Ortt to SUNY: “No Sanctuary Campuses”
Kevin Crumb
December 12, 2016
New York State Senator Rob Ortt (R,C,I – North Tonawanda) today called on the State University of New York (SUNY) Board of Trustees to immediately reject calls to establish “sanctuary campuses” at SUNY schools. In a letter (attached) to the Board of Trustees, Ortt asked the board to focus on its mission of educating the students instead of falling into a divisive political issue. In opposing sanctuary campuses, Ortt pointed to the potential loss in federal aid as well as the message it sends to students.
“I would find it extremely difficult to tell a hard-working student, or a working class family, that they will not realize their dream of attending college because we lost federal aid when the state decided to make a needless political statement,” said Ortt, a member of the New York State Senate Committee on Higher Education.
“I worry about the message this would send to college students. This policy would tell students, in their formative years, that their college and their state condones violating the law. I believe that such a message would run contrary to our mission of developing the next generation of citizens. Many campuses are already free from opposing viewpoints; they shouldn’t also be free of the rule of law.”
Following the results of the presidential election, there has been a movement at private and public institutions to establish sanctuary campuses. The movement calls for campuses to continue components of President Obama’s unilateral 2012 Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) ahead of – and in spite of – the new President and Congress in 2017.
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