JUST IN: Justice Has Prevailed In Arizona!
'Dreamers' Just Stripped Of Their Favorite Freebie.
In a stunning win for the rule of law and our nation's sovereignty, the Arizona Supreme
Court upheld a lower court's ruling that illegal immigrant students are ineligible
for in-state tuition.
This ruling, which is being hailed as a huge blow for immigration activists in Arizona,
affects over 2,000 undocumented immigrants who attend state and community colleges in
Arizona and pay in-state tuition while doing so.
In-state students at Arizona State University will pay $9,834 for tuition next school year,
while non-resident students pay $27,618 and residents pay $86 per credit hour at the Maricopa
Community Colleges, compared with $241 for non-residents.
But so-called Dreamers may be able to take advantage of a rule passed by the Arizona
Board of Regents in 2015 that offers a lower tuition rate in 2015 meant for non-residents
who are Arizona high school graduates.
This ruling comes at a time when colleges and universities around the nation have displayed
blatant preferential treatment of undocumented students.
In fact, many students in multiple states enjoy a lower tuition than those in the country
illegally.
And it's not just tuition, "Dreamers" have a host of other financial help options
which people here legally don't have.
I'm not sure if many people here in the states realize this but in most Latin American
nations if you are an illegal you just can't go to school, period.
Even if you are a minor and your legal adult guardians are willing to pay for private schooling
at full price.
But why is it that here illegals can come and we have to school them from grades k-12
for free and then even cut them a break for college?
Because they are deserving?
Aren't our legal citizens also deserving?
And aren't our legal citizens also "Dreamers?"
Time to start putting our legal citizens first and this is a great start.
Here is more lunacy via Tru Jersey:
"Immigrants living in the country illegally will be eligible for a new scholarship program
designed for low-income DREAMers, a philanthropy group announced this week.
TheDream.US program will offer scholarships to 2,000 undocumented immigrant students over
the next decade, organizers announced.
The group has already raised more than $25 million to fund the program, including donations
from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Fernandez Foundation and Bloomberg Philanthropies.
Under the current system, children brought into the U.S. illegally are permitted to attend
K-12 schools and enroll in college.
But, in most states, they must pay out-of-state tuition if they can't prove they are citizens.
They are also not eligible for federal financial aid, making college unaffordable for many
students living in the country illegally.
"With support from our partner institutions and from civic leaders across the country,
TheDream.US is building a new movement to remove these roadblocks and make higher education
a reality for thousands of undocumented immigrants.
We're making a down payment on our country's future by helping these young Americans achieve
the American Dream," said Donald Graham, chief executive officer of the Graham Holdings
Company and one of the program's co-founders.
After years of debate, Gov. Chris Christie recently signed a law that makes students
living in the country illegally eligible for in-state tuition at New Jersey colleges.
But Christie did not support a provision that would have made students eligible for state
financial aid to help pay their tuition.
Many of the students — who have been dubbed DREAMers, after the proposed federal DREAM
Act that would open the federal financial aid system to them — say college is still
out of their reach if they lack the money to pay tuition.
But critics argue students living in the country illegally should not be eligible for the same
scholarships, loans and grants offered to students living in the country legally.
At Rutgers University, for example, undergraduates students living in the country illegally would
be required to pay the full $13,499 in annual tuition and fees this year, before the cost
of room, board, books and other fees is added in.
To apply for TheDream.US scholarships, immigrant students must qualify for the federal Deferred
Action for Childhood Arrivals program, must graduate from a U.S. high school or have a
GED with the equivalent a 2.5 grade point average or higher, organizers said.
Applicants must also show financial need and show the ability to succeed in an associate's
or bachelor's degree program.
Twelve colleges have signed on as partners for the program.
They are: the Borough of Manhattan Community College, Bronx Community College and Kingsborough
Community College in New York; Miami Dade College in Florida; Trinity Washington University
in Washington, D.C.; El Paso Community College, South Texas College, University of Texas Pan
American and University of Texas El Paso in Texas; Long Beach City College and California
State University, Long Beach in California; and Mount Washington College, a national online
college.
Nearly 40 scholarships have already been handed out.
The amount of the scholarships will vary according to a student's financial need, but could
cover up to 100 percent of a student's tuition, fees and book costs, organizers said.
Students are eligible for an additional $1,000 to $2,000 for maintaining high grades.
In addition to Graham, the program's co-founders are Democratic activist and philanthropist
Henry R. Muñoz III and former U.S. Secretary of Commerce Carlos Gutierrez.
"Absent the passage of the DREAM Act or other breakthrough in immigration policy,
thousands of eager young people will be unable to achieve their academic dreams.
We are not waiting for Washington to solve these challenges," Gutierrez said.
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