Citing risks, UC won't hire its immigrant students without legal status, work permits
![](https://article-imgs.scribdassets.com/6dxvydi05cbz2lfc/images/file7L6XKP1S.jpg)
University of California regents declined Thursday to move forward on a bold plan to hire immigrant students who lack legal work authorization, crushing the hopes of thousands of young people seeking to escape precarious futures without adequate access to jobs and research opportunities.
UC President Michael V. Drake told regents he would not recommend a proposed plan to challenge federal law barring employment of those without legal status because the potential consequences were too risky to UC students, families and staff. UC students could be subject to deportation, employees could risk civil and criminal prosecution if they knowingly participate in hiring practices deemed impermissible under federal law, and the university could lose federal contracts and grants, he said.
A legal scholars asserted that the 1986 federal law in question does
You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.
Start your free 30 days