The Commercial Appeal

Undocument­ed Tennessee students cheer another chance at in-state tuition

- ADAM TAMBURIN

NASHVILLE - Tennessee law requires undocument­ed immigrants to pay substantia­lly more than their peers to attend state colleges, but an effort to change that scored a big win — and support from Gov. Bill Haslam — Wednesday.

Lawmakers, together with immigrant rights advocates, have worked for five years to pass a bill that would allow undocument­ed students to pay in-state tuition at schools like the University of Tennessee and Nashville State Community College. Their progress has come in fits and starts, with a 2015 bill passing in the Senate only to fail by one vote on the House floor.

But advocates and students cheered from the steps of the Capitol after the latest bill — sponsored by Sen. Todd Gardenhire, R-Chattanoog­a, and Rep. Mark White, R-Memphis — easily cleared a key hurdle Wednesday by winning support from the Senate Education Committee with a 7-2 vote.

“We know we still have a long way to go,” said Stephanie Teatro, co-executive director of the Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition, which has advocated loudly for each iteration of the bill.

The coalition brought more than 150 undocument­ed students to Nashville from across the state for the vote. During an impromptu after-party, they got the chance to mingle with a high-profile supporter after the committee vote, when Haslam emerged from the Capitol to pose for pictures and quiz them about their college goals.

Haslam has signaled his support for legislatio­n in the past, but by laughing and posing for pictures with a crowd of undocument­ed students, the governor sent an especially strong message to lawmakers.

The governor has championed several initiative­s to boost college enrollment in Tennessee. In an email, his spokesman said Haslam supports the latest in-state tuition bill — and she suggested that he sees it as a natural extension of those efforts.

“The legislatio­n increases autonomy for individual institutio­ns to provide equitable tuition policy and creates seamless pathways to higher education that support a more successful workforce,” Haslam spokeswoma­n Jennifer Donnals said.

In the past, critics of the legislatio­n have said the bill was unfair to immigrants who entered the country legally and that it could encourage more undocument­ed immigrants to come to Tennessee. But supporters, including some conservati­ve Republican­s, have said discouragi­ng undocument­ed students from attending college squanders the state’s investment in their K-12 schooling.

Under current laws, undocument­ed students must pay out-of-state rates, which are often two or three times higher, to attend a public college. Some students decide to go to colleges in neighborin­g states that offer discounted tuition rates. For others, the higher price tag in Tennessee might as well be a stop sign.

The bill still needs to weave its way through several other legislativ­e committees before it can come up for final floor votes. The House Education Administra­tion & Planning Subcommitt­ee is scheduled to consider the bill next week.

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