Push mounts for 'sanctuary campuses'

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. -- Universities and colleges in several states are considering labeling themselves "sanctuary campuses" amid fears from illegal-alien students and pressure from activists after the election of Donald Trump.

College administrators in New Mexico -- the state with the highest percentage of Hispanic residents -- are looking into proposals that would grant students living in the country illegally protections while they pursue their studies.

Meanwhile, advocates in California, Georgia, Illinois, Minnesota and Texas are pressing their states and private universities to provide sanctuary to these students, known as DREAMers.

"We urge you to declare the University of San Diego a sanctuary campus for students, faculty, staff and community members now facing, among other things: the threat of deportation under President-elect Donald J. Trump's policy proposals, and the specter of hate speech and bigoted violence in our campus community," read a letter from alumni to administrators of the private Roman Catholic university.

Trump's alma mater -- the University of Pennsylvania -- has renewed its pledge to block federal agents who lack warrants from removing any of its students who are in the country illegally.

"Let us be unequivocally clear: We are and remain resolute in our commitment to Penn's undocumented students and will do all that we can to ensure their continued safety and success here at Penn," University of Pennsylvania President Amy Gutmann and other administrators wrote in a letter released Wednesday.

Students and professors at University of Illinois campuses are circulating petitions to make their schools sanctuary campuses. One such group in Chicago gathered more than 1,700 signatures and turned them over to school leaders.

A Nevada education philanthropist also is pushing for the University of Nevada-Las Vegas, College of Southern Nevada and Nevada State College to declare themselves sanctuary campuses.

The movement comes after Trump, a Republican, promised to end an executive order that granted temporary status to students living in the country illegally. During his campaign, Trump also promised to launch a "deportation force" and withhold federal funding from sanctuary cities.

Trump has not said anything about sanctuary campuses.

Still, New York's Columbia University recently announced plans to offer sanctuary and financial support to illegal-alien students. And last month, Wesleyan University President Michael Roth said the Connecticut school would be a sanctuary campus and would not voluntarily help the federal government deport students.

On Thursday, Connecticut College President Katherine Bergeron announced that her institution also would be a sanctuary campus.

The specifics of advocates' sanctuary demands vary. Some are asking colleges not to cooperate with federal authorities on immigration issues, while others want administrators to block federal immigration authorities from searching campuses.

University of New Mexico President Bob Frank said university lawyers were looking into sanctuary status after a group of professors went to his office last month to deliver a letter with more than 900 signatures. The Santa Fe Community College board of regents declared itself a "sanctuary campus" last week.

University of Illinois leaders have tackled the issue at the flagship Urbana-Champaign location, about 150 miles from Chicago, saying a working group will review the legal ramifications of making the roughly 44,000-student campus a sanctuary.

Not all schools are considering sanctuary campus status despite letters, petitions or even protests.

New Mexico State University President Garrey Carruthers said Friday in a memo to employees and students that the university doesn't discriminate on the basis of immigration status or require proof of citizenship for admission. However, the university respects "the diversity of opinion" and won't declare itself a sanctuary or ban federal agents from campus because that would jeopardize federal funding, he said.

The California State University system announced recently that it won't use the "sanctuary" term at any of its 23 campuses, but it won't cooperate with any new federal policy that targets illegal-alien students.

If Trump ends the program launched by President Barack Obama called Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, the status of illegal-alien students will vary by state. Some states do not allow students living in the country illegally to attend college at in-state tuition rates.

However, state colleges in New Mexico allow students suspected of living in the country illegally to attend at the in-state tuition rates. The state also lets those students access financial aid if they graduate from New Mexico schools and maintain high grade-point averages.

Community colleges in Chicago, which offer free tuition to qualifying students regardless of immigration status, beefed up anti-discrimination policies last week to include immigration status. In 2011, Illinois established a privately backed scholarship fund for students living in the country illegally. Legislation pending in the Illinois Legislature would let students get financial aid regardless of their legal status.

Information for this article was contributed by Maryclaire Dale of The Associated Press.

A Section on 12/04/2016

Upcoming Events