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Published: May 08, 2008 12:30 AM
Modified: May 08, 2008 12:46 PM

AG: Close colleges to illegal immigrants

The advice derails a movement to grant in-state tuition to graduates of N.C. high schools

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WHY NOW?

The state's universities have admitted illegal immigrants since 2004. Many of the community college campuses have also allowed them for years. Here's why this issue has come back up for debate:

* In 2007, an unverified complaint that a student was dismissed from a community college for being illegal prompted a new look at the system policy. The community colleges have long had an open-door admissions policy, but were allowed in 2004 to set their own regulations on illegal immigrants. About a third denied them.

* The system's attorney discovered a 1997 advisory letter from the office of then-attorney general and now Gov. Mike Easley saying community colleges cannot impose nonacademic criteria for admission. It does not specifically address the issue of illegal immigrants.

* Administrators concluded they were wrong to let schools reject undocumented applicants and, in November, a new policy admitting illegal immigrants was outlined in a memo.

* In December, the memo became public and caused a national controversy. Martin Lancaster, then president of the community colleges, defended the decision, but the system's attorney asked the Attorney General's Office for advice on the law regarding admission of illegal immigrants.

* The Attorney General's Office issued an advisory letter this week, saying that federal law prohibits illegal immigrants from attending public universities and colleges, unless a state law expressly allows it.

BY THE NUMBERS

27

UNC system students who are illegal immigrants, out of 200,000

340

Community college students who are illegal immigrants, out of 271,000

$5,300

Annual cost of educating a full-time student at a community college

$7,465

Out-of-state tuition illegal immigrants pay at community colleges

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"The key word is 'illegal,' " Stevens said. "They got here illegally and now they want to claim all the benefits."

Stevens said he asked the Attorney General's Office to consider the federal statute that became the basis of its advice. If the office hadn't issued the letter, Stevens said he would have supported legislation in the upcoming session to expressly bar illegal immigrants from colleges and universities.

Now, he said, that bill may not be necessary.

Advocates, including Bazán, called the advice "extreme." Several states provide in-state tuition to illegal immigrants, and she said that in years of fighting for a similar policy in North Carolina, she has never heard this federal law invoked.

The letter says that the "scope and applicability" of the federal law barring higher education is "unsettled" and cites conflicting legal rulings on the issue. It also says that enforcement of the federal law is the responsibility of the Department of Homeland Security, but that the department has not provided any guidance on how to interpret the law regarding higher education.

'Permanent underclass'

Bazán said that, by denying illegal immigrant students a chance at college, "we are creating this permanent underclass."

"We're not talking about thousands of kids," Bazán said. "We're talking about just a handful of kids who have made it to the top of their class and want to contribute."

Peter Kaufman, a University of North Carolina history professor, works with some of those students. He runs the Scholars' Latino Initiative, which mentors Hispanic high school students who want to go to college.

Kaufman said he has four illegal immigrant students in the program this year, two of whom plan to attend public colleges in North Carolina. He said all are teens who had no choice about moving to the United States, and that all have succeeded despite poverty and limited English skills.

"These are kids who are extraordinarily disciplined and gifted," Kaufman said. "But we can't tell them that achievement is going to mean clear sailing."


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