Key Points:
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Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes says state’s in-state tuition policy for non-citizens does not violate federal law
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Proposition 308 allows certain non-citizens to pay in-state tuition at Arizona public colleges and universities
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The legal status of DACA recipients remains unclear despite federal appeals court ruling
Attorney General Kris Mayes says Arizona is not violating federal law in offering in-state tuition at public colleges and universities to those not here legally — despite an edict from President Trump.
In a new opinion, Mayes acknowledged that the president issued a sweeping executive order in April on issues related to immigration.
One provision directs U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi to take action against any state that has practices that give benefits to illegal migrants that are not available to all American citizens. That, the order says, includes “state laws that provide in-state higher education tuition to aliens but not to out-of-state American citizens.”
And Mayes does not dispute that Proposition 308 allows certain individuals who have graduated from a high school in Arizona to pay the same tuition available to state residents, regardless of immigration status. At the same time, U.S. citizens from another state can be required to pay the higher non-resident tuition.
But, the attorney general contends, the wording of the 2022 ballot measure is sufficiently different from what’s forbidden by federal law. So much so that she believes the measure can withstand any challenge that might come from the Trump administration. And that, she said, means it is not subject to the same challenges as those mounted in Texas, Kentucky and Minnesota.
The issue of tuition for those who are not citizens traces its roots back to the Obama administration, which created the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program in 2012. It allows people who arrived in this country illegally as children before 2007 to remain and even to work if they meet certain conditions.
Based on that, the Maricopa Community College system and, later, the Arizona Board of Regents, agreed to let DACA recipients pay in-state tuition. But the Arizona Supreme Court ruled in 2018 that it is precluded by Proposition 300, a 2006 ballot measure that denies various public benefits to those not in the country legally — including any form of subsidized tuition.
Proposition 308, approved by a margin of 51.2% to 48.8%, was crafted to create an exception.
What makes it legal despite federal law, Mayes said, is that eligibility for in-state tuition is not based on being an Arizona resident. Instead, to qualify, someone needed to have attended an Arizona high school “while physically present in this state for at least two years” and having obtained a diploma in Arizona.
And Mayes concluded that it is not residency that triggers eligibility.
“Although many people who meet the eligibility requirements will also be residents, not all will be,” she said.
“For example, a student could meet the statute’s attendance and graduation requirement, move to another state, and then plan to return to Arizona for college,” Mayes wrote. “That student would not be a current Arizona resident, but would be eligible for in-state tuition.”
She also said the law allows in-state tuition for someone who crosses into Arizona every day from another state to attend school despite being a legal resident of another state.
Conversely, she said, some Arizona residents will not be eligible for in-state tuition. That, said Mayes, could be an Arizona resident who did not attend high school for the two years required by the law and did not graduate from high school here.
What’s crucial, said Mayes, is the 1998 federal law — the one Trump wants Bondi to use to deny in-state tuition to those not here legally — which specifically says “an alien who is not lawfully present in the United States shall not be eligible on the basis of residence within a state for any postsecondary education benefit.”
She said Prop. 308, by contrast, does not establish eligibility for in-state tuition based on residence, but rather on other factors, such as physical presence in attending and graduating from high school in Arizona.
When the ballot measure was being debated, the American Immigration Council, which favored Prop. 308, estimated that the lower tuition provision would mean that more than 3,600 dreamers would be able to enroll in college. The council also said that the ability of college-educated people to qualify for better jobs would generate an additional $4.9 million annually in federal income taxes and state and local taxes.
The legal status of DACA recipients remains murky.
In January, a federal appeals court declared that major parts of the program were unlawful. But the court has agreed not to allow enforcement of immigration laws against current recipients.
Tricia McLaughlin, assistant press secretary for the Department of Homeland Security, had her own take.
“Illegal aliens who claim to be recipients of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals are not automatically protected from deportations,” she told NPR. “DACA does not confer any form of legal status in this country.”
McLaughlin specifically said DACA recipients are subject to arrest and deportation in certain circumstances, like the commission of a crime. She also urged them to self-deport.
“We encourage every person here illegally to take advantage of this offer and reserve a chance to come back to the U.S. the right legal way,” McLaughlin said.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by PostX News and is published from a syndicated feed.)