Macalester College offers free summer housing to international students with visa worries



International students at Macalester College in St. Paul will be able to stay on campus for free this summer, in light of concerns over changing visa practices.

College president Suzanne Rivera said students are worried immigration rules might change, leaving them stuck abroad for the fall semester if they go home for summer break.

“Anxiety levels were really high,” Rivera said. “The best way we could assist our students was to let them know that if they didn’t feel they could travel home over the summer, they wouldn’t have to take that risk.”

The college says a donor gave $250,000 to make the housing offer possible. There’s room for 65 students to stay in dorms for free, with meal plans included.

The school said most of the students’ visas prevent them from working summer jobs. 

Macalester has more than 300 international students — about 14 percent of its student body. Rivera said staff are prioritizing housing applications from international students with high financial need, but she’s anticipating the school will have funding to house all who want to stay.

With a week left before commencement, students and staff are hurrying to make housing plans. Staff are also looking to connect students who stay in the country with volunteer and internship positions.

It’s the cap to a chaotic few months, marked by federal grant cuts and sudden rule changes for international students.

“The whole semester has felt like a scramble,” Rivera said. “Since late January, we’ve been monitoring closely a flurry of executive orders and policy changes and other kinds of initiatives.”

The college is continuing to check all of its international students’ statuses in a federal database daily, after thousands of students across the country had their records canceled, putting their visa status at risk. The Trump administration has since reinstated most of those records to comply with judges’ orders in several states. Rivera said staff were not aware of any Macalester students who had their records canceled.

The school has also signed on to an amicus brief in a lawsuit challenging the Trump administration’s revocation of student visas and detention of noncitizen students. 

Rivera said the federal rule changes are putting a strain on colleges and universities.

“Part of the reason the U.S. higher education system is a crown jewel is because our campuses are so intentionally diverse and international, and I would hate to see that go away,” Rivera said.

Last month, President Rivera — along with more than 620 other higher education administrators — signed on to a letter denouncing the Trump administration’s interference at colleges and universities. Several other Minnesota education leaders signed on, including presidents at Minnesota State Mankato, Hamline University and St. Olaf College.



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PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) — A coalition of 20 state Democratic attorneys general, including Minnesota’s, filed two federal lawsuits on Tuesday, claiming that the Trump administration is threatening to withhold billions of dollars in transportation and disaster-relief funds unless states agree to certain immigration enforcement actions.

According to the complaints, both Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem and Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy have threatened to cut off funding to states that refuse to comply with President Donald Trump’s immigration agenda.

While no federal funding is currently being withheld, California Attorney General Rob Bonta said during a news conference on Tuesday that the threat was “imminent.”

“President Donald Trump can’t use these funds as a bargaining chip as his way of ensuring states abide by his preferred policies,” Bonta added.

Department of Assistant Secretary of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement that the lawsuit will not stop the Trump Administration from “restoring the rule of law.”

“Cities and states who break the law and prevent us from arresting criminal illegal aliens should not receive federal funding. The President has been clear on that,” she said.

Duffy said in a statement that the 20 states have filed the lawsuit because “their officials want to continue breaking federal law and putting the needs of illegal aliens above their own citizens.”

Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison said in a written statement that decisions about how police resources are allocated should be made at the local leve.

“It is both wrong and unlawful for the Trump Administration to demand Minnesota law enforcement step away from their patrols, investigations, and community-engagement work to instead enforce federal immigration law,” Ellison said. “Furthermore, it is deeply disturbing that the Trump Administration is threatening to withhold important disaster relief and public safety funds if we do not do their job for them.” 

Both lawsuits say that the Trump administration is violating the U.S. Constitution by trying to dictate federal spending when Congress has that power — not the executive branch.

On April 24, states received letters from the Department of Transportation stating that they must cooperate on immigration efforts and eliminate diversity, equity and inclusion programs or risk losing funds.

New Jersey Attorney General Matthew Platkin criticized the timing of Duffy’s letter when Newark’s airport struggles with radar outages and other issues.

“I wish the administration would stop playing politics with people’s lives,” Platkin said. “I wish Secretary Duffy would do his damn job, which is to make sure planes land on time, not to direct immigration enforcement.”

Meanwhile, on Feb. 24, states received letters from the Department of Homeland Security declaring that states that “refuse to cooperate with, refuse to share information with, or even actively obstruct federal immigration enforcement reject these ideals and the history we share in common as Americans.”

“If any government entity chooses to thumb its nose at the Department of Homeland Security’s national security and public safety mission, it should not receive a single dollar of the Department’s money unless Congress has specifically required it,” Noem wrote in her letter.

Attorneys general behind the lawsuits include the following states: California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Washington, Wisconsin and Vermont.

The cases are being spearheaded by California but were filed in federal court in Rhode Island, a detail that the attorneys general defended by saying they filed in “any court that is going to be fair and objective and consider our factual presentation and legal analysis.”

The lawsuits are the latest legal actions that Democratic-led states have taken against Trump since he took office earlier this year. Bonta noted that California has filed more than 20 lawsuits against the administration, while Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha said his state has launched more than a dozen.

While the lawsuits have challenged policies on tariffs, federal employee firings and health care research, Trump’s focus on immigration enforcement and the mass deportation of immigrants in the United States illegally have received the most attention.

This has included the president’s promise to mass deport people and the start of a registry required for all those who are in the country illegally.

“What we’re seeing is a creeping authoritarianism,” Neronha said.



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