TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — Carly hopes to spend her fourth year with a taste of her final moments on the University of Central Florida palm-lined campus. Instead, she fears sitting alone at home, logging in to an online course, leaving her apartment and risking being held bound by US immigration and customs enforcement.
A few months ago, Carly was studying public relations in Orlando. Thanks to in-state tuition and private scholarships, Carly lived a life she only dreamed of in Haiti, which she left behind at the age of 13.
Now she is one of the Florida students whose education has been delayed or derailed after state lawmakers revoked the 2014 law. In-state tuition fees At a public university.
All over the country, Tens of thousands of university students Without legal status, access to tuition fees in the state is lost Immigrant suppression It was done by President Donald Trump and his allies.
“All my efforts feel like they don’t make any sense, so I can lose them one day,” Carly said.
Thousands of students without legal status lose tuition fees in the state
When Florida lawmakers passed the tuition waiver more than a decade ago, it was a bipartisan effort defended by then-state legislator Janet Nunez. Vice Governor. Ten years later, Nunez’s support for dismantling what was one of the fruits of her signature is a sign of how far the state’s immigration politics has shifted to Trump’s priorities.
More than 6,500 students were eligible for what is known as out-of-state tuition waiver during the 2023-2024 school year, according to state data. The waiver was revoked as of July 1st after DeSantis. I signed the bill Abolish tuition fee reductions.
The difference in cost is substantial. Florida’s flagship university estimates that state residents will pay around $6,380 for the 2025-2026 academic year, compared to about $30,900 for non-resident students. Home, transportation and other costs can add an additional $17,000 or more.
While Florida’s state universities and universities do not specifically track admissions for students without legal status, some immigration advocates expect fewer students to take part in in-person classes, while others expect to give up on the university altogether.
Diego Durant Falcon earned a Bachelor of Psychology thanks to a tuition exemption. He is currently pursuing a Masters degree in Public Health from the University of South Florida.
Losing access to tuition fees within the state, Dulanto Falcon said students without legal status are being separated from various opportunities.
“Students that are not fully documented, they absolutely have no choice,” Dulanto Falcon said. “They either work under the table or don’t work at all.”
From college to work, from working at McDonald’s
Attending high school in Miami, David stacked up his schedule with dual registration and advanced placement classes. He wanted to attend college and become a radiologist or physiotherapist. Born in Honduras, David said he felt that he could not do it for a student like him without legal status. While his friends went to colleges like Duke and Florida, David went to work at McDonald’s.
He spoke on the condition that he would only be identified by middle names, as he feared foreign names.
“When you come to this country, your parents make the sacrifices and you are a child, what they say to you will focus on school,” David said. “I did that.”
But now, he said he couldn’t afford a university if there were no tuition fees shaking.
All over the country, immigration is provided by programs that provide in-state tuition fees to immigrants who were once widely bipartisan support and criticised by Republicans. On the legal challenge, the Trump administration has argued that interests are unconstitutional.
The Department of Justice has sued the state to end tuition breaks. Starting in Texas Following June Kentucky, Minnesota And Oklahoma. Meanwhile, the U.S. Department of Education is looking into universities that offer scholarships to students without legal status.
Rosie Kurt, a high school math teacher in the Dallas Independent School District, worries that if colleges feel out of reach, they won’t motivate students to learn algebra. Texas law gave college students for decades before federal judges without legal access to tuition fees in the state I blocked it June.
“The idea that they can be taken away from them in such a cruel way is touching the way educators think,” Kurtos said in a call with a reporter.
Risk scholarships and in-state tuition fees
In Orlando, Carly had a private scholarship to attend Central Florida, but only covered in state tuition fees.
She was able to register as an online student at Purdue Global University, but said that some of her credits had not transferred and had to delay graduation and change majors.
Going to school in Florida was no longer an option after more than a dozen universities and universities, including UCF, signed contracts with ICE. Immigration enforcement On campus, she said.
“I chose an online school simply because I don’t feel safe,” Carly said.
Spending time away from her Miami family, Carly worries that if she was in custody it might take several days for someone to realize she’s gone missing. She says that when she tries to finish her education, it is much safer to stay inside, as she lives in the food that will be delivered to her apartment.
“I’m trying to get my life back on track,” Carly said. “I can’t stay home forever.”
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Kate Payne is a legion of the Associated Press/America Statehouse News Initiative report. American Report It is a non-profit, national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms and reports on secret issues.