US law entitles immigrant children to an education. Some conservatives
say that should change
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[October 15, 2024]
By MICHAEL CASEY and JOCELYN GECKER
BOSTON (AP) — At a sparsely attended meeting last year, the Saugus
Public School Committee approved a new admissions policy, it said, to
streamline the process of enrolling students.
But critics say the policy — including stringent requests for proof of
“legal” residency and “criminal and civil penalties” for violators — has
another goal: keeping immigrants out of the small school district
outside Boston.
The debate over welcoming immigrant children into America’s schools
extends far beyond the Boston suburbs. Advocates fear it could figure
more prominently into a national agenda if Donald Trump wins a second
term in the White House.
Conservative politicians in states such as Oklahoma, Texas and Tennessee
are questioning whether immigrants without legal residency should have
the right to a public education, raising the possibility of challenges
to another landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision.
For decades, children of families living in the country illegally have
had the right to attend public school based on a 1982 Supreme Court
decision known as Plyler v. Doe. In a 5-4 vote, justices held it is
unconstitutional to deny children an education based on their
immigration status.
The new Saugus policy requires new students to share immigration records
and says children must be “legal residents whose actual residence is in
Saugus," where the share of students who are learning English has nearly
tripled to 31% over the last decade. Families must also complete a town
census, sign a residency statement and provide occupancy and identity
documents.
Civil rights attorneys say the requirements are onerous and violate
federal law by disproportionately harming students from immigrant
families, who may lack many of the required documents, regardless of
whether they're living in the country legally.
The chairman of the Saugus school committee, Vincent Serino, said during
the meeting the policy is “tightening up” of existing residency rules
and is not intended to keep out immigrants.
But a Nicaraguan woman said it took six months for her to enroll her
8-year-old child because of the document requirements. The woman, who
spoke on condition of anonymity out of fear her child would face
retaliation, said the town wouldn’t accept her lease and her complaints
to the school were rebuffed.
Growing attempts to undermine Plyler v. Doe should be taken seriously,
immigration experts say, pointing to the conservative-dominated Supreme
Court’s readiness to overturn longstanding legal precedent, notably on
abortion rights and affirmative action in higher education.
Trump, a Republican, has made immigration a central part of his 2024
campaign, vowing to stage the largest deportation operation in U.S.
history if elected. He refers to immigrants as “animals” and “killers”
and has spoken of immigrant children bringing disease into classrooms. A
photo displayed at a recent Trump rally showed a crowded classroom with
the words “Open border = packed classrooms.”
There is no disputing immigrant populations have strained schools in
many communities, contributing to crowded classrooms and forcing
teachers to adapt to large numbers of Spanish-speaking students.
But until recently, the idea of denying children an education would have
been considered “too far to the right and too far fringe,” said Tom K.
Wong, director of the U.S. immigration Policy Center at the University
of California, San Diego. “But now we are seeing a political climate
where previously fringe policies are becoming mainstream.”
Earlier this year, the conservative Heritage Foundation urged states to
pass legislation requiring public schools to charge tuition to families
living in the country illegally. Doing so, it said in a policy brief,
would provoke a lawsuit that likely would "lead the Supreme Court to
reconsider its ill-considered Plyler v. Doe decision.”
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Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump
salutes at a campaign rally at the Gaylord Rockies Resort &
Convention Center, Friday, Oct. 11, 2024, in Aurora, Colo. (AP
Photo/Alex Brandon)
Over the summer, Oklahoma's education superintendent, Ryan Walters,
announced his agency would be issuing guidance to districts about
gathering information on the “costs and burden” of illegal
immigration to school districts.
“The federal government has failed to secure our borders. Our
schools are suffering over this,” Walters said.
Several school districts have pushed back, saying they will not
check students' immigration status.
“Federal law is quite clear on this topic, as it prohibits districts
from asking students or their families about their immigration
status or to request documentation of their citizenship,” said Chris
Payne, a spokesperson for Union Public Schools in Tulsa, outlining a
common interpretation of the Supreme Court ruling.
In Tennessee, a proposal for universal school vouchers by Gov. Bill
Lee, a Republican, led to debate over whether immigrant students
should be excluded. The idea appealed to many of the Legislature’s
conservative members, but some worried the exclusion would spark
legal challenges. Ultimately, Lee abandoned his voucher proposal
after several aspects of the plan failed to gain support.
The Saugus school committee in Massachusetts approved its admissions
policy at a committee meeting in August 2023, two days after Gov.
Maura Healey, a Democrat, declared a state of emergency over the
state’s migrant crisis. At the time, Healey said nearly 5,600
families — many of them immigrants from Haiti and Venezuela — were
living in state shelters, up from about 3,100 families the year
before.
Serino, the school committee chairman, said the group began
considering updating its residency policy more than a year before
migrants became an issue in the state. He said the policy requires
documents like a signed landlord affidavit or property tax bill,
“simple stuff that everyone has.”
“We haven't hurt anyone and no one has come to us — no migrant, no
parent has come to us to complain about the policy,” Serino said.
Local legal advocates say the policy has been a hurdle for at least
two immigrant families trying to enroll in Saugus schools. Lawyers
For Civil Rights and the group Massachusetts Advocates for Children
said it took their intervention to get the students into the school.
“The policy itself is illegal,” said Oren Sellstrom, litigation
director for Lawyers for Civil Rights. “Schools should be welcoming
(all) children who are in the district and educating them.”
In Texas, Republican Gov. Greg Abbott said in 2022 that Plyler v.
Doe should be challenged and the federal government should pay for
the public education of students who are not legal residents. He
drew backlash from immigrant advocates and the White House. The
following year, Republican lawmakers in Texas introduced several
unsuccessful bills aimed at limiting non-citizen children from
enrolling in public schools.
In June, the idea also was included in the Republican Party of Texas
platform.
The party’s priorities for the upcoming Legislative season include
“ending all subsidies and public services, including in-state
college tuition and enrollment in public schools, for illegal
aliens, except for emergency medical care.”
___
Associated Press writers Sean Murphy in Oklahoma City and Kimberlee
Kruesi in Nashville, Tennessee, contributed to this article. Gecker
reported from San Francisco.
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