logo
New College fires Chinese professor under controversial Florida ‘countries of concern' law

New College fires Chinese professor under controversial Florida ‘countries of concern' law

Miami Herald29-03-2025

A New College of Florida professor was abruptly fired this month under a controversial state law that limits public universities from employing people from so-called 'countries of concern,' including China, Cuba, Iran, Russia and Venezuela.
Kevin Wang, a Chinese academic who is seeking asylum and authorized to work in the United States, had been teaching Chinese language and culture classes at the small liberal arts college in Sarasota for nearly two years when, on March 12, the school terminated his contract, citing a university regulation based on that law, known as SB 846.
His letter of dismissal, which was reviewed by Suncoast Searchlight, stated that the school's decision to cancel his contract as an adjunct professor was 'not based on any misconduct and does not constitute a dismissal for cause or disciplinary action.' Instead, it claimed, Wang's immigration status – and, implicitly, his country of origin – made him ineligible for employment at New College.
His sudden ouster has sparked outrage among his students and raises questions about academic freedom as Florida's crackdown on foreign influence plays out on campuses across the state. The school also has not shied from bringing far-right figures to campus, hosting President Donald Trump's 'border czar' Tom Homan for a roundtable talk that drew protests on March 20.
It also marks the latest flashpoint at New College, a liberal arts school once known for its progressive student body that has become a high-profile ideological battleground after Gov. Ron DeSantis overhauled its leadership, installing political allies on the board of trustees and appointing former Florida House Speaker Richard Corcoran as president.
Since the takeover, the college has drawn national scrutiny for dismantling its diversity office, discarding books, and implementing a new athletics program – a dramatic shift in identity that continues to ripple through campus life.
For Wang, his firing carried echoes of the political repression he fled in China, he told Suncoast Searchlight during an interview this week on campus. He also shared a letter that further elaborated his thoughts on the matter.
'Before coming to the United States in May 2022, I was a university professor in China,' Wang wrote in his letter for Suncoast Searchlight. 'I faced political repression from the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) for criticizing Xi Jinping and the CCP's domestic and foreign policies, resulting in the loss of my teaching position and my freedom to teach, research, and express myself in China.
'I never expected to face such a distressing experience after escaping persecution from the CCP in China, only to encounter a somewhat similar situation' at New College in the United States.
Wang asked Suncoast Searchlight to refer to him by his English name only due to fear of reprisals from the Chinese government.
The New College attorney who signed Wang's letter of dismissal did not respond to a request for comment. The Florida Board of Governors and the Florida Department of Education did not respond to a question about whether SB 846 applies to asylum-seekers from 'countries of concern.'
The law, which went into effect on July 1, 2023 – three weeks before Wang was first offered a job at New College – states that schools 'may not accept any grant from or participate in any agreement with any college or university based in a foreign country of concern' without the express approval of the Board of Governors.
It also restricts state colleges and universities from entering into partnerships with 'foreign principals' – meaning foreign government officials from those countries, but also '[a]ny person who is domiciled in a foreign country of concern and is not a citizen or lawful permanent resident of the United States.'
After SB 846 passed, the Florida Board of Governors, which oversees public colleges and universities in the state, followed up with its own guidance defining 'domicile' as 'a physical presence in a foreign country of concern with an intent to return thereto' and further defining 'intent' as being demonstrated by 'an absence of seeking citizenship in the United States.'
Wang is the only asylum seeker identified by Suncoast Searchlight who has been targeted by the law.
'This is the first case I've heard of this,' said Helena Tetzeli, a Miami-based immigration lawyer. Tetzeli said that while Wang's firing may have been in compliance with SB 846, the Florida law itself could conflict with anti-discrimination provisions in the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986. Whether Wang was fired improperly, Tetzeli said, 'really depends on whether or not this law [is] ultimately found to be unconstitutional.'
The law was met with outrage across state public universities as students and faculty denounced the legislation as discriminatory.
The University of Florida Student Senate passed a resolution in February 2024 condemning the measure for its impact on international graduate students who typically work as research or teaching assistants while pursuing their doctoral degrees. The resolution called these students 'integral to academic and scientific advancement.'
A month later, the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida and Chinese American Legal Defense Alliance filed a lawsuit on behalf of a University of Florida professor and two Chinese students at Florida International University, arguing that SB 846 violates the 14th Amendment's Equal Protection Clause and contradicts federal employment and immigration laws.
Plaintiffs in the suit compared Florida's law to the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act, which banned Chinese laborers from immigrating to the U.S. during a period of widespread anti-Chinese racism.
It is unclear how many other academics have been fired since the passage of SB 846 – or how the law, which limits the pool of applicants for research positions in the Florida school system, has impacted academic brain drain from the state.
Zhengfei Guan, an agricultural economist and a plaintiff in the lawsuit, argued that the law's passage has made it harder for him to recruit and hire high-quality researchers and postdoctoral fellows.
In a statement, Gisela Kusakawa, the executive director of Asian American Scholar Forum wrote that the law 'creates an hostile atmosphere that prospective students and faculty will want to avoid.
In February, a federal magistrate judge recommended that U.S. District Court Judge Jose Martinez issue an injunction to temporarily suspend the law's enforcement. Martinez has not yet acted on this.
A Routine Email. A Sudden Dismissal.
Early on the morning of March 10, before New College's bayfront campus stirred to life with the bustle of students, Wang sent what seemed like a routine administrative email.
He had not been receiving paychecks at all this semester, he wrote to his department chair. And he wondered when the situation would be resolved or if there was anything he could do to facilitate. He ended the email with a customary 'thank you' and 'have a nice week,' and hoped for a quick fix.
But Wang's message set off a chain of internal correspondence that would end, just two days later, with his firing – and with no opportunity to say goodbye to his students, according to an interview with Wang and a trove of emails Suncoast Searchlight obtained through a public records request to the school.
'Oh, heavens! We will get this fixed,' replied Maribeth Clark, the chair of the Humanities Division, about an hour and a half later.
Clark, apparently realizing what happened, sent an email to the provost, David Rohrbacher, apologizing for having forgotten to submit an employment agreement form for Wang at the start of the semester in January.
'We tried something different this year with an offer letter for adjuncts that covered the whole year,' she wrote. 'Then, in January, we realized that we needed to create EAFs for each semester. We just missed this one.'
Just before noon, Wang received an email from Erin Fisher, associate vice president of Human Resources, Digital Learning and Dual Enrollment.
'In going through our records, a question came up on your file,' Fisher wrote. 'Do you have documentation of lawful permanent resident status? If so, please provide to us by close of business today.'
Wang replied that afternoon that he had already submitted documentation of his work authorization.
'When I applied for this position, I only required valid work authorization in the U.S. My immigration status is currently being processed, but I am uncertain when it will be completed,' he wrote. 'I assure you that I am in the U.S. legally at this time.'
Rohrbacher weighed in at noon the next day.
'I think this explains what happened,' Rohrbacher replied, writing that Wang 'was hired legally but when countries of concern was passed no one went back and checked again.'
Another professor of Chinese Language and Culture who was made aware of the situation reached out to Rohrbacher via email the same day to express her concerns that Wang might be fired.
'We all know how disruptive it would be if he had to stop teaching in the middle of the semester. We should try our best to prevent that from happening, for the sake of the students' learning and well being,' wrote Jing Zhang, who also is New College's director of International Studies.
Rohrbacher responded the next morning.
'Everyone wants Kevin to stay,' he wrote. 'The lawyers are trying to determine whether his reappointment violates the BOG 'countries of concern' rule and we'll have to see what they come up with.'
Hours later, the college informed Wang his contract had been cancelled, effective immediately.
'Almost at the same time, they closed my NCF account,' Wang told Suncoast Searchlight. 'I cannot get into my email and cannot even say goodbye to my students.' Instead, he texted his students and sent them an email from his personal account notifying them that he had been dismissed.
New College has scrambled to fill the teaching gap left by Wang's dismissal.
But students in the Humanities Division were blindsided by his firing, according to emails obtained through the public records request and texts from Wang's students that Suncoast Searchlight reviewed.
In an email to Rohrbacher requesting a meeting between Wang's students and New College administrators, Clark, the chair of the humanities department, wrote that the students had expressed a 'high level of anger' about Wang's removal.
Wang, meanwhile, said he is preparing to leave Florida but that he will remain in the United States while pursuing his bid for asylum. Although he's upset about what happened, he said, he must now focus on what comes next.
'As an adjunct, I do not have much time or energy to delve deeply into this matter,' he wrote in his letter to Suncoast Searchlight, 'but I truly hope that such interference undermining academic freedom will not occur again in a place that claims to be a 'beacon of democracy.''
This story was produced by Suncoast Searchlight, a nonprofit newsroom of the Community News Collaborative serving Sarasota, Manatee, and DeSoto counties. Learn more at suncoastsearchlight.org.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump 'gold card' website opens. Here's how to join the $5 million waitlist
Trump 'gold card' website opens. Here's how to join the $5 million waitlist

Yahoo

time37 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump 'gold card' website opens. Here's how to join the $5 million waitlist

President Donald Trump's long-touted "gold card," which offers foreigners a path to U.S. citizenship after paying $5 million to the government, is open for business. But even if you have the money, there's a waitlist at And read the fine print carefully: Your $5 million doesn't buy you immediate citizenship. Trump has said that he is not seeking approval from Congress as he is not providing gold card buyers with citizenship - only a path to citizenship. The path to citizenship requirements for card buyers are unclear and White House officials have said more details will be provided soon. The most common path to U.S. citizenship through naturalization is being a lawful permanent resident for at least five years. It requires the applicant to be least 18 years old when they apply, be able to read, write, and speak basic English (depending on age) and be of "good moral character." Trump has described the card, which he has also dubbed the Trump card, as 'somewhat like a green card, but at a higher level of sophistication.' 'FOR FIVE MILLION $DOLLARS, THE TRUMP CARD IS COMING!,' President Donald Trump announced on Truth Social on June 11. 'Thousands have been calling and asking how they can sign up to ride a beautiful road in gaining access to the Greatest Country and Market anywhere in the World.' The website shows an image of the gold-colored card, emblazoned with a likeness of Trump's face, and asks a few questions including name, region, email address and if an applicant is applying for themselves or as a business. The new website asks interested people to fill out a form that specifies eight regions: Europe, Asia (including Middle East), North America, Oceania, Central America, South America, Caribbean and Africa. Other countries also offer immigration programs that offers permanent residency or citizenship to foreign investors in exchange for investment. Portugal, for example, offers residency and a path to EU citizenship after five years. When he first floated the idea in February, Trump said the card would replace the "EB-5" immigrant investor green card visa program, The EB-5 visa allows immigrant investors the option to invest between $800,000 and $1.05 million to obtain a green card. The investment money is used to help create or preserve U.S. jobs. 'Wealthy people will be coming into our country by buying this card,' Trump said in February. 'They'll be wealthy, and they'll be successful, and they'll be spending a lot of money, and paying a lot of taxes and employing a lot of people.' 'It's a road to citizenship for people and essentially people of wealth or people of great talent where people of wealth pay for those people of talent to get in,' he said. Swapna Venugopal Ramaswamy is a White House correspondent for USA TODAY. You can follow her on X @SwapnaVenugopal This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Trump 'gold card' is open for business. Waitlist is open

LAPD fires flash-bang grenades, less-lethal rounds at protesters
LAPD fires flash-bang grenades, less-lethal rounds at protesters

San Francisco Chronicle​

timean hour ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

LAPD fires flash-bang grenades, less-lethal rounds at protesters

LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles police lobbed flash-bang grenades and shot less-lethal munitions at peaceful protesters Wednesday as Angelenos took to the streets in a sixth day of demonstrations denouncing President Donald Trump's crackdown on America's immigrant community. Several people said they were struck — and injured — by the projectiles, and some people said they heard dispersal orders given well before the 8 p.m. curfew. The LAPD did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Wednesday night. In recent days, protesters have convened on the city's federal complex in downtown Los Angeles. On Wednesday, however, protesters shifted tactics, and gathered at Pershing Square, a public park about three quarters of a mile from City Hall. There, protesters held a peaceful rally and then marched down Hill Street to City Hall, chanting slogans in Spanish and English, decrying ICE's deportation raids. 'I'm tired of turning on the TV, crying, and seeing families ripped apart,' said Billy Tagle, 45, who marched carrying a huge homemade banner emblazoned with a picture of a heart made up of Mexican and American flags and the slogan 'United we Stand.' He said he was tired of seeing President Trump belittling Californians. 'He didn't even give Gov. Gavin Newsom or the mayor the chance to defuse the situation,' he said, speaking of the protests that erupted earlier this week. 'Right now I feel a lot of unity — we care about our people,' he said, as chants of 'ICE out of LA' echoed behind him. At City Hall, protesters gathered on the building's steps, as a line of police officers decked in riot gear looked on. Some protesters handed water out to each other, others line danced and played musical instruments, chanting 'Peaceful Protest' as officers looked on. Soon, however, the evening took a dark turn, as police began clearing out the crowd, lobbing flash-bang grenades and chasing protesters. People reported seeing officers fire less-lethal rounds and others said they were injured by them. Among the people chased by police was Sara Alura. 'I didn't have high expectations of the police, but it's shocking,' she said. 'A total lack of recognition of our First Amendment rights to assemble and to express ourselves. It's shocking but not surprising.' Across from City Hall, Donaldo Angel Pedro, 25, was decked out in a pith helmet and a tan vest on which he'd painted the words 'Jesus forgives prostitutes, not hypocrites.' He and others fled back toward Grand Park as police unleashed flash-bang grenades. 'They're getting afraid of the crowd size,' he said, gesturing at the officers attempting to hem in the demonstrators. As police advanced, the crowd retreated up into Gloria Molina Grand Park. Among them was Megan Marmon, 32, a Los Angeles resident originally from Alameda. The police response was a reminder of the city's response to the 2020 protests against George Floyd's murder, she said. 'Everything I've seen here from protesters has been entirely peaceful,' she said. But in just a few minutes, she witnessed three people shot with what she described as rubber bullets. 'The aggression from LAPD feels totally insane,' she said. Nearby, a 49-year-old man who only identified himself as Quincy struggled with a bandage on his elbow. Minutes earlier, he said, he'd witnessed an altercation between two protesters. As the two men neared him, he said, police fired less-lethal munitions, and a round caught him just above the elbow, leaving a nasty cut and a bump the size of a small egg. 'If the cops aren't trying to cause problems, they're doing a terrible job,' he said, as a field medic re-wrapped his arm. Moments later, Miles Ma, 31, walked by, and revealed a similar injury on his torso. He'd been taking photos when the police had ordered protesters to disperse. As he turned and ran, a less-lethal round caught him in the stomach. 'They are rude,' he said. 'It's too much.'

Ex-council leader wrongly claimed tax discount
Ex-council leader wrongly claimed tax discount

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Ex-council leader wrongly claimed tax discount

A former Conservative council leader has admitted claiming the single person discount for council tax despite not being eligible. Phil Broadhead, who spent three months leading Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole (BCP) Council in 2023, said it happened when he moved house in 2022 and blamed the local authority's online forms for not being in "plain English". Broadhead, who voted on the authority's budgets at a time when he was in council tax arrears, said he repaid the underpayment as soon as it was noticed and that the council agreed it was an honest mistake. BCP Council said it had "worked hard to make our online systems clear and easy to use". Under the Local Government Act, an offence is committed if a councillor votes on any financial or budgetary matters when they are themselves in council tax arrears for two months or more. Broadhead - leader of the Conservative group at the council - has not confirmed to the BBC how long he was in arrears. In a letter, published in the Bournemouth Daily Echo, he admitted to the error but said he wondered "how many other examples there are of people getting caught out by the complications of online intricacies". "Surely we need a team whose focus is on making sure that the council's processes pass the plain English and ease test," he added. In January this year, BCP Council said it had recovered £654,000 by re-checking who was claiming single person's council tax discount and checking against other records such as the electoral roll. Details of that investigation are due to be published shortly. The deadline for a council response to a Freedom of Information request from a resident about the matter passed earlier this week. The council has yet to publish its response. In a statement to the BBC, Broadhead said: "When I was informed by the council that I'd been claiming this discount, I was shocked. "At no point had I had any correspondence by post that this was applied. When I asked to see the form to show I'd selected to receive the discount, I was told it had been lost. "I've since discovered that in the council's previous (and now scrapped) change of address form, if you didn't list those moving with you - which I must have inadvertently skipped - it automatically applied this discount without even telling you. "This is perhaps why so many others have fallen into this same trap, with the council reporting £700k collected for those mistakenly doing the same thing. "Once noticed, I rectified immediately and have repaid the full underpayment. The council agreed that it was an honest mistake and agreed no further action was needed. "I sincerely hope they've closed this quirk in the system so others don't fall into the same trap." A BCP Council spokesperson said the online form used to register for council tax at a new address included a confirmation screen showing any discounts being requested. "They are then sent an email every year, asking them to check that the details are still correct and that their circumstances have not changed, which also confirms any discounts being applied," the spokesperson said. "We have worked hard to make our online systems clear and easy to use and residents are also able to contact us if they have any questions. "As part of routine checks undertaken by BCP Council, working alongside the national fraud initiative, discrepancies between council tax payments and individual circumstances are flagged to us. "We then contact those individuals to make them aware and discuss repayment options, including applying a penalty where appropriate." You can follow BBC Dorset on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram. Dorset and BCP residents owe £45m in council tax BCP Council

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store