Colorado Lawmakers Vote To Give Undocumented Residents College Tuition Break
Thursday, February 17, 2005 at 12:08AM
TheSpook
Legislators voted Thursday to give children of undocumented parents a
break on college tuition and allow them to pay in-state rates if the
children attended a Colorado high school for three years. Students told
lawmakers it is unfair for the state to take tax money from the parents
and deny their children an education. Rep. Val Vigil, D-Thornton, said
many Hispanic students are being punished because their parents never
bothered to apply for permanent status. He said those students are
forced to pay out-of-state tuition at Colorado colleges and
universities, while their school mates get a break on tuition. "It is
intellectually dishonest to deny them for an act over which they had no
control," Vigil said. He said his measure (House Bill 1124) will
produce graduates who will contribute to society and pay taxes. He said
taxpayers have already paid to put those students through public school
and deserve a return on their investment. Rep. Keith King, R-Colorado
Springs, said the bill did not go far enough to remove the 2,300
out-of-state students who move to Colorado and qualify for in-state
tuition. Vigil said the U.S. Supreme Court has barred Colorado from
trying to disqualify those students. The measure passed 7-5 and was
sent to the appropriations committee. It would currently affect 19
students and cost $143,000 in lost revenue for the fiscal year
beginning July 1, but the cost is expected to increase as more students
finish high school and go on to college. [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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