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Friday, December 16, 2005

California Colleges Getting Sued By Students

Awesome...

Dec. 14 - A lawsuit was filed Wednesday that aims to change the way the state of California charges out of state students to attend college. It claims that illegal immigrants pay less for a state education than out-of-state citizens.

U.C. Davis student Chaning Jang has had it.

The Hawaiian native is tired of paying $20,000 dollars more in out-of-state tuition than undocumented immigrant students pay. Those immigrants pay the same as Californians.

Chaning Jang, UC Davis student: "It's pretty ridiculous how much more we pay, considering they're giving these kinds of tuition kickbacks to illegal immigrants that aren't even going to get to work here after they're done with college."

Jang is one of some 60,000 students represented in a class-action lawsuit filed today. They claim the tuition difference is unfair and even discriminatory.

Kris Kobach, students' attorney: "California taxpayers right now are providing subsidy in excess of $50 million dollars a year to provide for the in-state tuition for illegal aliens."


$50 million/year to subsidize the education of people who couldn't be bothered to follow our immigration laws when they entered this country. Is that really a message we want coming out of America to the rest of the world? Please feel free to flout our immigration laws, we'll just respond by giving you tax-funded entitlements? I certainly don't think that's in our best interests.

Of course, anybody coming out against tax funded entitlements for illegal immigrants is being branded as "anti-immigrant:"



Jeannette Zanipatin, California Immigrant Welfare Collaborative: "These are students, like I said, who have lived here for three years, have graduated from a high school and but for the tuition would not be able to continue their education."

The lawsuit upset many Latino students throughout U.C., Cal State and community college campuses.

Francisco Tostado is a U.S. citizen, but his three college siblings are not.

Francisco Tostado, college student: "I think it's anti-immigrant. I don't think it's fair for our students who, all they want to do is get a better education and become a better person."


It always amazes me when people who are for upholding our immigration laws get accused of being anti-immigration. I, for one, am not against immigration at all. I am, however, four-square against spending tax dollars for the benefit of foreigners who refuse to follow our country's laws.

Comments

Avatar for Dave

Jang is one of some 60,000 students represented in a class-action lawsuit filed today. They claim the tuition difference is unfair and even discriminatory.

I agree that the policy is stupid, but how is it “discriminatory?” How is the policy even illegal? They seem to be banking on an activist court ruling, methinks.

Dave on December 16, 2005 at 10:13 am
Avatar for likwidshoe

Dave said, They seem to be banking on an activist court ruling, methinks.

How do youthinks?

likwidshoe on December 16, 2005 at 04:12 pm
Avatar for Daniel

I would say that its discriminating against US citizens from other states.

Daniel on December 16, 2005 at 04:13 pm
Avatar for Dave

Their policy is not unconstitutional. In order to overturn it, the judge would have to legislate from the bench. That should be bad even when the activism is in your favor, lik.

Dave on December 16, 2005 at 11:12 pm
Avatar for likwidshoe

Their policy is not unconstitutional. In order to overturn it, the judge would have to legislate from the bench.

It doesn’t need to be unconstitutional, only illegal.

That should be bad even when the activism is in your favor, lik.

Yes, I’m quite aware of that. Thank you.

likwidshoe on December 17, 2005 at 03:13 am
Avatar for ellinas

All states charge different tuition for non residents.
Solution: A)stay in your own state.
B)require proof of citizenhip from all students.

ellinas on December 17, 2005 at 05:13 am
Avatar for Say Anything - North Dakota’s Most Popular P

[...] California Colleges Getting Sued By Students By Rob on December 16, 2005 at 10:59 am [...]

Avatar for Jean Hallow

 

 

Actually, the suit challenges this on the basis that it violates a US statute passed in 1998. reads: 

United States Code 1623 of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Responsibilities Act - mandates that any state university or college that allows illegal immigrants to pay in-state tuition must also give the same benefit to out-of-state students.

Jean Hallow on May 4, 2006 at 04:23 pm
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