Thursday, October 27, 2022

Re: Ukrainian Refugee Tuition

As Maria said, eligibility for residency is tied to legal immigration status. Non-immigrants (students who are coming only to study and do not intend to reside long term or to work, e.g. F1, J1 visas) cannot seek residency or qualify for federal financial aid. Those with immigrant status (legal permanent residents/”green card” holders and those who have immigrant visas, e.g. refugees and asylees) are legally permitted to remain long-term in the U.S. They are approved to seek in-state residency, usually have the legal ability to work, and can apply for federal financial aid.

 

Best,

 

BRIGITTA LEE

ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF ADMISSIONS, EVALUATIONS

 

Undergraduate Admissions

Gilkey Building   |   32 Campus Drive   |   406-243-2496

brigitta.lee@umontana.edu

 

University of Montana

 

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From: Mangold, Maria <Maria.Mangold@mso.umt.edu>
Sent: Thursday, October 27, 2022 2:07 PM
To: MACRAO Listserv <MACRAO@LISTSERV.GFCMSU.EDU>; Lee, Brigitta <Brigitta.Lee@mso.umt.edu>; Campeau, Tony <tcampeau@montana.edu>
Subject: RE: Ukrainian Refugee Tuition

 

Yes, I agree with both @Lee, Brigitta and @Campeau, Tony

 

I know enough to be dangerous regarding F-1 and J-1 visa regulations, but it’s been a while since I worked directly with international students.  F-1 and J-1 visa statuses are inextricably linked to pursuing a course of study (read:  time limitations apply; host institutions issue forms 1-20 and DS-2019) and are non-immigrant statuses, whereas refugee and asylee statuses are indefinite with a clear-cut path to pursuing U.S. permanent residency status.  Asylees and refugees are both authorized to work in the U.S.  F-1 ad J-1 visa types have highly regulated conditions under which they may work. 

 

@Lee, Brigitta or someone else in international admissions – please fill in any gaps I may have missed. 

 

Best regards,

Maria

MARIA MANGOLD, M.Ed. (she/her)

UNIVERSITY REGISTRAR

 

Office of the Registrar

Aber Hall 6th floor   |   32 Campus Drive   |   406-243-2412

maria.mangold@umontana.edu

 

University of Montana

 

   

 

From: MACRAO Listserv <MACRAO@LISTSERV.GFCMSU.EDU> On Behalf Of Campeau, Tony
Sent: Thursday, October 27, 2022 1:09 PM
To: MACRAO@LISTSERV.GFCMSU.EDU
Subject: Re: Ukrainian Refugee Tuition

 

Hello,

Thanks for the question based on the language in this directive “Individuals in lawful permanent resident status, or in asylee or refugee status are also presumed to have the ability to obtain in-state status.”  My understanding is that a person with documentable refugee status (or has evidence of filing for refugee status), COULD be eligible for in-state residency but would need to meet the other residency requirements as outlined in the policy and overcome the presumptions.  However, simply being a refugee does not overcome the presumption.

 

It would be good if we are all on the same page with this.  We have one student who applied this fall (who had been on exchange in HS).  After consultation with legal counsel we determined he is not a resident for fee purposes but has not yet overcome the presumption that his reason for being in MT in educational.

 

Please chime in if others have different interpretation or experience.
Tony

 

From: MACRAO Listserv <MACRAO@LISTSERV.GFCMSU.EDU> On Behalf Of Amy Kanewischer
Sent: Thursday, October 27, 2022 12:52 PM
To: MACRAO@LISTSERV.GFCMSU.EDU
Subject: Ukrainian Refugee Tuition

 

**External Sender**

Good afternoon!

 

Our campus could possibly have Ukrainian Refugees apply for our spring term and we had a question about what residency status they would receive for tuition. Any information, suggestions or advice is greatly appreciated!

 

Have a great afternoon!

 

Amy Kanewischer | Registrar 
akanewis@fvcc.edu | (406) 756-3845

Flathead Valley Community College 
777 Grandview Dr. | Kalispell, MT 59901 
www.fvcc.edu


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