ICE Lawsuit
ICE Lawsuit
ICE Lawsuit
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS,
STATE OF COLORADO, STATE OF
CONNECTICUT, STATE OF DELAWARE,
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, STATE OF
ILLINOIS, STATE OF MARYLAND, STATE
OF MICHIGAN, STATE OF MINNESOTA,
STATE OF NEVADA, STATE OF NEW
JERSEY, STATE OF NEW MEXICO, STATE Civil Action No. 20-11311
OF OREGON, COMMONWEALTH OF
PENNSYLVANIA, STATE OF RHODE
ISLAND, STATE OF VERMONT,
COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA, and
STATE OF WISCONSIN, COMPLAINT FOR DECLARATORY
AND INJUNCTIVE RELIEF
Plaintiffs,
v.
Defendants.
INTRODUCTION
Connecticut, State of Delaware, District of Columbia, State of Illinois, State of Maryland, State
of Michigan, State of Minnesota, State of Nevada, State of New Jersey, State of New Mexico,
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Commonwealth of Virginia, and State of Wisconsin (collectively, “the Plaintiff States” or “the
States”) bring this action to challenge the federal government’s cruel, abrupt, and unlawful
action to expel international students or force campuses to be less safe amidst the SARS-CoV-2
pandemic that has wrought death and disruption across the United States.
science and public health that we hope will conquer the pandemic—have not been spared its
effects. As millions of SARS-CoV-2 infections have spread across the country and more than
137,000 people have suffered and died from COVID-19 disease as a result, our institutions of
higher education have had to overhaul their operations to keep students, faculty, and staff safe
ongoing public health emergency by the federal government and by all of the Plaintiff States, and
with carefully designed guidance and directives by the States to control the spread of the virus
4. Recognizing that indoor gatherings pose particular risk for transmitting the highly
contagious—and sometimes deadly—virus, colleges and universities have eliminated some or all
in-person classes. A blanket approach to holding in-person classes, no matter the current, local
public health risks, endangers not only students, faculty, and staff, but also their household
5. In light of the need to limit or eliminate in-person classes during the pandemic, on
March 13, 2020, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), a division of the
Department of Homeland Security (DHS), issued guidance advising students and educational
institutions that, “[g]iven the extraordinary nature of the COVID-19 emergency,” exemptions
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would be granted “for the duration of the emergency” to allow international students attending
our colleges and universities on certain nonimmigrant student visas (“F-1” and “M-1” visas) to
take online classes to fulfill the course of study required by their visas (the “March 13
Guidance”).1 At the time of the March 13 Guidance, there were known to have been a total of
6. Without warning, on July 6, 2020—a date on which the country recorded 47,375
new positive COVID-19 tests in a single day, and by which date a total of 122,915 known deaths
had occurred in the United States, with hundreds more occurring every day3—ICE announced
through a “Broadcast Message” a new directive that international students can no longer live in
the United States and take their classes online (the “July 6 Directive” or “Directive”).
7. This abrupt change came after colleges and universities had final or near-final
plans already in place for fall 2020. Because of the months-long efforts required to coordinate
these plans, institutions were forced to rely on the March 13 Guidance announced “for the
duration of the emergency” in making these preparations, and the vast majority have opted for
continued use of online learning to ensure the health and safety of students, faculty, staff, and the
public at large.
students who are not taking a sufficient number of in-person classes to “depart the country or
1
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Homeland Security Investigations, National
Security Investigations Division, Student and Exchange Visitor Program, COVID-19: Guidance
for SEVP Stakeholders, at 1-2 (Mar. 13, 2020),
https://www.ice.gov/sites/default/files/documents/Document/2020/Coronavirus%20Guidance_3.
13.20.pdf.
2
The COVID Tracking Project, U.S. Historical Data, https://covidtracking.com/data/us-daily.
3
Id.
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take other measures, such as transferring to a school with in-person instruction to remain in
lawful status or potentially face immigration consequences including, but not limited to, the
initiation of removal proceedings.”4 The Directive further demanded that educational institutions
advise the federal government within 9 days—by July 15, 2020—whether they intend to offer
only remote courses in the fall semester, and to certify within 20 days—by August 4, 2020—that
each individual student taking in-person classes meets particularized requirements for in-person
9. ICE offered no rationale for this abrupt reversal of the March 13 Guidance, which
had explicitly allowed exemptions to in-person learning requirements “for the duration of the
emergency” our States and schools continue to face. It failed to consider the health and safety of
our students, faculty, staff, and the untold other residents of our States with whom they interact;
it failed to consider the tremendous costs and burden this abrupt reversal would impose on our
institutions of higher learning; and it failed to consider that, for many of our international
students, remote learning in the countries and communities from which they come would impede
their studies or be simply impossible. It is the essence of arbitrary and capricious to withdraw,
without explanation, a commonsense measure to manage the pandemic currently engulfing our
country.
10. This reversal leaves colleges and universities with an agonizing dilemma. To
ensure all of their students can remain in the United States to continue their courses of study,
they must scramble to offer sufficient in-person classes in myriad subjects for hundreds of
thousands of international students, mere weeks before the semester starts, and without regard
4
Student and Exchange Visitor Program, Broadcast Message: COVID-19 and Fall 2020, at 1
(July 6, 2020), https://www.ice.gov/doclib/sevis/pdf/bcm2007-01.pdf.
5
Id. at 2.
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for the public health impact of doing so. The alternative is to lose significant numbers of
international students from their campuses, who will be forced to leave the country to participate
remotely insofar as they are able, transfer to another school offering sufficient in-person classes,
11. Either choice will inflict harm. In-person instruction offered only for the purposes
of meeting this arbitrary Directive risks sacrificing the health and safety of students, faculty, and
staff—and, indeed, our States more generally. Losing the presence—and in many cases the
enrollment—of international students would result in the loss of invaluable perspectives and
contributions by these students, hundreds of millions of dollars in foregone tuition as well as fees
for housing and other services, and hundreds of billions of dollars in revenue for our States’
economies.
12. ICE’s reversal also imposes an insuperable burden on our colleges and
universities. These institutions now must certify by August 4, 2020, for each and every
international student, that the students’ respective class schedules meet the federal requirement
for sufficient in-person learning. These same institutions have, for months, been devising
detailed, multifaceted plans to ensure the safety and well-being of our students, faculty, and staff,
while also preserving learning opportunities for students, all while dealing with the uncertainty
of the pandemic’s course. Now, with insufficient notice, zero explanation, and severely depleted
resources, colleges and universities are forced to readjust all of those plans to account for
whether every single international student, in every single program, will have sufficient in-
person learning opportunities to maintain their visa status in the United States—a determination
they must make before many students have registered for a single class, while many faculty and
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staff are absent from campus due to the pandemic or on leave for the summer, and while the
pandemic’s course this summer and autumn remains worrisome and unclear.
13. ICE’s reversal is senseless and cruel to our universities and students. It also
violates the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. §§ 701 et seq., by failing to offer any reason
for the dramatic policy reversal, neglecting to consider the myriad ways in which the colleges,
universities, and students relied on the previous policy, disregarding our country’s ongoing—
indeed worsening—public health emergency, and imposing an effective date that makes
compliance all but impossible. Thus issued wholly without warning or opportunity for notice and
comment from the myriad affected individuals and entities, the July 6 Directive is also
procedurally invalid. This Court should therefore stay the effective date of the Directive pending
judicial review; grant the Plaintiff States declaratory and injunctive relief from the Directive on a
preliminary and permanent basis; vacate and set aside the Directive; and award the Plaintiff
14. This Court has subject matter jurisdiction over this action under 28 U.S.C. § 1331
and may enter declaratory, injunctive, and other relief under 28 U.S.C § 2201(a) and 5 U.S.C.
§§ 702, 705-706.
1391(e)(1). Defendants are United States agencies or officers sued in their official capacities.
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts is a resident of this judicial district, and a substantial part
of the events or omissions giving rise to this complaint occurred within the district.
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PARTIES
Attorney General, is a sovereign state of the United States of America. This action is brought on
behalf of the Commonwealth by Attorney General Maura Healey, who has both statutory and
common-law authority and responsibility to represent the public interest for the people of
officials in litigation. Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 12, § 3; Feeney v. Commonwealth, 366 N.E.2d 1262,
17. Plaintiff State of Colorado is a sovereign state of the United States of America.
This action is brought on behalf of the State of Colorado by Attorney General Phillip J. Weiser,
who is the chief legal counsel of the State of Colorado, empowered to prosecute and defend all
18. Plaintiff State of Connecticut, represented by and through its Attorney General,
William Tong, is a sovereign state of the United States of America. The Attorney General brings
this action as the state’s chief civil legal officer under Conn. Gen. Stat. § 3-124 et seq.
19. Plaintiff State of Delaware is a sovereign state of the United States of America.
This action is brought on behalf of the State of Delaware by Attorney General Kathleen
Jennings, the “chief law officer of the State.” Darling Apartment Co. v. Springer, 22 A.2d 397,
403 (Del. 1941). General Jennings also brings this action on behalf of the State of Delaware
pursuant to her statutory authority. Del. Code Ann. tit. 29, § 2504.
under the Constitution of the United States. It is empowered to sue and be sued, and it is the local
government for the territory constituting the permanent seat of the federal government. The
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District is represented by and through its chief legal officer, the Attorney General for the District
of Columbia, Karl A. Racine. The Attorney General has general charge and conduct of all legal
business of the District and all suits initiated by and against the District and is responsible for
21. Plaintiff State of Illinois is a sovereign state of the United States of America. The
State of Illinois is represented by Attorney General Kwame Raoul as its chief law enforcement
officer. Ill. Constit. Art. V, § 15. Attorney General Raoul has broad statutory and common law
authority to act in the interests of the State of Illinois and its citizens in matters of public
22. Plaintiff State of Maryland is a sovereign state of the United States of America.
Maryland is represented by and through its chief legal officer, Attorney General Brian E. Frosh.
Under the Constitution of Maryland, and as directed by the Maryland General Assembly, the
Attorney General has the authority to file suit to challenge action by the federal government that
threatens the public interest and welfare of Maryland residents. Md. Const. art. V, § 3(a)(2);
23. Plaintiff State of Michigan is a sovereign state of the United States of America.
This action is brought on behalf of the State by Attorney General Dana Nessel, the State of
Michigan’s chief law enforcement officer, pursuant to her statutory authority. Mich. Comp. Laws
§ 14.28.
24. Plaintiff State of Minnesota is a sovereign state of the United States of America.
This action is brought on behalf of the State by Attorney General Keith Ellison, the chief law
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25. Plaintiff State of Nevada, represented by and through Attorney General Aaron D.
Ford, is a sovereign state within the United States of America. The Attorney General is the chief
law enforcement officer of the State of Nevada and is authorized to pursue this action under Nev.
26. Plaintiff State of New Jersey is a sovereign state of the United States of America.
This action is being brought on behalf of the State by Attorney General Gurbir S. Grewal, the
27. Plaintiff State of New Mexico is a sovereign state of the United States of
America. New Mexico is represented by its Attorney General, Hector Balderas, who is
28. Plaintiff State of Oregon, acting by and through the Attorney General of Oregon,
Ellen F. Rosenblum, is a sovereign state of the United States of America. The Attorney General
is the chief law officer of Oregon and is empowered to bring this action on behalf of the State of
Oregon, the Governor, and the affected state agencies under Or. Rev. Stat. §§ 180.060, 180.210,
and 180.220.
of America. This action is brought on behalf of the Commonwealth by Attorney General Josh
Shapiro, the “chief law officer of the Commonwealth.” Pa. Const. art. IV, § 4.1. Attorney
General Shapiro brings this action on behalf of the Commonwealth pursuant to his statutory
30. Plaintiff State of Rhode Island is a sovereign state of the United States of
America. This action is brought on behalf of the State by Attorney General Peter F. Neronha, the
State’s chief legal officer. R.I.G.L. § 42-9-5; R.I. Const., art. IX § 12.
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31. Plaintiff State of Vermont is a sovereign state of the United States of America.
This action is brought on behalf of the State by Attorney General Thomas J. Donovan, Jr., the
State’s chief legal officer. See Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 3, §§ 152, 157.
32. Plaintiff the Commonwealth of Virginia is a sovereign state of the United States
of America. This action is brought on behalf of the Commonwealth by Attorney General Mark
R. Herring. As chief executive officer of the Department of Law, General Herring performs all
legal services in civil matters for the Commonwealth. Va. Const. art. V, § 15; Va. Code Ann. §§
2.2-500, 2.2-507.
33. Plaintiff State of Wisconsin is a sovereign state of the United States of America.
This action is brought on behalf of the State of Wisconsin by Attorney General Joshua L. Kaul
pursuant to his authority under Wis. Stat. § 165.015(6). Attorney General Kaul brings this action
34. The Plaintiff States are aggrieved and have standing to bring this action because
Defendants’ actions pose immediate and irreparable injuries to the Plaintiff States’ proprietary,
United States federal government. DHS implements and enforces the Immigration and
official capacity.
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FACTS
39. The COVID-19 pandemic’s relentless spread began in late 2019, and the first
United States case was confirmed on January 20, 2020. On March 11, 2020, the outbreak of
COVID-19 was characterized as a pandemic by the World Health Organization. By March 13,
2020, 45 states—including all the Plaintiff States—had declared states of emergency due to
escalating case counts, hospitalizations, and deaths worldwide and in the United States. By early
40. On March 13, 2020, President Donald J. Trump announced a national emergency.
41. COVID-19 is a highly contagious, and sometimes fatal, respiratory disease. The
disease has an extreme risk of person-to-person transmission via respiratory droplets and in close
contact settings has also been demonstrated to be transmitted by aerosols. Although symptoms of
the disease may include fever, cough, and shortness of breath, many individuals who contract
COVID-19 are asymptomatic and indeed are unaware of their infection and risk of infecting
others. Even those who ultimately show symptoms may not do so until days after exposure to the
virus, during which time they may be infectious to others. It is generally thought that people with
symptoms are likely able to actively spread virus for approximately 48 hours before their
symptoms occur. The disease tends to have more severe outcomes for individuals aged 60 and
over and individuals with underlying health conditions, but has had lethal effects across
demographic groups. The risk of transmission is of concern for indoor gatherings of any size, but
particularly for large, densely populated indoor gatherings. Such gatherings can facilitate the
spread of infection of COVID-19 not only to the gathered individuals and to those with whom
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42. Federal, state, and local governments have issued guidance and directives to
mitigate the spread of COVID-19. These measures have included mandating the shutdown of
physical workplaces, advising residents to stay home, and limiting the size of gatherings. Those
state governments that have allowed workplaces and sectors to reopen have required compliance
with a variety of measures to mitigate the spread of COVID-19, including limiting the occupancy
of buildings and the number of individuals that can gather indoors, and providing detailed
43. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has issued guidance encouraging
virtual learning to reduce risks at colleges at universities.6 And most of the Plaintiff States have
issued guidance or directives specific to the operations of colleges and universities to help
schools navigate how to continue their educational missions and operations while also protecting
44. Because of the particular risk of indoor infection of COVID-19, and in order to
comply with state and local limitations on and protocols for indoor gatherings, colleges and
universities across the country suspended in-person instruction for the spring semester.
45. On March 13, 2020, ICE responded to these pandemic conditions and their
obvious impact on in-person learning by issuing temporary exemptions “for the duration of the
emergency” to the existing requirements that international students on F-1 and M-1 visas attend
6
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19),
Considerations for Institutions of Higher Education, https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-
ncov/community/colleges-universities/considerations.html
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46. As a condition of obtaining and maintaining an F-1 or M-1 visa to study in the
United States, an international student must be “a bona fide student qualified to pursue a full
course of study and who seeks to enter the United States temporarily and solely for the purpose
of pursuing such a course of study[,]” at an institution that “shall have agreed to report to the
47. Institutions of higher education are required to report to the Attorney General
information regarding their international students, including whether the students are
48. Students are admitted “for duration of status,” defined as “the time during which
[the] student is pursuing a full course of study” or “engaging in authorized practical training
period up to 30 days before” they “need to be in attendance for required activities.” Id.
§ 214.2(f)(5)(i) (30 days); id. § 214.2(f)(7)(ii) (defining “report date”). “The student is
course of study[,]” id. § 214.2(f)(5)(i), and stays in status “during the annual (or summer)
vacation if the student is eligible and intends to register for the next term,” id. § 214.2(f)(5)(iii).
See also id. § 214.2.(f)(6)(iii)(B) (authorizing reduced course loads for up to 12 months based on
49. The regulatory definition of “full course of study” limits the amount of “on-line”
or “distance education” courses “not requir[ing] the student’s physical attendance for classes,
examination or other purposes integral to completion of the class” that can count toward a full
course of study. 8 C.F.R. § 214.2(f)(6)(G). This limit is “no more than the equivalent of one class
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or three credits per session, term, semester, trimester, or quarter.” Id. An “on-line or distance
education course” is defined as one “offered principally through the use of television, audio, or
computer transmission.” Id. For both F-1 students at language study programs and students with
M-1 visas to study at vocational schools, “no on-line or distance education classes may be
considered to count toward a student’s full course of study requirement.” Id. (language study
50. In addition to allowing students to study, F-1 and M-1 visas permit students to
accept certain types of employment. 8 C.F.R. §§ 214.2(f)(9), f(10), & (m)(13)-(14). Students on
F-1 visas may engage in on-campus employment, subject to some restrictions. 8 C.F.R.
§ 214.2(f)(9)(i). After their first year, F-1 students can engage in both on-campus employment
and off-campus employment through curricular practical training (CPT) and optional practice
training (OPT). Id. § 214.2(f)(10). After completion of their academic program, subject to certain
restrictions, F-1 students can work on OPT for up to one year with the possibility of renewal in
some circumstances. Id. § 214.2(f)(10)(ii). M-1 students may engage in practical training after
they have completed their studies, with some restrictions. Id. § 214.2(m)(14).
13, 2020, ICE’s Student and Exchange Visitor Program (SEVP) announced it would “allow F-1
and/or M-1 students to temporarily count online classes towards a full course of study in excess
of the limits stated in Id. § 214.2(f)(6)(i)(G) and (m)(9)(v).”7 ICE required educational
institutions to “notify SEVP of COVID-19 procedural changes within 10 business days.” Id.
7
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Homeland Security Investigations, National
Security Investigations Division, Student and Exchange Visitor Program, COVID-19: Guidance
for SEVP Stakeholders, at 1 (Mar. 13, 2020),
https://www.ice.gov/sites/default/files/documents/Document/2020/Coronavirus%20Guidance_3.
13.20.pdf.
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52. ICE stated that these exemptions would be “in effect for the duration of the
emergency,” although a disclaimer at the end of the guidance noted that “[d]ue to the fluid nature
53. In additional guidance provided via Frequently Asked Questions, ICE further
advised that, if schools were unable to offer all courses due to inability to deliver via online
methods, course of study requirements could be waived via the school’s procedural change
documents. Frequently Asked Questions for SEVP Stakeholders About COVID-19, at 8 (version
last updated May 12, 2020), https://tinyurl.com/y87ht4ye. Moreover, “F and M students unable
to participate in online or other alternative instruction requirements due to the lack of available
technology resources [were to] notify their” schools, and schools were advised that they “may
keep these student records Active in SEVIS as long as the student intends to resume their course
54. As of ICE’s March 13, 2020 action, the United States had confirmed 4,575
COVID-19 cases anywhere across the country, and had recorded a total of 55 deaths.8
States’, Schools’, and Students’ Reliance on ICE’s Action in Planning for Fall 2020
55. Schools in the Plaintiff States9 substantially stopped in-person instruction and
transitioned to remote learning in March 2020. Pursuant to public health and safety information,
guidance, and mandates, schools moved courses online and students out of on-campus housing.
During that time, as required by the March 13 Guidance, schools in the Plaintiff States submitted
8
The COVID Tracking Project, U.S. Historical Data, https://covidtracking.com/data/us-daily.
9
Throughout this complaint, references to “colleges,” “universities,” “schools,” and the like refer
to both public and private institutions of higher education, except where context dictates
otherwise.
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56. Soon thereafter, schools shifted to planning for the fall of 2020. College and
university administrators and others undertook time- and resource-intensive planning over the
course of several weeks and months, carefully weighing known and uncertain facts and
to interested and expert parties, such as public health and medical experts, to assist them in
considering their options and developing and implementing plans. They also surveyed
stakeholders, such as students, faculty, and staff. This planning involved both individualized
universities invested extensive institutional resources in developing plans for the fall to balance
the health and safety of students, faculty, staff, and the broader community with their
commitment to providing high-quality education to their students. In many cases, colleges and
57. Colleges and universities in the Plaintiff States have announced or are imminently
announcing their plans for the 2020-2021 academic year. Many intend to offer a carefully
balanced hybrid of in-person and online instruction, favoring in-person courses for programs that
require hands-on learning. As part of these plans, schools have set rules about students’ return to
campus. In some cases, for example, only first-years or seniors will return; in other cases,
universities will permit vulnerable students—such as those with home environments that are
58. Many of these plans are designed to be flexible, so that students can shift back
and forth between in-person and remote learning depending on the community trends of the
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virus, outbreaks on campus, and specific factors for individual students such as illness, exposure
59. Given the extraordinary time, effort, and coordination required to develop and
implement appropriate public health and safety measures on their campuses, schools were left
with no option but to rely on the March 13 Guidance in preparing for classes to resume in the
fall. Early preparation was particularly necessary so that students, faculty, and staff could make
60. Students, faculty, and staff have accordingly been making such plans—relying on
the announcements their colleges and universities have made—including securing leases,
booking plane tickets, enrolling their children in schools, and seeking or planning for
61. On July 6, 2020, ICE abruptly reversed course. With no warning of any kind, let
alone giving adequate notice and an opportunity to comment, ICE largely rescinded the
pandemic exemptions to the in-person class requirements for the semester slated to begin in mere
weeks, requiring all schools to report within 9 days if they would be conducting all of their
classes remotely in the fall, and requiring schools to certify by August 4, 2020, for each
individual F-1 and M-1 student, that the student’s academic program would meet new
62. The July 6 Directive provided that F-1 and M-1 students “attending schools
operating entirely online may not take a full online course load and remain in the United
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States.”10 Carrying out this reversal, “[t]he U.S. Department of State will not issue visas to
students enrolled in schools and/or programs that are fully online for the fall semester nor will
U.S. Customs and Border Protection permit these students to enter the United States.” Id.
Accordingly, ICE directed, “Active students currently in the United States enrolled in such
programs must depart the country or take other measures, such as transferring to a school with
including, but not limited to, the initiation of removal proceedings.” Id.
63. The July 6 Directive entirely rescinded the March 13 Guidance’s exemptions with
respect to students on an M-1 visa pursuing vocational education and F-1 students in English
language training programs, “who are not permitted to enroll in any online courses.” Id. (citing 8
64. For schools “adopting a hybrid model,” which ICE defined to mean “a mixture of
online and in person classes,” ICE newly required schools to certify, for each F-1 student,
“within 21 business days of publication of this Broadcast Message (by August 4, 2020.[sic]),”
that the student’s particular “program is not entirely online, that the student is not taking an
entirely online course load for the fall 2020 semester, and that the student is taking the minimum
number of online classes required to make normal progress in their degree program.”11
65. Moreover, “[o]nly students enrolled at a school that is only offering online
10
Student and Exchange Visitor Program, Broadcast Message: COVID-19 and Fall 2020, at 1
(July 6, 2020), https://www.ice.gov/doclib/sevis/pdf/bcm2007-01.pdf (emphasis in original).
11
Id. at 1-2.
12
Id. at 2 (emphasis added).
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66. In other words, students have only three choices: (1) enroll in a program that only
offers online classes and stay outside of the United States; (2) enroll in a program that offers a
hybrid model, and make sure to take “the minimum number of online classes required to make
normal progress” in the degree program; or (3) enroll in a fully in-person program. Schools must
work to accommodate each individual international student to ensure that one of these options is
possible and acceptable—and that it does not change over the course of the semester—or risk
67. The July 6 Directive’s dramatic reversal of course was issued without
explanation. The Directive referred to the “need to resume the carefully balanced protections
implemented by federal regulations,”13 but did not give any reason why this “need” arose amidst
the on-going emergency that was the basis for its March 13, 2020 Guidance “for the duration of
the emergency,” nor explain how the unspecified “balance[]” had shifted.
68. On July 7, ICE issued a document entitled “Frequently Asked Questions for
SEVP Stakeholders about Guidance for the Fall 2020 Semester” (“FAQ”).14 In purporting to
explain the reasons for the new Directive after it was issued, this FAQ asserts that “DHS is
seeking to maximize flexibility for students to continue their studies, while minimizing the risk
of transmission of COVID-19 by not admitting students into the country who do not need to be
present to attend classes in-person[,]” and that the July 6 Directive “provided the best options for
flexibility for nonimmigrant students to continue education with health risks associated with
international travel at this time.”15 Like the July 6 Directive, this FAQ, too, fails to explain why a
reversal of the March 13 Guidance was warranted at this time, as the pandemic continues to
13
Id. at 1.
14
https://www.ice.gov/doclib/sevis/pdf/sevisFall2020_FAQ.pdf.
15
Id. at 2, 3.
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ravage communities across the country. Moreover, this purported explanation has no logical
connection to the Directive’s requirement that students currently present in the United States
must depart—and assume the “health risks associated with international travel at this time”—if
their schools are currently offering only online instruction due to the pandemic.
69. The July 6 Directive fails to address the substantial reliance interests of students,
colleges, and universities on the March 13 Guidance, the roadmap for planning that guidance
70. The July 6 Directive also fails to consider the harm to international students and
their families whose lives will be upended; the lost revenue to colleges and universities if foreign
students are forced to stay away; the enormous administrative burden on schools to rethink
carefully calibrated fall semester plans and to make individual certifications for each individual
international student in a matter of weeks, at a time when many students will not yet have even
chosen their courses; the individual, community, and public health impact of schools being
forced to offer additional and superfluous in-person learning in order to ensure the status of its
international students; the harm to the university community of losing the perspectives, skills,
and talents of so many international students; and the harm to the economy and society if
71. And the July 6 Directive also fails to explain the impossibly short timeline for
implementation of its requirements, leaving only nine days for colleges and universities to advise
the federal government if they will be fully online for the fall 2020 semester and then only 20
days later to certify that each individual student will meet the requirements for hybrid or in-
person learning.
The July 6 Directive’s Irreparable Harms to Plaintiff States, Schools, and Students
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72. The Directive will cause immediate and irreparable harm to the States as well as
73. Collectively, the Plaintiff States are home to a combined 1,124 colleges and
74. The Plaintiff States’ own 487 public colleges and universities18 host tens of
thousands of international students19 and contribute trillions of dollars to the economy each year.
Of the twenty-five universities and colleges listed by the Institute of International Education as
leading host institutions for international students in 2019, one-fifth are public colleges and
75. Each Plaintiff State funds, supports, and/or administers its own public colleges
and universities. The July 6 Directive directly regulates these public colleges and universities,
will harm their operations, will cost them significant resources, and will make it more difficult
for them to ensure the safety of their students, faculty, staff, and the untold additional number of
state residents with whom members of our school communities live and otherwise interact daily.
The Directive will also cause irreparable harm to the public health and the economy in the
Plaintiff States.
16
U.S. Department of Education National Center for Education Statistics College Navigator,
https://nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator/.
17
Institute of International Education Data By State Fact Sheet, https://www.iie.org/Research-
and-Insights/Open-Doors/Fact-Sheets-and-Infographics/Data-by-State-Fact-Sheets (statistical
information on international exchange in each state in 2019).
18
U.S. Department of Education National Center for Education Statistics College Navigator,
https://nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator/.
19
Institute of International Education Leading Host Institutions, https://www.iie.org/Research-
and-Insights/Open-Doors/Data/International-Students/Leading-Host-Institutions.
20
Institute of International Education Leading Host Institutions, https://www.iie.org/Research-
and-Insights/Open-Doors/Data/International-Students/Leading-Host-Institutions.
21
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76. The July 6 Directive imposes immense and irreparable costs and burdens on
Plaintiff States’ public colleges and universities, costs and burdens ultimately borne by Plaintiff
States.
77. To retain all international students despite the Directive, our colleges and
universities would have to substantially reevaluate the carefully calibrated plans they have
developed for the fall semester and instead develop and implement new, complex, and costly
accommodations to meet ICE’s new requirements. If the schools do not, they will lose significant
78. Choosing to develop unanticipated fall 2020 plans that would expand the
availability of in-person instruction poses enormous costs and burdens on schools, including
staffing, COVID-19 testing, personal protective equipment sourcing, classroom space, class size
79. Choosing to retain plans that greatly limit in-person instruction or eliminate it
altogether will leave our students defenseless against the July 6 Directive’s requirement that they
depart to study remotely in their home countries—insofar as they are able—or disenroll from
school altogether. This would be a huge loss of financial, human, and cultural capital for our
schools.
80. Many students will be unable or unwilling to pursue their studies remotely from
their home countries and will be forced to disenroll. These students would no longer pay tuition
and housing, dining, and other fees at a time when colleges and universities are already faced
with severe financial hardship. As a result, Plaintiff States’ public institutions stand to lose tens
of millions of dollars. This is a particularly acute loss because international students often pay
22
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higher out-of-state tuition rates, which enhances public universities’ ability to serve lower-
income in-state students by reducing the amount of tuition they are required to pay. These
international students would also likely no longer be able to work as employees on our campuses
81. Even where it is feasible for students to depart to their home countries to pursue
online studies, our colleges and universities will still unexpectedly lose housing, dining, and
other fees paid by these students; the students’ in-person participation in research and other on-
campus work that is not part of their course of study; and the students’ unique in-person
82. Indeed, the July 6 Directive will cause harm to schools’ academic, extracurricular,
and cultural communities. International students bring rich and diverse viewpoints, interests, and
skillsets, which they share in classrooms, on-campus jobs, clubs, and other extracurricular
activities, and social interactions with other students, faculty, and staff. If they are forced to
disenroll or leave campus because of the July 6 Directive, schools and other students will lose
their contributions.
83. Our colleges and universities will also be forced to expend time and resources to
make individualized determinations to certify students with F-1 and M-1 visas and re-issue I-20s
for each student. These certifications require not only a determination of the particular forms of
instruction offered by the schools in which each student is enrolled, but also a determination of
each individual student’s course load and the format in which such courses will be taught—the
latter of which may not be information readily available to the school administration. In some
cases, instructors may be given the option to include in-person components, and those decisions
may not yet have been made. In other cases, students will not have registered for their courses
23
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before SEVP’s certification deadline, putting schools in the impossible position of having to
84. The 2020-21 academic year plans developed by schools, and their related
operating budgets, of course do not account for the loss of revenue or any additional resources
required to comply with the July 6 Directive. And the Directive’s enormous impact comes as
schools grapple with other financial challenges brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic.
85. The July 6 Directive will irreparably harm the Plaintiff States’ sovereign interest
in regulating their public colleges and universities, particularly with regard to public health and
86. Plaintiff States have issued guidance and mandates governing the reopening of
colleges and universities. In Massachusetts, for example, the Department of Public Health and
the COVID-19 Command Center issued mandatory workplace safety standards that apply to
higher education institutions.21 Massachusetts also provided guidance to cover two different
phases of reopening, with guidance for a third phase still pending.22 As part of the second phase,
institutions of higher education must develop a written control plan outlining how each of their
campuses will comply with the workplace safety mandates, including rules relating to social
21
https://www.mass.gov/info-details/reopening-mandatory-safety-standards-for-
workplaces#overview-.
22
https://www.mass.gov/info-details/reopening-higher-education.
23
https://www.mass.gov/doc/higher-education-covid-19-control-plan-template/download.
24
Case 1:20-cv-11311 Document 1 Filed 07/13/20 Page 25 of 34
87. The July 6 Directive interferes with implementation of such state guidance and
mandates, because it has the effect of coercing schools to consider greater use of in-person
88. The July 6 Directive also reduces the Plaintiff States’ and their schools’ flexibility
in responding to changing conditions over the course of the pandemic. To the extent that
at schools not yet entirely online, the July 6 Directive will serve as a deterrent to making
coercive effects of the July 6 Directive and even indicated that the directive was actually
intended to pressure schools into reopening, overriding the deliberative planning by Plaintiff
States to ensure the health and safety of students, faculty, staff, and the broader community. The
same day as the announcement of the administration’s reversal, the President of the United States
made repeated public statements expressing the view that schools must reopen in the fall:
The next day, Acting Deputy Secretary of Homeland Security Ken Cuccinelli underscored the
connection between the July 6 Directive and the administration’s evident preference in favor of
reopening, stating that the July 6 Directive would “encourage schools to reopen.”24 Coercing
24
Interview with Acting Deputy Secretary of Homeland Security Kenneth T. Cuccinelli, CNN
(July 7, 2020), https://twitter.com/CNNPolitics/status/1280576267360886784. See also, e.g.,
25
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schools into holding more in-person classes in the fall—regardless of the schools’ assessment of
the health and safety risks of doing so—harms the Plaintiff States’ ability to regulate their
90. The July 6 Directive also threatens irreparable injury to the Plaintiff States’
interests in the health and well-being, physical and economic, of our residents.
91. Our States have an interest in preventing the physical harm to our residents—and
to the public health system more generally—caused by the insidious spread of COVID-19. The
July 6 Directive undermines this interest by encouraging the expansion of in-person classroom
instruction beyond that which will best prevent and mitigate the spread of the disease, thus
increasing the risk of infection to students, faculty, and staff; to the members of their households;
Donald J. Trump, Twitter (July 6, 2020) (“Corrupt Joe Biden and the Democrats don’t want to
open schools in the Fall for political reasons, not for health reasons! They think it will help them
in November. Wrong, the people get it!”),
https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1280232979781111808; Donald J. Trump, Twitter
(July 8, 2020) (“I disagree with @CDCgov on their very tough & expensive guidelines for
opening schools. While they want them open, they are asking schools to do very impractical
things. I will be meeting with them!!!”),
https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1280857657365200902; Donald J. Trump, Twitter
(July 8, 2020) (“In Germany, Denmark, Norway, Sweden and many other countries, SCHOOLS
ARE OPEN WITH NO PROBLEMS. The Dems think it would be bad for them politically if
U.S. schools open before the November Election, but is important for the children & families.
May cut off funding if not open!”),
https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1280232979781111808.
Donald J. Trump, Twitter (July 10, 2020) (“Now that we have witnessed it on a large scale basis,
and firsthand, Virtual Learning has proven to be TERRIBLE compared to In School, or On
Campus, Learning. Not even close! Schools must be open in the Fall. If not open, why would the
Federal Government give Funding? It won’t!!!”),
https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1281554061972692994.
26
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92. Our States also have an interest in preventing the economic harm caused by the
spread of COVID-19, as well as the more specific harm caused by discouraging or precluding
thousands of international students from coming to and residing in our States. In addition to the
significant loss of tuition dollars, the Plaintiff States’ economies will suffer harms if international
students are forced to disenroll from schools because of the July 6 Directive.
93. Students working on campus as well as those with CPT and OPT authorization—
opportunities made available to them because of their F-1 or M-1 status—contribute to our state
economies by the thousands through their employment in fields such as science, technology,
biotechnology, healthcare, business and finance, and education. Forcing F-1 and M-1 students to
leave the country will diminish the chance that these students will have and accept the
opportunity to make these contributions to our workforce, economy, and tax base.
houses from local landlords; purchase food from grocery stores and restaurants; and patronize
our retail stores and entertainment and leisure sectors. During the 2018-2019 academic year,
international students studying at U.S. colleges and universities contributed $41 billion and
supported 458,290 jobs in the U.S. economy.25 In Massachusetts alone, the 2019 economic
impact of what was then approximately 71,000 international students was estimated as $3.2
billion.26 A loss of international students would damage local economies at a time of already
25
NAFSA Economic Value Statistics, https://www.nafsa.org/policy-and-advocacy/policy-
resources/nafsa-international-student-economic-value-tool-v2.
26
Id.
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CAUSES OF ACTION
COUNT I
95. The Plaintiff States hereby incorporate by reference the foregoing paragraphs of
this Complaint.
96. Under the APA, a court “shall . . . hold unlawful and set aside agency action,
97. The July 6 Directive is arbitrary, capricious, and an abuse of discretion because it:
Guidance, including:
i. the need to protect public health and safety amidst the ongoing
pandemic;
ii. the reliance interests of schools and students across the country on that
crisis and their plans for the impending fall 2020 semester; and
iii. the July 6 Directive’s harm to and extreme burdens on public and
agency that the pandemic conditions that necessitated the March 13 Guidance
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Case 1:20-cv-11311 Document 1 Filed 07/13/20 Page 29 of 34
d. Required compliance on a timetable that does not afford the affected parties
98. The July 6 Directive is also arbitrary and capricious and not in accordance with
the INA, because in the context of an escalating global pandemic, whether a particular student’s
instruction is provided entirely online bears no relationship to whether that student is a “bona
COUNT II
99. Plaintiff States hereby incorporate by reference the foregoing paragraphs of this
Complaint.
100. Under the APA, a court “shall . . . hold unlawful and set aside agency action,
5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A).
101. Subject to enumerated exceptions not applicable here, federal agencies must
complete the process of agency rulemaking before issuing a rule. Id. § 553(b).
102. The July 6 Directive is a rule for purposes of the APA because it is an “agency
statement of general or particular applicability and future effect designed to implement, interpret,
or prescribe law or policy.” Id. § 551(4). The July 6 Directive indeed acknowledges that
rulemaking is required to implement “the procedures and responsibilities” that it sets forth,
where it provides that they will be published “in the near future as a Temporary Final Rule in the
Federal Register.”
29
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103. Defendant’s issuance of the July 6 Directive without notice and comment
rulemaking, and without good cause to proceed without notice and comment rulemaking, is in
Wherefore, the Plaintiff States request that this Court enter judgment in their favor and
a. Postpone the effective date of the Directive pending judicial review under 5 U.S.C. §
705;
c. Preliminarily and permanently enjoin the Defendants and their officers, employees, and
e. Award Plaintiff States reasonable costs and expenses, including attorneys’ fees; and
f. Award Plaintiff States such other relief as this Court deems just and proper.
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Respectfully submitted,
MAURA HEALEY
Attorney General
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
/s/ Abigail B. Taylor
Abigail B. Taylor
Elizabeth N. Dewar
Katherine B. Dirks
Julie E. Green
Angela R. Brooks (admission pending)
Andrew J. Haile
Abrisham Eshghi
Assistant Attorneys General
Office of the Attorney General
One Ashburton Place
Boston, MA 02108
Tel. (617) 727-2200
abigail.taylor@mass.gov
bessie.dewar@mass.gov
katherine.dirks@mass.gov
julie.green@mass.gov
angela.brooks@mass.gov
andrew.haile@mass.gov
abrisham.eshghi@mass.gov
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Case 1:20-cv-11311 Document 1 Filed 07/13/20 Page 34 of 34
JOSH KAUL
Attorney General
State of Wisconsin
/s/ Anne Bensky
Anne M. Bensky*
Assistant Attorney General
State of Wisconsin Department of Justice
Division of Legal Services
17 W. Main Street
Madison, Wisconsin 53707-7857
benskyam@doj.state.wi.us
Tel. (608) 264-9451
34