Undocumented students rally for in-state tuition rates

An estimated 150 undocumented students from Tennessee rallied on Legislative Plaza today in support of legislation that would grant state high school graduates in-state tuition rates to public colleges regardless of their immigration status.
An estimated 150 undocumented students from Tennessee rallied on Legislative Plaza today in support of legislation that would grant state high school graduates in-state tuition rates to public colleges regardless of their immigration status.
photo An estimated 150 undocumented students from Tennessee rallied on Legislative Plaza today in support of legislation that would grant state high school graduates in-state tuition rates to public colleges regardless of their immigration status.

NASHVILLE -- An estimated 150 undocumented students from Tennessee rallied on Legislative Plaza today in support of legislation that would grant state high school graduates in-state tuition rates to public colleges regardless of their immigration status.

As an organizers shouted "tuition equality," the group responded "Now!"

They later went into Legislative Plaza to discuss with legislators their support of legislation sponsored by Sen. Todd Gardenhire, R-Chattanooga, and Rep. Mark White, R-Memphis. As amended, it would allow any Tennessee high school graduate with at least four years in Tennessee, a 21 on their ACT and 3.0 GPA to attend a public college or university at in-state tuition rates.

The students currently have to pay triple the tuition rate as American-born in-state students do. Most wore placards stating their career ambitions.

Among them was 21-year-old Chattanoogan Samira Gutierrez, an East Ridge High School graduate, who was eight months old when she arrived in the U.S. Gutierrez said she is currently studying biology at Chattanooga State. She and her parents are paying out-of-state tuition and she's taking two courses a semester at a cost of almost $4,000.

"I really can't afford to keep doing this much longer," said Gutierrez, who wants to become a researcher. "A lot of immigrant students have a difficult time."

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