Schools across Minnesota are enrolling hundreds of new students who have arrived with a recent wave of Latin American migrants, prompting a midyear scramble by district leaders to make sure they can offer the language and support services the young newcomers need.
The students’ arrival has boosted enrollment numbers in public schools, which get funding on a per-pupil basis. But it has also stretched resources in districts that need to hire more Spanish-speaking educators while facing multimillion-dollar budget cuts. Many of the students are living in homeless shelters, hotels or in small apartments they share with two or three other families. Some have missed months or years of schooling in their home country, and many carry intense trauma from the violence they fled and their difficult journeys to the United States.
![Liliana Rodríguez, with the Office of Latine Achievement, instructs students at a downtown homeless shelter in Minneapolis, Minn., on Friday, Dec. 22, 2023. The Office of Latine Achievement held a winter break academy that the district put on for students at a homeless shelter in Minneapolis. The only significant boost to enrollment at the city’s schools is coming from a wave of hundreds of immigrants to the district. Many of the students are from Ecuador and do not speak English, and most are in tough or unstable living situations. Schools are scrambling to accommodate dozens of high-needs students they hadn’t planned for in their budgets this year. The few dual-language programs in the city are bursting at the seams, meaning many of the new immigrants are placed at schools without enough bilingual educators. ] Elizabeth Flores • liz.flores@startribune.com](https://arc.stimg.co/startribunemedia/DO76O4JSZBEUPJ2ERNUZOK7WAE.jpg?&w=712)
“There’s a big gap in what we can do and what is needed,” Marion Tizón, director of the Office of Latine Achievement, a new department in Minneapolis Public Schools. Tizón’s department is developing a plan to better support the new students, but it’s hard to know how long the influx of asylum seekers will continue. Staff in Minneapolis schools have been trying to predict how many families to expect based on the number of people coming to the border. But that’s hardly an exact science, because many families are going to other U.S. cities first before coming to Minneapolis.
Minnesota now ranks as a top destination for migrants accepting free plane tickets to leave New York City, where homeless shelters are struggling with record numbers of asylum-seekers. County officials have said they offer any new arrival much the same help offered to any family in need, and that the county is applying lessons learned from responses to recent waves of immigrants from Afghanistan and Ukraine.
“I haven’t heard of a place that has got it down,” Tizón said. “We’re all doing what we can.”
The Bloomington and Wayzata school districts are also serving students new to the country, many of whom are living in homeless shelters. Bloomington schools have 100 more newcomers identified as homeless or highly mobile than last year. Wayzata schools enrolled students from 36 Ecuadorian families.
Richfield has enrolled more than 120 newcomers (including some from Afghanistan and Somalia as well as Latin America) so far this school year. That’s up from 80 for all of last school year and nearly double the number that came in 2021-2022.
Minneapolis schools have 800 more English language learners than a year ago. Now, more than 2,500 students — nearly 9% of the district’s student body — are newly enrolled students who speak Spanish as a home language.