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College Board endorses DREAM Act
College Board wants to help some illegal immigrants find path to citizenship
By Ben Meyerson
Washington Bureau
CHICAGO TRIBUNE
April 22, 2009
WASHINGTON--A
prominent group of more than 5,000 colleges and universities is
supporting legislation that would offer some undocumented youths a path
to citizenship through college or the military.
The College Board, best known for the SAT and advanced placement
tests it administers, is stepping into the contentious issue for the
first time just as President Barack Obama is signaling he may encourage lawmakers to overhaul immigration laws later in the year.
The bill the College Board is supporting, known as the Dream Act,
would allow students who illegally entered the U.S. when they were 15
or younger to apply for conditional legal status if they have lived in
the country for five or more years and graduated from high school or
earned a GED. If they then attended college or served in the military
for two or more years, they could be granted full citizenship.
Conditional legal status could make the immigrants eligible for
in-state college tuition, depending on local laws, and would allow them
to compete for some forms of federal financial assistance. A 2007 UCLA
report estimated that 65,000 undocumented students graduate from U.S.
high schools every year.
The College Board's trustees have voted unanimously to support the
Dream Act, said James Montoya, a vice president of the College Board.
"These are students who have gone through our K-12 system and have achieved in a very high manner," Montoya said.
But Ira Mehlman, spokesman for the Federation for American Immigration
Reform, said the Dream Act allows illegal immigrants to take
scholarship opportunities away from native U.S. residents. It's unfair
to reward those who violated the law to get here, he said.
"If you ask any illegal alien why they came to America, the
answer, invariably is 'Well, I wanted to do better for my family,' and
this gives them precisely what they broke the law to achieve," Mehlman
said.
The Senate voted on the Dream Act in 2007, winning a majority but
lacking the 60 votes needed to end a filibuster. The measure was then
folded into more comprehensive Immigration legislation, which died. It was reintroduced in the House and Senate last month.
bmeyerson@tribune.com
Copyright © 2009, Chicago Tribune
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