February 12, 2025

Testimony on HB 1C Before the Florida House Budget Committee

The testimony below was provided on February 12, 2025, during the Florida House Budget Committee meeting on House Bill 1C, legislation that would end tuition fairness for Dreamers.

There is no way to document all the reasons we do not support this bill at Florida Policy Institute, but I’d be remiss not to highlight some more of the fiscal perils that my peers have discussed already. 

First, our analysis finds that pulling the in-state tuition rug out from under ambitious young Floridians, one of many provisions of this bill…would mean a state loss of $15 million in tuition and fees. 

Over 63,000 out-of-state fee waivers have been granted to Dreamers since 2014, with 6,800 students getting these waivers, on average, each year. These youth are paying millions annually for in-state tuition with the waiver now, but without the waiver, and without access to financial aid that they do not currently have to help pay steep out-of-state rates, these Floridians will likely end up paying no tuition and instead foregoing their college dreams entirely.

A repeal would hit Florida’s 28 colleges hardest, because it has granted 72 percent of nonresident waivers since the policy’s inception in 2014. The state itself has said college enrollment rates remains 11 percent below pre-pandemic levels, with more than 36,000 fewer full-time enrollments. Denying thousands more students the opportunity to enroll and to thrive is reckless and unnecessary. 

One final point on the state’s educational goals. In 2019, the governor prioritized the “SAIL to 60” initiative, and this was to raise the rate of working-age people with a degree or high-value postsecondary certificate to 60 percent by 2030.

We cannot meet educational goals by denying young people — regardless of their immigration status —  the opportunity to thrive in our state.

And while the repeal of this policy has often been framed as a way to save Floridians money, the opposite is true. Floridians and the economy will suffer, while the state chooses to spend over a quarter of a billion dollars in this bill on the unnecessary proposals.

For all of these reasons, we at Florida Policy Institute urge you to vote NO.    

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