions also say the law does not specifically address tuition rates. Some courts have interpreted the term “benefit” to include cheaper tuition.
Institutions of higher education maintain that their learning practices comply with the law.
“California’s community colleges are open institutions dedicated to serving all students. California’s community colleges will follow all legal obligations and participate fully in our federal process,” said Chancellor Sonya Christian.
Community colleges enroll the majority of undocumented immigrant students in the state. Between 12,000 and 14,000 such students attend CSUS and UCS.
“While we can’t comment on an ongoing lawsuit, our commitment remains the same: We will continue to ensure that all students who qualify under federal law have access to an affordable, high-quality education,” Christian said. “We will also continue to fully comply with all current federal and state requirements.”
For students like Sara, the case stirs more uncertainty in a year that she says has “shaken” immigrant communities, including her relatives who are citizens and legal permanent residents.
“We have Ice Raids, we have people who pick up on the street and in their homes. Now they don’t want to teach us too?” he said. “This is my home, not the place I didn’t remember where I was born.”
Juan, an undocumented student at Cal State Northridge, shares similar experiences. He also traveled as a young child with his Mexican parents to the US and paid tuition.
“Even with that, it’s expensive — you pay for gas, books, computers,” said Juan, who asked that his last name not be used.
Juan has an older sibling who was approved for the limited act of childhood immigration, which provides labor authorization to people who immigrated to the US as children and do not have legal status. The program is very closed to new age applications, so his funding options are limited.
“I help my parents, siblings and friends with odd jobs – running social media accounts, housework, pet sitting,” she said. “That money can help pay for the lower tuition rates. It can’t cover the prices.”
At CSU Northridge, the In-Stature rate per semester is $3,925, compared to $10,585 for non-California residents.
Ju Hong, who attended UC Berkeley as an undocumented student and directs the UCLA Preade Creades Resource Center, is “destroyed” by the suit.
“I think we’re going to go back,” said Hong, who was born in South Korea. “Immigrant Youth and Students and organizers win a major victory with AB 540 Despite decades of attacks. This is an attack on immigrant students.”
Jack Feng, a UCLA graduate student and immigration rights student, said the moment calls for broad support from undocumented students across UC.
He said C “should join the state of California in cracking down on these attacks.”
“UC should increase legal legal services, mental health services, and emergency financial assistance for undocumented students,” said Feng, who is the external president of UCLA’s undergraduate and graduate program.
Ahilan arulantham, director of immigration law and policy at UCLA Law School, said California’s study law does not appear to violate the law of the Federal Administration using its challenge.
“Federal law denies certain benefits to undocumented students based on residency across the country. But Ab 540 does not qualify individuals based on residency,” he said. “Instead it binds eligibility to whether students have graduated from high school and received three years of high school in the state.”
He said the difference between residency and high school graduation is a legitimate point.
Arulanantham explained that the In-State course is open to all students, regardless of legal status. But all students must meet California high school attendance and graduation requirements — even if they currently live in another state.
“There are many citizens who were eligible for in-state scholarships under the residency-based regime – but who are eligible based on graduation criteria,” she said.
Arulantham said that California law sometimes helped more students with legal documents than those without.
A 2012 report from the University of California tracked recipients of AB 540 from 2002 to 2011, in those years, US citizens were more likely to use the law than undocumented immigrants.
In the 2010-2011 academic year, the report said, 1,260 enrolled UC students received California resident tuition rates compared to 620 “non-enrolled” students.
UC said it did not make a public report of the latest data.
California law has precedents. The Supreme Court of the State upholds us in 2010 after finding out the students who leave. The US Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal of the case.
In those cases, the justices said undocumented immigrants were receiving special treatment not because of their immigration status but because they had access to California schools. They said US citizens who graduated from public schools had the same opportunity.
Thursday’s complaint was filed in the Eastern District of California. In June, after the Trump Administration struck down the law in Texas, the state agreed to stop offering tuition to undocumented people. Kentucky and Oklahoma also said they would not protect their tuition laws.
Undocumented students joined the Kentucky lawsuit to fight to keep the law in place and are trying to do the same in Oklahoma. Illinois and Minnesota have said they will challenge Trump’s lawsuits against their states. No cases have come to a conclusion.
The hours of the writer’s staff seem to be devoted to this story.
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