Albany, NY – Assembly Would Give College Aid to Illegal Immigrants

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    Albany, NY – Tens of thousands of illegal immigrants would become eligible to receive government financial aid to attend college in New York under a bill that state Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver introduced Friday.

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    The powerful Democrat’s bill follows the Obama administration “Dream Act” initiative this week. It defers deportation for young illegal immigrants and makes it easier for them to get better jobs and pay for college.

    “My parents came here as immigrants and I was able to have opportunities precisely because this country welcomed my family and allowed us to work hard and succeed,” Silver said Friday.

    If it becomes law in New York, Silver’s measure could influence the presidential debate. The state is home to more than 4 million legal immigrants and growing fast, and it has some of the nation’s highest concentrations of public and private colleges. Because illegal immigrants are undocumented, it’s hard to estimate their numbers.

    New York’s proposal comes two days after Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer issued an executive order denying driver’s licenses and other public benefits to illegal immigrants who are authorized to work under the Obama program. She said those rights are reserved for legal residents.

    Under the federal program, immigrants must prove they arrived in the United States before they turned 16, are under 31 years old and lived in the United States at least five years. They also must be in school or graduated or have served in the U.S. military, have no convictions and pose no threat to public safety.

    “We don’t have enough engineers and scientists in this country,” Silver, a Manhattan Democrat, said in an interview. “If we have young immigrants, we need to give them the opportunity to a college education that will increase our pool and make New York state business better overall.”

    The Senate’s Democratic minority has supported a New York “Dream Act,” which they are trying to make a campaign issue for the fall elections to regain the majority from Republicans.

    “We commend the speaker for this legislation,” said Senate Democratic spokesman Mike Murphy. “This is something that we are extremely supportive of and I think it goes perfectly with our Dream Act legislation that we pushed this year, but was unfortunately blocked by the Senate Republicans.”

    There was no immediate comment from the Senate’s Republican majority nor from Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo.

    Under New York law, illegal immigrant students already pay the lower public college tuition for state residents, rather than the higher rate for those coming from outside New York.

    The bill would provide access to the Tuition Assistance Program that provides grants to hundreds of thousands of students each year in public and private colleges, according to the bill co-sponsored by Assembly Higher Education Committee Chairwoman Deborah Glick of Manhattan and Assemblyman Francisco Moya of Queens.

    While the bill would make TAP available for illegal immigrants, TAP was discontinued for graduate students who are legal residents beginning in the 2010-11 state budget as part of spending cuts in a fiscal crisis in a policy that continues today. TAP provides varying grants up to full tuition based on financial need to more than 309,000 students. In the current budget, TAP was increased by $21 million to a total of $930 million.

    Illegal immigrants would also be eligible for other grants and low-interest loans based on financial need. The bill will require a new application form and process to help students who can’t fill out a federal student aid form.

    Some previous measures providing more rights to illegal immigrants have drawn concern even in Democrat-dominated New York. In 2007, Democratic Gov. Eliot Spitzer was blocked by Republicans in his attempt to allow illegal immigrants to apply for driver’s licenses, partly out of fear it could help terrorists.

    The bill could be considered in the regular session beginning in January, or in an expected special session after the November elections.


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    5 Comments
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    pushkin
    pushkin
    11 years ago

    hey where are the comments?

    mewhoze
    mewhoze
    11 years ago

    we dont have enuf tuition assistance for kids who are here legally and their parents are taxpayers. why are we giving assitance this way to people who are not here legally?

    11 years ago

    WAIT- i lost TAP as a graduate student because there was not enough money.
    I cannot get subsidized student loans as a graduate student (which I used to be able to do just last year!).
    But now we somehow have the money to pay for ILLEGALS???
    Why do illegals get financial aid to pursue the same degrees that LEGAL citizens are trying to attain (but without financial help?)????
    Can someone out there help me understand this???

    cookookajew
    Member
    cookookajew
    11 years ago

    Disgusting… simply disgusting. If you want to survive in this country then it looks like falsifying yourself as an ileagal immigrant is the way to go. There is no such thing as working hard or earning an honest days wage anymore. This country is swirling down the toilet fast..

    PaulinSaudi
    PaulinSaudi
    11 years ago

    Great. It is always a good idea to educate young people. It makes us all richer and happier.