"In-state tuition" is the college tuition that a resident pays to a public college or university in their home state. This is typically much less than the tuition charged to students who come from out-of-state. Allowing an illegal alien student to pay less than an American student is wrong, yet this has been promoted in Congress under the DREAM act. It is also being promoted in a number of states across the country, including, unfortunately, Colorado.
Under U.S. law, illegal aliens may not hold a job in the United States. Thus, tax dollars expended on higher education illegal aliens to prepare them for professional careers only draws more illegal aliens to those states offering in-state tuition.
When an illegal alien is granted in-state tuition and admission to a state university, he or she is directly competing with American students for that educational slot. This competition is unfairly biased against American students in other states who must pay out-of-state tuition to attend the university, while the illegal alien student is given in-state tuition preference.
In-state tuition for illegal aliens is a violation of Federal Law. Federal Law Title 8, Chapter 14, Sec. 1623 states:
The 2013 illegal alien tuition bill (SB13-033) was signed into law on April 29, 2013. It went overboard to provide financial aid to illegal alien students.
From a January 14, 2013 Denver Post article: Colorado Democrats back in-state tuition break for illegal immigrants [aliens]
Under current tuition rates, an in-state student in the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Colorado-Boulder taking 18 credit hours pays $5,144 per semester. With the College Opportunity Fund scholarship added in, that rate falls to $4,028.
An out-of-state student, meanwhile, pays $14,976 in the same example...50% of Colorado University applicants come from out of state and from out of the country.
Tuition rates have been going up with no end in sight. Tuition rates at CU went up 15% in 2003 and there was talk of raising 2004 tuition by another 40%. (March 25, 2004 Boulder Daily Camera story, "CU pulls big from outside Colorado"). On March 4, 2013, ten years later, the Denver Post ran the story: CU, CSU wish lists include 9 percent tuition hikes for you.
Illegal aliens now pour in from all over the world at a rate of more than 80,000 a month. A 2003 Wal-Mart immigration sweep netted large numbers from Mexico, the Czech Republic, Mongolia, Brazil, Poland, Russia, Uzbekistan, Georgia, Lithuania and some from from African and Asian countries. Because of virtually no internal enforcement, illegal aliens typically bring their entire families into the U.S. There is a potential for a vast number of illegal aliens to receive in-state tuition at taxpayer expense. Thus, instate college tuition for illegals would give an adult illegal alien from Uzbekistan and all the nearly 200 countries of the world benefits that would be denied to American citizens - an absurdity.
If the claimed 1,000 illegals graduating from Colorado high schools were to enroll at CU-Boulder at in-state rates for four years, revenue losses would exceed $65 million (out-of-state citizen tuition rates = $20,346; instate rates = $4,022; loss of one four-year student = $65,296 million.)
Colorado's elected officials are now voting on issues influenced by illegal aliens and their supporters residing in the districts of the state elected officials. For example. State Senator Norma Anderson voted to give in-state tuition to illegals because "I have many Hispanics now residing in my district". Democratic representation of Colorado's citizens is being eroded by ethnic pandering that emphasizes illegal aliens.
Claim: "Yes, but children of undocumented workers should not be punished for what their parents did."
Response: So, Colorado's and America's citizen students should be punished for the illegal acts of illegal-alien parents residing in Colorado?"
The following Letter to the Editor was published in the Colorado Daily in 2004. It is still relevant today.
It's curious how "objective" news stories can be written in just about any way it author preconceives things. Take, for example, Adam Ewing's story, A DREAM or a nightmare? Instead of it having been written in sob-story fashion leaning in favor of giving away the store to illegal aliens, consider this perhaps more accurate rendering:
A dream or a NIGHTMARE?
For illegal aliens, there are revered stories of breaking into the U.S. and then being rewarded with all kinds of goodies and freebies. But for Susan, who lives with her family just across the border in Nebraska, that story is a nightmare.
A bill currently working its way through Congress, the NIGHTMARE Act, would deny Susan, a veteran and Purple Heart recipient, the opportunity to go to college in Colorado at in-state rates. But it would give those rates to illegal aliens from every country in the world. Currently, federal law requires that if illegal aliens are given in-state rates, the same must be given to U.S. citizens from the other states. The proposed bill would eliminate that provision.
Hundreds of thousands of U.S. citizens would be denied in-state rates while illegal aliens, such as Maria X, a Mexican illegal alien whose parents illegally sent her north to mooch a free K-12 education, would be awarded that benefit. As a Mexican citizen, Ms. X, who is eligible for a virtually free college education in Mexico, would get the chance to attend Colorado colleges at in-state rates. (X already is attending an undisclosed Colorado college, but it is undetermined at this point if she committee fraud to get in or if her two-year-old child, as is typical of illegal-alien mothers, was a Medicaid freebie.)
Such a measure would fulfill Maria's parents' dream, but it would mean a financial nightmare for Susan's parents, fourth-generation Nebraskan family farmers. "Out of common sense and fairness, our laws should allow United State citizens at least parity with illegal aliens not to mention the outrage that American citizens would not be given first priority," words Susan says she wishes but doesn't expect to hear from the Hispandering president of the United States.
The NIGHTMARE Act would allow illegal aliens, who unlawfully entered the U.S., to be eligible to receive in-state tuition rates and a six-year, temporary legal resident status, which could lead to U.S. Citizenship. The illegal-alien student could become a permanent legal resident if he or she completes two years of school toward a degree.
But until this absurdity is resolved in favor of U.S. citizens, Susan and her like are trapped in a kind of no-citizen's-need-apply, void, sandwiched between right and wrong. "I get tired of people asking if I am an illegal alien," Susan said with frustration. "I feel bad that I have to lie to be accepted, but maybe with a return to some common sense, I will be able to get at least some of the benefits handed out to illegal aliens," she added.
For Susan and others like her, that would only be fair. And while greatly disheartened and not terribly optimistic, Susan's resolve to bring some sense to the nonsensical remains steadfast. "We must wake up from this nightmare and get real," said Susan, having just returned from a long 12-hour day attending to livestock and mending fences. Removing her dusty hat and wiping the sweat from her brow, she paused and rhetorically sighed aloud, "Is this my reward for serving my country?"