How Immigrants Without Legal Status Can Pay for College

More than 1 million immigrant children without legal status reportedly live in the United States. Roughly 65,000 graduate from high school each year, but experts estimate that fewer than 6,500 go on to attend college.

Two major barriers — a lack of information and assistance — often prevent immigrant teens without legal permission from continuing their education, says Laura Bohorquez, coordinator of the DREAM Educational Empowerment Program at United We Dream, a nonprofit immigrant advocacy organization.

“Unfortunately, we’re still getting a lot of questions from students thinking that because they’re undocumented, they can’t access higher education,” Bohorquez says. Students without legal status have options, though, including laws at the state level that allow some noncitizens to receive in-state tuition at state colleges and universities, and Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, an executive order issued by President Barack Obama that gives some young immigrants — often referred to as DREAMers — temporary resident status and a pathway to work legally.

[Explore 11 public schools with the lowest in-state tuition.]

In-State Tuition and Financial Aid

Eighteen states, including Colorado, Maryland and Oregon, allow teens without legal status to pay in-state tuition rates at public colleges and universities, provided they meet certain requirements. Students living in California, Texas, New Mexico, Minnesota and Washington are also eligible for state-based financial aid, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

The conditions of these laws vary, but most stipulate that students must have lived in the state for a minimum number of years and have graduated from high school or received their GED in the state.

Even with these policies in place, many immigrant students don’t understand the financial aid process, Bohorquez says.

In Texas, for example, students must fill out the Texas Application for State Financial Aid. But many don’t know the form exists, even though the state has been giving out financial aid for nearly a decade, Bohorquez adds.

[Check out scholarships for immigrant students.]

Teachers, high school counselors and college financial aid offices aren’t always helpful for immigrant students without legal residency, says Alejandra Rincon, author of “Undocumented Students and Higher Education: Si Se Puede.”

It’s important for students to be informed and persistent, she says.

“Bottom line, if they are in a state that has in-state tuition, the key thing is to not take no for an answer,” Rincon says. “If they know that the law allows for them to go to college, then they have that to back them up.”

Students can seek help from campus groups and organizations such as United We Dream and Educators for Fair Consideration, which both publish resources for students without legal status. The College Board also has a “Repository of Resources for Undocumented Students,” which Rincon authored, that includes contact information for officials at community colleges, nonprofit organizations and other groups offering assistance to students who don’t have citizenship.

Scholarships

Federal dollars are out of reach for students in the country illegally, but scholarship dollars are not.

TheDream.US, a $32 million scholarship fund established in February 2014, awards scholarships of up to $25,000 to immigrant students with temporary resident status.

State scholarship programs, such as the Illinois Dream Fund, and private scholarship funds also exist. Scholarships A-Z, a nonprofit based in Arizona, curates scholarships open to students without legal status, sorted by application deadline. The database includes contact information and requirements for each scholarship so students can get a snapshot of all the necessary information in one place.

Some scholarship applications ask students to enter a Social Security number, which can frighten away some applicants without legal status, says Bohorquez.

“We tell our students, ‘Don’t be afraid to ask if the Social Security number is something they need for the application,’” she says. “We’re finding that a lot of scholarships just keep it [on the application] because it’s been there for years.”

Employment

Students who have temporary resident status are eligible to work legally if they have a work permit. These students typically have access to higher-paying jobs and can use the income to help fund their education.

Most colleges have payment plans, so students can pay tuition in installments, Bohorquez says. Many institutions also offer small loans that students can use to pay for part of their tuition, books or other expenses.

[Learn how to estimate a college's net price.]

Students unable to legally work in the U.S. many still be able to land a job on campus and have their wages applied directly to fees, housing and other expenses billed by the college, says Bohorquez, who worked as a teaching assistant while earning her master’s at Loyola University Chicago.

Bohorquez could not legally receive a paycheck for her stipend, so instead the university applied it directly to her housing, student fees and books. Her tuition was waived as part of her assistantship.

None of that would have happened if she didn’t ask, though.

“It might be scary to share your status,” Bohorquez says. “But if you find someone to be your champion, they will help you in terms of advocacy for financial aid.”

Trying to fund your education? Get tips and more in the U.S. News Paying for College center.

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Hillsborough charity may house immigrant kids


A couple dozen of the thousands of undocumented children and teenagers from Central America who have crossed into the United States in recent months might soon be housed in Hillsborough County.

So far, no one is saying exactly how many or when they will arrive.

In the past 11 months, an estimated 63,000 undocumented minors have entered the United States over the Mexico border, and the federal government is looking for places to house them until they can be placed with relatives or sponsors.

This week, a federal official confirmed in a one-line email that unaccompanied immigrant children may be temporarily housed in Hillsborough County at The Children’s Home, a 122-year-old charity that through the years has cared for orphaned and foster children and kids who are victims of abuse and neglect.

“That organization has been approved for funding under the Unaccompanied Alien Children program,” said Kenneth Wolfe, deputy director of public affairs with the Administration for Children and Families, a division of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services in Washington.

Wolfe declined further comment.

Officials with The Children’s Home, which helps some 15,000 kids and adults a year, also stood silent on the issue this week, declining requests for interviews. CEO Irene Rickus referred all questions to Wolfe. Messages left with two Children’s Home directors resulted in polite referrals of all questions to Wolfe.

The Children’s Home runs two residential shelters for fostered and orphaned children and offers outreach programs in family support, matching foster care children with homes and help for abused and neglected children.

❖ ❖ ❖

U.S. Rep. Kathy Castor, D-Tampa, said she was notified by Health and Human Services that 27 children will be housed in Hillsborough County, although she doesn’t know when, or whether they already are here.

“We can’t talk about locations,” she said, citing the children’s safety.

“They’re children,” she said. “They’re young unaccompanied minors.”

The issue of minors from Central America making the trek to the United States, most of them from Guatemala and Honduras, has gotten a lot of attention in recent months.

Castor said Florida already is home to an unusually large number of refugees and asylum seekers of all ages.

“We have dedicated nonprofits … who do an excellent job of resettling refugees from across the globe,” she said. “People from Cuba and Iraq, people who are running from torture, running for their lives.”

The Children’s Board of Hillsborough County, which acts as a clearinghouse for grants and funding for children’s programs, was unaware of any federal funding being approved for The Children’s Home, but the board is getting ready to help in case immigrant children are brought to the county, said Joanna Cheshire, spokeswoman for the Children’s Board.

She said two meetings have been held involving Children’s Board Executive Director Kelley Parris, the state Department of Children & Families and federal immigration officials, judges and charities. The goal was to develop plans to accommodate children who may be shipped here without disrupting services for local kids.

“They are still in the formative stages,” Cheshire said of the plans.

Initially, the federal government opened three temporary shelters on three military bases in the Southwest to house the youths as they streamed across the border. The government has closed those shelters, opting to place the children in community shelters across the nation or release them to sponsors while they await immigration proceedings.

The number of undocumented children crossing the border is unprecedented, according to the federal Division of Children’s Services, which provides care and placement for minors who immigrate to the United States without an adult guardian.

“On average, between 7,000 and 8,000 children are served annually in this program,” states the division’s website. But that number has swelled over the past three years to more than 60,000.

The children come primarily from Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras. Most are 14 or older, and approximately three-quarters of them are boys. The average stay in the program is 35 days, federal officials say. Eight of every 10 served eventually are placed with relatives.

“We were able to take this step because we have pro-actively expanded capacity to care for children in standard shelters, which are significantly less costly facilities,” states the federal Administration for Children and Families’ website.

❖ ❖ ❖

The shelters are in communities across the nation, and in some cases the placement of the immigrant children has raised controversy.

In Pasco County this summer, a plan to expand a youth shelter operated by Gulf Coast Jewish Family and Community Services to accommodate immigrant children from Central America has been met with stiff resistance from some residents.

The nonprofit social services agency won a federal grant this year to provide temporary housing for unaccompanied immigrant boys ages 8 to 17. The agency is asking to double the 16-bed capacity of its shelter in Holiday, but the request before the county’s planning commission has been delayed until October.

Those against the expansion characterized the youths as criminals and gang members, though federal officials discount that claim.

“Many of these children are fleeing violent situations in their home country and choose to leave rather than join a gang,” the Administration for Children and Families’ website states. “They endure a long and dangerous journey to reach the border. When they are placed in a standard shelter, they are, as a rule, relieved to be in a safe and caring environment where they can wait for a sponsor to arrive to take custody.”

kmorelli@tampatrib.com

(813) 259-7760

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Hillsborough charity may house immigrant children


A couple dozen of the thousands of undocumented children and teenagers from Central America who have crossed into the United States in recent months might soon be housed in Hillsborough County.

So far, no one is saying exactly how many or when they will arrive.

In the past 11 months, an estimated 63,000 undocumented minors have entered the United States over the Mexico border, and the federal government is looking for places to house them until they can be placed with relatives or sponsors.

This week, a federal official confirmed in a one-line email that unaccompanied immigrant children may be temporarily housed in Hillsborough County at The Children’s Home, a 122-year-old charity that through the years has cared for orphaned and foster children and kids who are victims of abuse and neglect.

“That organization has been approved for funding under the Unaccompanied Alien Children program,” said Kenneth Wolfe, deputy director of public affairs with the Administration for Children and Families, a division of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services in Washington.

Wolfe declined further comment.

Officials with The Children’s Home, which helps some 15,000 kids and adults a year, also stood silent on the issue this week, declining requests for interviews. CEO Irene Rickus referred all questions to Wolfe. Messages left with two Children’s Home directors resulted in polite referrals of all questions to Wolfe.

The Children’s Home runs two residential shelters for fostered and orphaned children and offers outreach programs in family support, matching foster care children with homes and help for abused and neglected children.

❖ ❖ ❖

U.S. Rep. Kathy Castor, D-Tampa, said she was notified by Health and Human Services that 27 children will be housed in Hillsborough County, although she doesn’t know when, or whether they already are here.

“We can’t talk about locations,” she said, citing the children’s safety.

“They’re children,” she said. “They’re young unaccompanied minors.”

The issue of minors from Central America making the trek to the United States, most of them from Guatemala and Honduras, has gotten a lot of attention in recent months.

Castor said Florida already is home to an unusually large number of refugees and asylum seekers of all ages.

“We have dedicated nonprofits … who do an excellent job of resettling refugees from across the globe,” she said. “People from Cuba and Iraq, people who are running from torture, running for their lives.”

The Children’s Board of Hillsborough County, which acts as a clearinghouse for grants and funding for children’s programs, was unaware of any federal funding being approved for The Children’s Home, but the board is getting ready to help in case immigrant children are brought to the county, said Joanna Cheshire, spokeswoman for the Children’s Board.

She said two meetings have been held involving Children’s Board Executive Director Kelley Parris, the state Department of Children & Families and federal immigration officials, judges and charities. The goal was to develop plans to accommodate children who may be shipped here without disrupting services for local kids.

“They are still in the formative stages,” Cheshire said of the plans.

Initially, the federal government opened three temporary shelters on three military bases in the Southwest to house the youths as they streamed across the border. The government has closed those shelters, opting to place the children in community shelters across the nation or release them to sponsors while they await immigration proceedings.

The number of undocumented children crossing the border is unprecedented, according to the federal Division of Children’s Services, which provides care and placement for minors who immigrate to the United States without an adult guardian.

“On average, between 7,000 and 8,000 children are served annually in this program,” states the division’s website. But that number has swelled over the past three years to more than 60,000.

The children come primarily from Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras. Most are 14 or older, and approximately three-quarters of them are boys. The average stay in the program is 35 days, federal officials say. Eight of every 10 served eventually are placed with relatives.

“We were able to take this step because we have pro-actively expanded capacity to care for children in standard shelters, which are significantly less costly facilities,” states the federal Administration for Children and Families’ website.

❖ ❖ ❖

The shelters are in communities across the nation, and in some cases the placement of the immigrant children has raised controversy.

In Pasco County this summer, a plan to expand a youth shelter operated by Gulf Coast Jewish Family and Community Services to accommodate immigrant children from Central America has been met with stiff resistance from some residents.

The nonprofit social services agency won a federal grant this year to provide temporary housing for unaccompanied immigrant boys ages 8 to 17. The agency is asking to double the 16-bed capacity of its shelter in Holiday, but the request before the county’s planning commission has been delayed until October.

Those against the expansion characterized the youths as criminals and gang members, though federal officials discount that claim.

“Many of these children are fleeing violent situations in their home country and choose to leave rather than join a gang,” the Administration for Children and Families’ website states. “They endure a long and dangerous journey to reach the border. When they are placed in a standard shelter, they are, as a rule, relieved to be in a safe and caring environment where they can wait for a sponsor to arrive to take custody.”

kmorelli@tampatrib.com

(813) 259-7760

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Charlotte shelter proposed for unaccompanied immigrant children

Charlotte could soon help in the humanitarian crisis involving tens of thousands of unaccompanied immigrant children pouring across the U.S. border.

Federal officials are considering Charlotte for a 50-bed “day shelter” that will temporarily house unaccompanied immigrant children who are waiting to be reunited with families already in the United States, local leaders said Thursday. Similar proposals have been controversial in other cities.

It’s believed as many as 23,000 children are being detained by the federal government while awaiting reunification with their families.

News of the shelter plan was revealed Thursday during the kickoff of a community initiative to muster support, financial resources and legal expertise to help the children and their families, who are facing fast-tracked deportation proceedings.

Details remain vague and a proposed site has not been named. However, Caldwell Presbyterian Church on East Fifth Street has offered to host the shelter in a 10,000-square-foot building that was most recently used as an overflow shelter by the Salvation Army. The total cost isn’t known, but backers expect the federal government to cover the bill.

Organizers say the shelter could open as early as October. The children would stay in foster care at night and return to the shelter by day for schooling and legal orientations, officials said. It’s predicted the average stay would be 15 to 45 days, or until legal paperwork has been completed.

Though the shelter would be located in Charlotte, children staying there could be awaiting reunification with family in other states, officials added.

Federal officials have said North Carolina is already home to about 1,200 unaccompanied children who came to the United States as part of the border crisis. All are with family or guardians as they await deportation proceedings.

Shelter efforts in some states have faced resistance, including mayors and governors who rebuffed attempts to house the unaccompanied children in their communities.

Gov. Pat McCrory has not taken a stand on locating shelter for unaccompanied children in North Carolina, nor has Charlotte Mayor Dan Clodfelter.

City Council member John Autry and Mecklenburg County commissioner Pat Cotham attended the Thursday meeting where the shelter plan was announced. The 30-plus community leaders included representatives of Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools, a half-dozen houses of faith, and officials connected with nonprofits that help immigrants of all nationalities.

Another meeting of the group has been scheduled for next week, and the goal is to attract representatives of other houses of faith, officials said.

Autry recently asked city staff to study what Charlotte can do to help immigrant children involved in the crisis, including those whose parents can’t be located. He said that study discovered there is little the city can do, as far as providing resources.

Clodfelter said in a statement that he was aware of Autry’s inquiry and “it is our understanding that local nonprofit agencies are taking the lead on providing services to these children.”

The group that met Thursday is working to create a plan to educate the community about the children, while also recruiting expertise and resources to help the families. Chief among the needs is local attorneys willing to work pro bono to represent the families in Charlotte’s immigration court.

Charlotte attorney Tin T. Nguyen of Central Law Group is a key figure in the community initiative and among the things he is seeking are proclamations from Charlotte and Mecklenburg County announcing that this is a “welcoming community” willing to help the children.

“A lot of cities have done this. Atlanta and even Columbia (S.C.) have done it, and if Columbia can do it, there’s no reason we can’t,” Nguyen said, adding that the shelter in Charlotte is aimed as a show of community compassion.

“These children are currently in detention, which is like jail. I don’t know about you, but I don’t like the idea of kids being held like criminals.”

Cotham said she, too, hoped the county would issue such a proclamation in support of the children. “Educating people in the community on this issue is important because there is a lot of fear and a lot of misunderstanding,” she said.

“For a lot of my colleagues (on the county commission), this is not even on their radar. We need to build this (initiative) to includes hundreds and hundreds of people.”

The attempt will likely face resistance from at least one commissioner.

“If they plan on asking me whether I would accept them, the answer is a clear ‘no.’ Not one,” Mecklenburg County commissioner Bill James said in an earlier interview.

CMS reports it is already seeing the impact of the border crisis, with double the number of immigrant students registering for classes this spring compared with last year (400 this year, compared with 200 last year). That includes immigrants of all nationalities, officials said. However, many are from Honduras, which is a nation at the heart of the border crisis, CMS officials said.

Pastor John Cleghorn of Caldwell Presbyterian Church says simply offering the children a place to stay is not enough. His hope is that houses of faith throughout the region will supply volunteers to help the children during their shelter stay.

“I saw wonderful common ground at the meeting that we as Christians can rally around,” Cleghorn said. “This is an opportunity for the faith community to step up and demonstrate our shared values of hospitality, a value that is shared across faith communities.”

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Illegal immigrant children get first-class treatment at taxpayers' expense

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Illegal immigrant children get first-class treatment at taxpayers' expense

From culturally sensitive music to special meals for the lactose intolerant, the organizations the federal government is paying to house and care for the children who have surged across the border illegally are taking pains to make sure they are as comfortable as possible.

Dietitians scrutinize the menus each day to make sure they include enough whole grains but not whole milk. Counselors offer life skills classes in Spanish, and intensive English language training, including use of the Rosetta Stone program. Doctors and dentists treat the children at taxpayers’ expense — often the first medical care of the children’s lives.


SEE ALSO: Surge of illegal immigrant children drops by half in July



PHOTOS: Illegal immigrant children get first-class treatment at taxpayers’ expense


The children also are guaranteed phone privileges, including the right to call back to their home countries.

Some facilities go above and beyond. Yolo County, California, which has a grant to house several dozen of the children in its juvenile detention facility, provides an intercom system in each bedroom so children can talk with staff, but the system “also provides the opportunity for youths to listen to music that is sensitive to culture and preference.”

The federal government has been hush-hush about many aspects of housing and caring for the children. It has refused to provide a list of the 100 or so nonfederal facilities where the children are being sheltered.

But documents from the program give a glimpse of the breadth and scope of the effort, which is eating up an ever-larger portion of the Health and Human Services Department’s budget, jumping from $305.9 million last year to $671.3 million so far in fiscal year 2014.

The biggest grants this year are going to Baptist Child & Family Services, which is being paid $280.2 million; Southwest Key Programs Inc., at $122.3 million; and International Educational Services Inc., at $55 million. Translation services and charter airlines also are making millions of dollars from contracts to transport the children around the country, and to help overcome language barriers.

The Washington Times submitted Freedom of Information Act requests early last month seeking copies of the largest grants, but those have yet to be fulfilled.

Nonprofits contacted by The Times said federal officials told them not to answer questions, and to direct all inquiries to HHS.

HHS spokesman Kenneth J. Wolfe told The Times that Congress has ordered the department to keep all information private.

“These policies are based on a number of congressional directives to protect this vulnerable population, including a 2005 House Committee Report urging HHS ‘to maintain the privacy and confidentiality of all information gathered in the course of the care, custody and placement of unaccompanied alien children,’” Mr. Wolfe said. “In addition, the Flores Settlement Agreement, which governs HHS’ treatment of unaccompanied children, includes requirements to safeguard records about the children and to preserve the confidentiality of their personal information.”

But public spending databases give a glimpse of many locations, and activists at NumbersUSA, an organization that wants a crackdown on immigration, have culled through the contracts, scrutinized press reports and solicited tips from residents to create a map detailing where children are being housed, sites under consideration and places where the government has had to back off.

Scattered locations

The sites are concentrated mainly along the coastal states and southern border, but some are scattered throughout the Upper Midwest.

Rosemary Jenks, government relations manager at NumbersUSA, said the problem isn’t the care the children are receiving, but rather the lack of effort to eventually send them home.

Story Continues →

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Bay City residents make blankets for immigrant children

Bay City Volunteers in central Michigan are rallying to provide blankets and other supplies to unaccompanied children who crossed into the U.S. at the Mexican border.

Dozens of people gathered in Messiah Lutheran Church Wednesday night to make fleece blankets for 24 immigrant children, the Bay City Times reported. The volunteers made 30 blankets by cutting long strips along the edges of two pieces of fabric and tying them together.

Gwen Daeschlein of Bay City said she hopes someone would help the children in her family if they were in need.

I dont care what it is, kids need help and they need to feel comfortable and at home, and they need to feel safe, she said.

The immigrant children will be relocated to a facility in Bay City by the end of the month. Children are also expected to be housed in another facility in Farmington Hills. A plan to house some in Vassar has met with numerous protests.

Another volunteer pointed out the children will most likely experience winter for the first time while theyre in Michigan.

Rick Green, a member of the church, agreed with the blanket-making volunteers.

You need to separate the political questions from the humanitarian questions, he said. How are they going to keep warm?

Andreas Teich, pastor at Messiah Lutheran, said he and other community leaders plan to meet in the coming weeks to discuss other needs of the children.

Sandra Rogers, a local resident, administers the Facebook group Bay City United for Children. She said her group, which includes about 110 people, also plans to provide more donations. She said they could organize a winter clothing drive and donate coloring books and crayons to the children at the shelter.

Because its federally funded, theyre going to have the funds to get them the bare necessities, Rogers said. What we want to do is give the kids more.

About 63,000 unaccompanied children, mostly from Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador, entered the U.S. from October to July, double the number from the same period a year earlier. The numbers slowed in July, possibly due to temperatures climbing at the U.S.-Mexico border.

U.S. cities and towns have been asked to identify facilities where children can be temporarily housed.


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Immigrant rights groups protest against TSCO’s budget request

The Travis County Sheriff’s office is asking for a bigger budget, but some immigrant rights groups aren’t too happy about that.

Sheriff Greg Hamilton went before commissioners Wednesday asking for a budget increase, which could be used to add more mental health officers, update their property room and crime lab. Not everyone thinks that is where the money will actually be used.

Travis County Sheriff Gregg Hamilton was greeted with protestors at Wednesday’s budget hearing. Among them, Maria Del Carmen Rodriguez, who tells us how she feels the Hispanic community is being treated.

“Like disposable people that we can use at any time and after we use them, then we throw them away,” Rodriguez said.

Rodriguez came to the United States when she was 17 years old. She would like to see a better future for undocumented immigrants coming to live here. But says a program called secure communities, is holding them back.

“Anytime someone is booked, their fingerprints are taken and they are sent to ICE. Then ICE says we want to hold anyone with a Spanish last name,” Rodriguez said.

It’s a program that immigrant rights groups say is causing more harm than good.

“Every county and city and state has the right to opt out of this program. In fact we’ve seen 125 counties and states all across the country opt out and say they don’t want any part of this program because it separates families, costs money and opens counties up to lawsuits,” Rodriguez said.

She says 73 percent of those deported have no criminal record. When asking Travis County Sheriff Gregg Hamilton what a budget increase would be used for, he said, “We’re going to reach out for mental health officers because we have changed the way we have been doing business. We’re trying to upgrade our property room and our crime lab and get individuals out there moving.”

Immigrant rights groups say if Travis County opted out of the secure communities program, the sheriff’s office would have the money they need.

Data from immigration and customs enforcement says an average of 19 immigrants are deported from Travis County each week. Something Alejandro Caceres from Austin Immigrant Rights Coalition thinks will continue to rise.

“If they increase the budget, they are themselves guilty and responsible for the thousand deportations that will happen next year,” Caceres said.

“I think what we’re saying is increasing the budget just keeps the status quo and the status quo is having one of the highest deportation rates in the country,” Rodriguez said

The Travis County Sheriff’s Office says they are not the ones who do deportations. They continued to emphasize that the money is needed for five mental health counselors and three additional crime scene specialists.

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More immigrant students swarm DeKalb’s school registration center

Nearly two hundred families with immigrant children had lined up outside a school registration facility in DeKalb County Monday by the time officials arrived around 7:30 a.m., a reminder of the crowd that swamped the building Friday.

“We got here and there was a long line,” said Sandra Nunez, who runs the school district’s International Welcome Center. People camped outside the building from Thursday night to Friday morning, apparently because of a rumor that if they didn’t register by then their kids wouldn’t get into school this year. Nunez said facility workers heard that falsehood repeated by numerous families. In reality, the district registers students as they arrive year round, though school started Monday in DeKalb so late registrants are missing class time.

Nunez said the district registered about 300 immigrant students last week. The time-consuming process of testing and checking medical and other documents limits daily capacity to about 60 new students, she said. Early Monday, officials handed out about 180 sequentially-numbered cards. Those with the first 60 cards were to be processed that day, and the rest were asked to return Tuesday or Wednesday. But new students kept trickling in as the morning progressed.

Kimberly Knight is hosting an exchange student from France and arrived late in the morning. She left after 11 a.m. clutching a card with the number “14” and a note to return Thursday. She faulted herself for the tardy registration, saying she shouldn’t have waited until the last minute to file the paperwork. “The system is probably completely overloaded,” she said, adding that the staff were “very kind and polite.” Knight works at Agnes Scott College and plans to take her 15-year-old charge to the French department to mingle with college students and do some reading.

Officials have no way of knowing whether the rush on the center has any connection to the national humanitarian crisis on the U.S.-Mexico border, where children have been crossing without their parents. School officials are not required to ask for immigration documentation. “We don’t know their immigration status,” Nunez said. The center has been open for much of the summer, registering nearly 900 students, about half of them since July 29. Another 300 or so were registered at elementary schools during spring registration drives and at a high school at the start of summer.

The center is new. It opened late last summer, so there is no comparison registration figure for last year, when much of the processing took place within schools instead. However, DeKalb typically registers about 2,000 new immigrants a year, and the tally for this school year is about 1,300 so far.

Source Article from http://www.ajc.com/news/news/local/more-immigrant-students-swarm-dekalbs-registgratio/ngzDL/
More immigrant students swarm DeKalb’s school registration center
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Unaccompanied immigrant children, lack of solutions in Gaza, democracy in Thailand, isolation of Britain, and why …

Ahora / Holguín, Cuba
The tragedy of unaccompanied immigrant children in the US

“[I]f the government decides to resolve the situation with strict enforcement of current laws, the existing immigration chaos will only be exacerbated,” writes Albor Ruiz about the unaccompanied children pouring over the southern border of the United States. “This chaos is the product of a long list of injustices and mistakes…. Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson has said that children arrested on the border are prioritized for deportation, emphasizing that immigration laws will be enforced regardless of [their] age…. The children do not come in search of the illusory ‘American dream,’ but to escape the dangers of poverty and desperation, drug traffickers’ violence and murderous gangs, which have displaced an entire generation.” 

The Guardian / London
No easy fix in Gaza Strip

“America has to get over its obsession with happy endings or definitive solutions to the Israeli-Palestinian problem. Because right now there are not any…,” writes Aaron David Miller. “[Secretary of State John] Kerry is out of sync, both in trying (and failing) for ceasefire after ceasefire and in trying (and flailing [sic]) to make peace…. The key next step is for the US to see its role as small, not big – transactional, not transformational.”

Bangkok Post / Bangkok, Thailand
Is Thailand really ready for democracy? 

“I have heard many comments [on] … whether Thais are ready for democracy and whether Thais … truly understand what it means,” writes Pichai Chuensuksawadi, referring to the coup in June. “There have been suggestions, for example, that candidates for elected MPs should only come from the ‘knowledgeable and educated,’… that only taxpayers should be allowed to vote, or that voters should at least be given a test on what democracy means before they are allowed to vote…. [W]e should be honest with ourselves and admit that we are not yet a democracy…. [W]e will never have a democracy like countries in the West…. [O]ur culture and our traditions are different…. But unless we find a political structure that allows all stakeholders their space and say in governance, we will once again be back to where we were before.”

Arab News / Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
Britain’s era of self-imposed isolation

“[I]solationism was made clear by the rapid rise of the UK Independent Party (UKIP), which is ideologically anti-foreign and opposed to the expansion of [European Union] power…,” writes Abdel Aziz Aluwaisheg. “UKIP came first in the 2014 European Parliament elections … probably the first time in a century that a party other than Labour and Conservative parties came first in a nationwide election…. Conservatives [tried] … to demonstrate that they were more anti-immigrant than UKIP. They sent out vans with messages encouraging illegal immigrants to ‘go home’ as well as calling for tougher policies against immigrants’ right to benefits and the welfare state…. It is ironic that Britain, with a long imperialist and aggressively intervention past, and with a domain covering seven continents, would now adopt isolationist policies.”

The Herald / Harare, Zimbabwe
Don’t brush aside Zimbabwe

“The US cherry-picked African countries to attend the [US-Africa] summit [Aug. 5-6], which is within its right…,” writes Tichaona Zindonga on US relations across Africa. “There will be 47 countries [at] the table with Obama, that is, including the International Criminal Court-wanted Kenyan president Uhuru Kenyatta. The US says it has not invited Zimbabwe because it maintains sanctions against President Mugabe and key officials ‘over suppression of democracy and what Washington sees as politically motivated violence….’ Zimbabwe is the incoming chair of both [the Southern African Development Community] and the [current deputy of the] African Union…. [Now] the US decides to ostracise Zimbabwe, which will preside over continental affairs for a good year to come. How constructive does the US want to be with Africa?”

Source Article from http://www.csmonitor.com/Commentary/Global-Newsstand/2014/0811/Unaccompanied-immigrant-children-lack-of-solutions-in-Gaza-democracy-in-Thailand-isolation-of-Britain-and-why-Zimbabwe-wasn-t-invited-to-the-Africa-Summit
Unaccompanied immigrant children, lack of solutions in Gaza, democracy in Thailand, isolation of Britain, and why …
http://www.csmonitor.com/Commentary/Global-Newsstand/2014/0811/Unaccompanied-immigrant-children-lack-of-solutions-in-Gaza-democracy-in-Thailand-isolation-of-Britain-and-why-Zimbabwe-wasn-t-invited-to-the-Africa-Summit
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