The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Agnes Scott says it will join effort to support ‘Dreamers’

Lawmaker threatens to cut off funding if likely Trump policy defied.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com Dreamers B3

Emory University is getting some backup from another metro Atlanta private school after a Republican lawmaker threatened to cut off state funding to any higher education institutio­n that declares it will defy President-elect Donald Trump if he tries to deport immigrants who are illegally in the U.S.

Agnes Scott College President Elizabeth Kiss said in a statement that the Decatur school would continue to support students, known as “Dreamers,” who were illegally brought to the country as children and grew up in the U.S. They were granted a temporary reprieve from the threat of deportatio­n by an executive order from President Barack Obama.

“Agnes Scott’s DACA students do not receive a penny of state or federal aid,” Kiss wrote, referring to the Obama program Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, adding: “They are bright, hard-working young women who have played by the rules, graduated from high school and passed a criminal background check. They want to become citizens of their country and pursue the American Dream.”

The school is at least the second private college in Georgia to commit to supporting students who are in the country illegally regardless of Trump’s immigratio­n policy. Emory President Claire Sterk said last week that the school would follow state and federal laws but also continue to support its “Dreamers.” She also said administra­tors were reviewing whether to declare Emory a “sanctuary campus and ways to

protect all members of the Emory community.”

That prompted a backlash from state Rep. Earl Ehrhart, who told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on on Monday that he plans to introduce legislatio­n to block colleges from receiving state funds if they aren’t complying with state and federal law. Ehrhart, the chairman of the House’s higher education financing panel, said, “If you’re picking and choosing which laws you’re going to follow, state dollars aren’t going to follow.”

Such a decision could cost private schools tens of millions of dollars in grants, tuition assistance programs and other funding.

Following Trump’s election, students and faculty from more than 100 universiti­es have called on their administra­tors to declare themselves sanctuarie­s or otherwise protect students who are illegally in the U.S. The president-elect has vowed to deport the estimated 11 million people in the country illegally, though it’s unclear how he’ll handle students and other young people who came to the U.S. illegally as children.

They are borrowing the term “sanctuary” from the handful of major cities — and dozens of smaller ones — that have declared themselves “sanctuary cities.” Though the meaning varies widely, it typically signals that the city won’t work with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s to hand over people in the country illegally.

Already, Emory’s stance has infuriated some alumni. Larry Hailey, who graduated from Emory with two degrees in the 1950s, called Sterk’s comments “appalling” in a letter sent Wednesday to the university’s board.

“If Emory follows through with the planned intent not to follow the applicable laws, I will not only be ashamed of my former university, but also could not consider making any more contributi­ons to Emory,” wrote Hailey, a commercial real estate executive. “As will be the case with many of my friends and acquaintan­ces who in the past have thought well of Emory.”

Kiss, the Agnes Scott president, said she’s hopeful “cooler heads will prevail” and that students in the country illegally won’t be targeted for deportatio­n. The DACA students at the Decatur school are high achievers, she said, who aren’t taking any spots away from American-born students.

“They are able to go to college because they receive private scholarshi­p support, which we raise from donors and foundation­s, and scrape together the rest of their college costs through the hard work of their families in housekeepi­ng, constructi­on, agricultur­e, hospitalit­y, manufactur­ing and the U.S. military,” she said.

 ?? JASON GETZ / JGETZ@AJC.COM ?? Emory President Claire Sterk said last week that the school would follow laws but also continue to support its “Dreamers,” undocument­ed students whose reprieve from the threat of deportatio­n could be revoked by the Trump administra­tion. State Rep. Earl...
JASON GETZ / JGETZ@AJC.COM Emory President Claire Sterk said last week that the school would follow laws but also continue to support its “Dreamers,” undocument­ed students whose reprieve from the threat of deportatio­n could be revoked by the Trump administra­tion. State Rep. Earl...
 ??  ?? Emory University presidente­lect Claire Sterk (left) and state Rep. Earl Ehrhart, R-Powder Springs
Emory University presidente­lect Claire Sterk (left) and state Rep. Earl Ehrhart, R-Powder Springs
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States