The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

17 states sue Trump administra­tion over rule that could revoke visas

- The New York Times

Seventeen states and the District of Columbia sued the Trump administra­tion Monday, seeking to block a new rule that would revoke the visas of foreign students who take classes entirely online in the fall.

The rule, issued a week ago, would upend months of careful planning by colleges and universiti­es, the lawsuit says, and could force many students to return to their home countries during the pandemic, where their ability to study would be severely compromise­d.

“The Trump administra­tion didn’t even attempt to explain the basis for this senseless rule, which forces schools to choose between keeping their internatio­nal students enrolled and protecting the health and safety of their campuses,” Maura Healey, the Massachuse­tts attorney general, said in a statement announcing the suit, which accuses the administra­tion of violating the Administra­tive Procedure Act.

The action, filed in U.S. District Court in Boston, is the latest legal effort to contest the federal edict, which has been described by states and universiti­es in court filings as a politicall­y motivated attempt by the Trump administra­tion to force universiti­es to hold in-person classes this fall, even as many have announced they will remain largely online because of health concerns.

California filed its own lawsuit last week, after Harvard University and the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology had already gone to court seeking to block the new rule. Arguments in the Harvard and MIT case are scheduled to be heard today, also in the district court in Boston.

The federal guidance issued by Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, which says foreign students earning their degrees entirely online cannot stay in the United States, has sent students scrambling to enroll in in-person classes that are difficult to find. Many universiti­es are planning to offer a mix of online and in-person classes to protect the health of faculty, students and their surroundin­g communitie­s during the pandemic.

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany defended the administra­tion’s actions at a news conference last week.

“You don’t get a visa for taking online classes from, let’s say,

University of Phoenix. So why would you if you were just taking online classes, generally?” she told reporters, adding, “Perhaps the better lawsuit would be coming from students who have to pay full tuition with no access to in-person classes to attend.”

The area represente­d by the 17 states and the District of Columbia contains 1,124 colleges and universiti­es that in 2019 had enrolled a combined 373,000 internatio­nal students, who contribute­d an estimated $14 billion to the economy that year, according to the complaint. About 40 higher education institutio­ns filed declaratio­ns in support of the lawsuit, including Yale, DePaul, the University of Chicago, Tufts, Rutgers and state universiti­es in Illinois, Maryland, Massachuse­tts, Minnesota and Wisconsin.

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