USC is a taxpayer funded university and is clearly using some of those funds to promote a sanctuary campus.
Via Campus Reform:
The University of Southern California is working to establish an emergency fund to cover travel and legal expenses for students impacted by President Trumps executive orders on immigration.
In an email sent last week to students enrolled in USCs Price School of Public Policy, USC Graduate Student Government (GSG) Vice President Christina Gutierrez announced that the GSG had nearly unanimously passed a resolution titled Denouncing President Trumps Executive Orders Restricting the Refugee Resettlement Program and Travel from Seven Muslim-Majority Countries, and Reaffirming Support of Refugees, Muslims, Immigrants and Religious Pluralism.
The resolution not only demands that the administration issue a statement condemning the executive orders, but also that it increase funding for mental health centers that serve Muslim, refugee, immigrant, international and other marginalized student groups, as well as provide culturally sensitive mental health services for individuals that hold more than one marginalized identity (LGBTQ+, Muslim, immigrant, refugee, undocumented, etc.).
According to Gutierrez, more than 250 USC students are directly affected by the orders, the second-largest number of any university in the country, prompting the GSG to add a provision to the resolution calling for an emergency fund to cover travel and legal expenses of those students who are adversely affected.
A notation at the bottom of the resolution claims that the GSG Director of Campus Affairs has agreed to an initial allocation of $11,000 for the fund, which would come from the existing Campus Affairs budget. GSG board members and campus administrators, such as the Dean of Religious Life, are in the process of creating disbursement models modeled after the University of Michigans Rackham Graduate Student Emergency Funds.
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