KWMU (Missouri)
By Kameel Stanley
September 23, 2015
Immigration
advocates say some colleges and universities in Missouri are
discriminating against undocumented students by charging them higher
tuition.
Students
and organizers rallied Monday outside St. Louis Community College’s
downtown office, demanding officials reverse course.
Organizer
David Nehrt-Flores, of Missouri Immigrant and Refugee Advocates, said
technically the schools don’t have to raise tuition, but are doing so
because they are
worried about state funding.
“We
want these universities and colleges to show the leadership of building
more access to higher education for these students so that they can
continue their education,”
Nehrt-Flores said.
But the community college’s general counsel, Mary Nelson, said officials have no choice.
Earlier
this year, lawmakers added language to a bill that says undocumented
students who live in Missouri must pay the same higher tuition rates as
international students.
The students used to qualify for in-state tuition if they were
classified as DACA students (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals).
The college isn’t willing to jeopardize its funding by going against what the law says, Nelson said.
“I
do understand,” Nelson said Monday as the rally organizers handed over a
petition with more than 300 signatures. “The college has taken a very
aggressive position to
provide scholarships to address that very gap.”
St.
Louis Community College student Naomi Carranza, 18, gave a similar
batch of petitions to Gov. Jay Nixon’s office earlier this summer, after
the bill was first approved.
At
the time, the governor’s office said the language in the education bill
was not enforceable. Spokesman Scott Holste told St. Louis Public Radio
on Monday that the administration’s
stance hasn’t changed.
Despite
that, schools including the University of Missouri and St. Louis
Community College have notified students that their bills would be
higher.
Nelson said there are about 56 DACA students who are subject to the higher rates.
Carranza, who is studying nursing, is one of those. She said the higher rates are prohibitive for many students.
Compared to other schools, STLCC is still very affordable, Nelson said.
Tuition
for St. Louis area and Missouri students ranges from $100 to $150 a
credit hour, according to the college’s website. The rate for
international students is $215
a credit hour.
Nehrt-Flores said students will continue to rally, and hope to start a statewide conversation about the issue starts.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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