Rome News-Tribune

Appeals court rules against immigrants over in-state tuition

- By Kate Brumback Associated Press

ATLANTA — Immigrants who have been granted temporary status to stay in the U.S. will have to keep paying out-of-state tuition after an appeals court ruled against them, saying state colleges and universiti­es in Georgia aren’t required to let them pay in-state tuition.

Georgia’s state colleges and universiti­es require verificati­on of “lawful presence” in the U.S. for instate tuition. The Board of Regents has said students with temporary permission to stay under a 2012 program known as Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, don’t meet that requiremen­t.

A group of young immigrants who meet all the other requiremen­ts and who have been granted deferred action status filed a petition in April 2016 in Fulton County Superior Court asking a judge to order the university system to allow them to pay in-state tuition.

Charles Kuck, a lawyer for the young immigrants, had argued that the U.S. Department of Homeland Security has said beneficiar­ies of that program are considered “lawfully present.”

Lawyers for the university system rejected that argument, saying the statement about lawful presence appeared in an FAQ section of the department’s website and not as an official policy or regulation.

Fulton County Superior Court Chief Judge Gail Tusan in January sided with the students and ordered the university system to allow the students to pay in-state tuition if they otherwise qualify. Enforcemen­t of her order was put on hold while the state appealed. The Georgia Court of Appeals on Tuesday reversed that ruling.

The appeals court opinion said the DACA policy and website FAQ do not constitute an enforceabl­e federal law that designates those immigrants as being “lawfully present.”

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