State Superintendent of Public
Instruction Tom Horne changed his tune on a Trump-introduced visa
processing fee in statements to the Nogales International on Friday,
saying he supports the fee and that there had been a misunderstanding.
The
$100,000 fee recently imposed on new H1B visa applications will make
recruiting and hiring international teachers much more difficult for
Arizona schools, superintendents – including Elgin School’s Dan Erickson
-have said. During a visit to that school Tuesday, Horne told Erickson
and reporters he opposed the fee.
Following
that discussion, Horne approached a Nogales International reporter and
asked that he not publish his remarks in opposition to the policy,
saying that he would be “screwed” if Trump were to endorse his primary
challenger, State Treasurer Kimberly Yee.
A story on Horne’s remarks was
published Tuesday by the Nogales International and republished by
several other news organizations.
On Friday, Horne sent an emailed Letter to the Editor to the NI seeking to clarify his statements.
“It
was a big misunderstanding,” he wrote. “The principal at the school I
was visiting in Santa Cruz County, to recognize academic success at that
school, spoke as though all foreign teachers were here on H1B visas. My
comment was prompted by my knowledge of our critical teacher shortage
and need for foreign teachers.”
“When
I got back to my office I checked and found that almost all foreign
teachers are here on J1 and Q1 visas, which can be seen on our website.
These are not subject to the same financial burdens as H1B,” Horne
continued. “I apologize for my misstatement. I enthusiastically support
all of President Trump’s policies on education and am doing everything I
can to implement them here in Arizona.”
Reached Friday, Erickson said he disagreed with that characterization of his remarks.
“All
I can say to anyone is what I know about our teachers,” he said. Elgin
School has two teachers on H1B visas and none on other visas such as J1s
or Q1s.
“I
was also really disappointed about what he said in regards to President
Trump,” Erickson added. “That’s disheartening. That means he approves
of the dismantling of the Department of Education … those things are
bad for education.”
Statewide,
it is unclear how many teachers work on H1B visas versus J1 and Q1
visas. The Arizona Department of Education’s guidance page only
recommends J1s and Q1s, and Horne said Friday that “almost all”
international teachers have those visas, though he didn’t have the
figures.
In 2025, Arizona K-12 schools requested 130 H1B visa approvals, according to data from the National Education Association.
H1B
visas differ from J1s and Q1s in that teachers can pursue a path to
permanent residency while working on them, whereas with the other types,
they are required to return to their home country.
Horne
acknowledged in a phone call Friday that the $100,000 fee is too steep
for school districts, and that Arizona does have a teacher shortage
crisis and depends on international teachers.
But, he said, “teachers that want to come here can use the others.”
Erickson
said that in his previous post as superintendent of Bowie School
District, he had three teachers working on J1 visas out of six teachers
overall. When their visas expired at the end of five years, they were
required to return to the their home countries, and recruiting to
replace half the district’s teachers in a small, remote district proved
extremely difficult.
“My preference would always be an H1B,” Erickson said. “I want them to be able to stay as long as they want.”
“We can disagree, that’s fine,” he added, referring to Horne. “He’s not my boss and I’m not his boss.”
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Graham Krewinghaus Az schools chief Horne walks back opposition to visa fee, ‘enthusiastically’ supports Trump policy www.tucsonsentinel.com
Local news | TucsonSentinel.com 2026-01-09 22:46:34
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