June 26, 2026

Statement On New JAPC Letter To FLDOE

FPI today released a statement* from FPI CEO Sadaf Knight after the Joint Administrative Procedures Committee (JAPC) sent a powerful letter to the Florida Department of Education (FLDOE), questioning the legality of its proposed rule that would bar undocumented students from community colleges and adult education. FPI brought up similar issues in official communications to the JAPC and FLDOE regarding the proposed rules, which will be considered by the Florida Board of Education on June 30.

Florida’s constitution affirms that it’s a "paramount duty of the state to make adequate provision for the education of all children residing within its borders." Not some children. All children, regardless of race, ethnicity, nation of origin, gender, religion, or immigration status.

Our state community colleges and adult education programs serve all-comers; Floridians who want to build a better future for themselves and their families. These institutions also serve young people, including students in our public school systems enrolled in dual-enrollment community college programs and those 16 years old and over pursuing adult education courses. These are the children whose educational access is protected by Florida’s constitution.

Our constitution reads this way because our state benefits when all Floridians are well educated and able to support their families and contribute to a healthy Florida economy. While policymakers should be building bridges to economic opportunity, these administrative rules would do just the opposite.

Not only did the Florida Legislature ultimately reject language now being considered by FLDOE that would bar undocumented students from state colleges and universities — now, JAPC, a body tasked with rule-making oversight, is reminding the state education department that its purpose is not to create new laws, and that it must abide by current Florida law, such as the Florida Educational Equity Act.

Barring Dreamers from higher education will hurt all of Florida. Colleges and universities will lose out on tuition and fees, and communities will lose out on future tax revenue and economic activity. Every Floridian — regardless of immigration status — deserves access to affordable higher education opportunities. Just like Florida’s repeal of tuition fairness in 2025, FLDOE’s proposals are not rooted in common-sense fiscal policy; instead, they are the latest attempts to create a climate of fear, confusion, and division — ones that will come at the expense of Floridians’ well-being and taxpayer dollars. And it is blatantly against Florida law and our state constitution.

*This version of the statement on FPI's website includes the corrected title ("Statement On New JAPC Letter To FLDOE").

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