Immigrant students arrested protesting Georgia’s enrollment policies

Ga. Senator Fort joins protest, testifies against policies

Before this morning's Board of Regents meeting, students protested Georgia's tuition policies that require DACA immigrant students to pay more expensive out-of-state tuition at Georgia's public colleges. BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM

A group of immigrant students and their supporters were arrested Tuesday as part of protest of Georgia’s college enrollment and tuition policies.

The protest at the state’s Board of Regents meeting included undocumented students from Freedom University and other Georgia institutions, including Georgia State and Emory universities, according to an announcement about the protest on the group’s Facebook page. The protesters, many wearing signs reading #EndSegregation and #Boycott Georgia, called for a national boycott of the state.

The protesters began their demonstration around 9:15 a.m. before the Regents’ monthly meeting. A small group of the students sat in chairs reserved for the Regents and held their own short “alternative” board meeting on the state’s policies, and called on businesses to boycott Georgia because of those polices. After chanting “boycott Georgia” and briefly leaving the room, the students returned to the board room and again took seats reserved for the Regents.

Around 9:50 a.m., the students were ordered by state patrol members to vacate the Regents seats. They refused to abandon the seats and were arrested soon afterward.

The demonstration was aimed at policies of the University System of Georgia that prevent students without lawful presence in the country from attending any institution in the system that has not enrolled all of its academically qualified applicants for the previous two years. But immigrant students say the federal DACA — Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals — program gives them that legal presence in the country, so they should be allowed to attend the state schools.

For the other public colleges in Georgia that those students can attend, they must pay the more expensive out-of-state rate.

The DACA students and their supporters say those policies are discriminatory and often prevent them from attending school in the state because they cannot afford the higher rates.

Georgia Sen. Vincent Fort joined the protesters and testified during the group’s mock hearing, but did not participate in the further demonstration and was not arrested.

“These students are Georgians. They graduate from Georgia high schools and are being told they can’t participate in the American Dream even though they spent their entire lives or most of their lives here,” Fort, D-Atlanta, told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. “These are people who want to be part of the American Dream and are being denied because of their immigration status … It’s unfair and it’s discriminatory.”

Salvador Alvarado — who was brought to the country from El Salvador at age 7 — testified that he graduated from Berkmar High School in Gwinnett County in 2014, as one of the top students in his class, but because of the state’s policies he could not attend a top state school, he said. His family could not afford the out-of-state fees at another college, and he received a scholarship to attend college out of state, he said.

Tuesday’s protest follows a long history of demonstrations from the immigrant students, who have also held protests outside the state Capitol, at some Georgia colleges and at other Regents meetings.

Two lawsuits are currently working through Fulton County and federal courts regarding the Regents policies.