US drops plan to force thousands of foreign students out , Latest World News - The New Paper
World

US drops plan to force thousands of foreign students out

This article is more than 12 months old

The government says it will rescind move after legal challenge brought by universities

NEW YORK/WASHINGTON: In a stunning reversal of policy, the Trump administration abandoned a plan that would have forced out tens of thousands of foreign students following widespread condemnation of the move and pressure from colleges and major businesses.

US officials announced last week that international students at schools that had moved to online-only classes due to thecoronavirus pandemic would have to leave the country if they were unable to transfer to a college with at least some in-person instruction.

The government said it would drop the plan amid a legal challenge brought by universities.

But a senior US Department of Homeland Security official said the administration still intended to issue a regulation in the coming weeks addressing whether foreign students can remain in the United States if their classes move online.

There are more than a million foreign students at US colleges and universities, and many schools depend on revenue from foreign students, who often pay full tuition.

The July 6 move by the administration blindsided many universities and colleges that were still making plans for the fall semester, trying to balance concerns about rising cases in many US states and the desire to return to classes.

A flurry of lawsuits were filed challenging the rule, including one brought by Harvard University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology and another by a coalition of state governments.

Dozens of big companies and colleges and universities filed "friend-of-the-court" briefs opposing the rule.

Harvard planned to hold all of its classes online for the upcoming academic year.

President Donald Trump, who is pushing schools across the country to reopen in the autumn, said he thought Harvard's plan not to hold in-person classes was ridiculous.

The universities argued the measure was unlawful and would adversely affect their academic institutions.

In a highly anticipated court hearing on Tuesday in the case brought by Harvard, US District Judge Allison Burroughs in Massachusetts said the US government and the two elite universities that sued had come to a settlement that would roll back the new rules and restore the previous status quo.

The hearing lasted less than four minutes.

California Attorney General Xavier Becerra, who led a separate lawsuit challenging the visa rules, said in a written statement Mr Trump's "arbitrary actions" put the health of students and communities at risk.

"In the midst of an economic and public health crisis, we don't need the federal government alarming Americans or wasting everyone's time and resources with dangerous policy decisions," Mr Becerra said.

Mr Alexander Auster, 22, a second-year student from Germany at George Washington University Law School, had already signed a lease on an apartment for the next academic year when the policy was announced. He had arrived in the US when he was 17 to join the university's swim team.

"It feels really good now," he said after hearing that the government had walked back its plan. "Now I am hopeful and optimistic. I thought I had to go home." - REUTERS

WORLD