AP
May 5, 2015
Young
immigrants granted deferred deportation status by the Obama
administration are eligible for in-state college tuition, a Maricopa
County judge ruled Tuesday.
The
decision from Superior Court Judge Arthur Anderson comes in a lawsuit
filed by former Attorney General Tom Horne against the Maricopa County
Community College District.
Horne contended that so-called "dreamers" offered deferred action
status were not legally present in the U.S. and could not get state
benefits because of a 2006 voter-enacted law known as Proposition 300.
But
Anderson's ruling said Proposition 300 doesn't bar public benefits for
immigrants lawfully in the U.S., and the federal government considers
recipients of deferred action lawfully present. Thus, they can get lower in-state tuition, he
ruled.
"Federal
law, not state law, determines who is lawfully present in the U.S.,"
Anderson wrote. "The state cannot establish subcategories of `lawful
presence,' picking and
choosing when it will consider DACA recipients lawfully present and
when it will not."
The
ruling only applies to Maricopa County Community Colleges and does not
set statewide legal precedent. But it could help back up arguments by
other colleges. Pima Community
College offers in-state tuition for deferred action students, and state
university regents are considering a lower tuition rate for them that
is above in-state rates.
"Obviously
for the universities and for community colleges districts right now,
it's certainly valid for them to view this as something that does has
some precedential
value to them in terms of the fact that it is construing a state
statute," said Lynne Adams, the attorney who represented the college
district in the case.
President
Barack Obama created the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or
DACA, program in 2012 for young people who had been brought to the
United States illegally
as children.
The
community college district began offering lower in-state tuition to DACA recipients shortly after Obama's action, and Horne challenged it in
court.
College
district Chancellor Rufus Glasper said he knows the state disagreed
with the district's decision to offer lower tuition to dreamers. "And
what we asked for initially
is let someone independent of the two different parties make that
judgment, and the judge did that today," Glasper said.
Enrollment
dropped by more than 10,000 students when the district implemented
state rules on legal status required by Proposition 300, he said. Costs
went from $91 per
credit hour to $314 credit hour, with full-time student taking 30 units
per year.
Glasper
said about 1,200 students are getting lower tuition under the DACA guidelines and more are out there. "So we believe that our students
benefit from this, and I
believe those other additional DACA students out there can see this as
an opportunity and return back to our campuses," he said.
A spokeswoman for current Attorney General Mark Brnovich was working to get a comment on the ruling.
The
ruling comes one day after the state university Board of Regents
advanced a proposal to provide dreamers with lower non-resident tuition.
But the regents' plan falls
short of offering in-state tuition, and they contend that requiring
deferred action students to pay 150 percent of that rate covers the
complete cost of their education without using state money.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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