Federal judge rules UNT can't charge out-of-state students more tuition than undocumented students

ByKate McGee, The Texas Tribune
Wednesday, April 13, 2022
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TEXAS -- A federal judge has ruled that the University of North Texas can't charge out-of-state American students higher tuition than undocumented Texans who qualify for lower in-state tuition under a 2001 Texas law.

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UNT lawyers appealed last week's decision by U.S. District Judge Sean Jordan, who was appointed by President Donald Trump, over the weekend.

The ruling centers on Texas' 2001 law allowing undocumented students who have lived in Texas for three years and graduate from a Texas high school to pay in-state tuition.

This recent challenge by the Texas Public Policy Foundation, on behalf of the student organization the Young Conservatives of Texas, could provide a new path forward for some Texas lawmakers who have wanted to eliminate the in-state tuition benefit for undocumented students since at least 2015.

In 2021, a little more than 22,000 students were enrolled in Texas colleges and universities using this benefit.

Two years ago, the right-leaning TPPF filed the lawsuit, pointing out that the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 states that an individual "who does not legally reside in the United States should not be eligible for a postsecondary education benefit granted on the basis of where someone lives unless United States citizens qualify for the same benefit." Therefore, they argued, out-of-state students shouldn't have to pay more than undocumented Texas students.

Jordan, the federal judge, agreed.

"Because Texas's non-resident tuition scheme directly conflicts with Congress's express prohibition on providing eligibility for postsecondary education benefits, it is preempted and therefore unconstitutional," Jordan wrote.

Other university systems in the state said they are still reviewing this ruling.

But Thomas A. Saenz, president of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, criticized the judge's ruling.

"It's hard not to see it as a Trump judge overreaching to try to change longstanding law in the state of Texas," said Saenz, who is also MALDEF's general counsel. He found the ruling surprising given the amount of time the state law has been in place.

"It's obviously a political lawsuit, and granting that political lawsuit is what's disturbing," he said.

TPPF lawyer Rob Henneke said he's excited the ruling will make Texas colleges and universities more affordable for out-of-state students.

"For the thousands of college students in Texas who've been burdened by these higher out-of-state tuition rates, they get immediate relief from having to pay so much to be educated," he said.

According to New American Economy, a bipartisan research group, out-of-state tuition rates are on average three times higher than in-state rates.

At UNT, the average cost of tuition for an in-state student is $26,500, while an out-of-state student pays closer to $38,800 on average.

Students at the University of Texas at Austin who are Texas residents pay between $11,000 and $14,000 on average for tuition, while a nonresident student pays between $38,600 and $47,000 in tuition.

Saenz, with MALDEF, said Texas lawmakers could change the law to eliminate the three-year residency requirement and provide in-state tuition to any Texas resident who graduated from a Texas high school, similar to California's law. But he admitted that "in the current political context, that seems less likely."

Gov. Greg Abbott, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and Conroe Republican Brandon Creighton, chair of the Texas Senate Higher Education Committee, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Michael Olivas, a professor emeritus at the University of Houston Law Center who helped write the 2001 law, slammed the judge's decision.

He said the judge did not take into account the other exceptions that allow out-of-state students to receive the lower, in-state tuition rate, including the waiver that allows students in bordering states to receive in-state tuition at some institutions.

"These students are trying to make a political point for an issue that was a non-issue and then obfuscated it," he said.

Olivas also said TPPF lawyers did not adequately demonstrate how out-of-state students are harmed by the law, given that any U.S. citizen can qualify for in-state tuition if after living in Texas for a year before enrolling in college, while an undocumented student must live in Texas for three years before qualifying for in-state tuition.

Olivas expects advocacy and legal immigration groups to get involved in the appeal of the UNT ruling.

Meanwhile, lawyers for UNT also argued that barring it from charging out-of-state students a higher rate will force the university to incur millions in lost revenue, an argument the judge rejected.

"Budgetary constraints do not absolve constitutional violations," he wrote.

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