If your kid is attending Prescott College in Arizona this fall, you may want to double-check the detailed charges on your bill.

The private school is now charging every student a “non-mandatory” per-semester fee of $30 — or $60 for the year — to fund a college scholarship for an illegal immigrant. Yes, you read that right. The fee, announced in April, appears on the bill for students in the upcoming school term, who already pay $28,000+ in tuition to attend Prescott. (Room, board, and incidentals are extra, of course.)

“The application process and financial aid are open to all students, including both undocumented and DACA-status [Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals] students,” the school proudly notes on its website.

Students can opt out of this fee — but they have to know about it first.

“Most [students] won’t even see it,” said one University of New Hampshire sophomore. “Why not ask for the $30 to give a scholarship to a handicapped student or something?”

“This is utter lunacy and political correctness taken to the stratosphere — it defies any sort of fiscal, educational, and legal logic,” one Boston-area dad and small-business owner told LifeZette. “I’ll tell you what — my kid will not be going to Prescott College. It’s no coincidence the school’s initials are ‘PC.'”

As the college spelled out in a statement, social justice is taking precedence over the legitimate financial concerns of American families and their kids.

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“We’re committed to broadening access to higher education for a diverse group of students and mobilize our resources toward social justice,” President John Flicker said about the “Freedom Education Fund fee” in a message posted to the school’s website.

The college said it is “proud to announce the availability of this scholarship to one undocumented student as part of National Institution’s Coming Out Day in support of undocumented students, an annual event hosted by United We Dream. This is the first time a four-year college in Arizona has implemented such a fee, and only the second in the country to do so [Loyola University in Chicago is apparently the first]. The fee was a student-led initiative with collaboration between undergraduate and Social Justice and Human Rights Master of Arts students, community members, and faculty members.”

Don’t look to Hillary Clinton to put families first — not legal families, anyway.

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The school said “the fee will support one student this coming academic year” — but that’s just the wind-up. “The college hopes to raise additional funds to support more full-tuition scholarships for additional undocumented students.”

Many are outraged. “At a time when student loan debt is over $1 trillion, it is irresponsible for Prescott College to offer this ‘privilege’ at the expense of other students,” Andrew Kloster, legal fellow for the Center for Legal & Judicial Studies at The Heritage Foundation, told Fox News.

“While the dollar amount seems small per student, the fee does send a message to potential donors to Prescott College that the administration is less concerned with sound financial management than it is with making a political statement.”

Jessica Vaughan, director of policy studies for the Washington-based Center for Immigration Studies, was aghast at the new student fee.

“It is beyond absurd that this college is going to force all the students to subsidize the education of a student who is in the country illegally,” she told Fox News. “It’s a shame these students and faculty don’t have the same drive to help some of their fellow citizens who can’t afford college and who are forced to compete with illegal workers for job opportunities.”

The fee rubs salt in the wounds of Americans who constantly hear Democrats place the needs of illegals in the same category as those of legal American families who work hard and struggle daily to make ends meet.

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Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton asserted last Friday, during a minority journalists convention about immigration, that she will “not break up families.” This is no doubt upsetting to many Americans not because anyone wants a family broken up — far from it. More to the point, it once again puts American largesse squarely in the hands — and wallets — of those who live here illegally.

Democrats place the needs of illegals in the same category of those of legal American families struggling to make ends meet.

“This is how they do it — they play the sympathy card,” said one Boston-area mom who is frustrated with progressive Democratic verbiage. “Who wants to argue for ‘breaking up families’? But that is clever framing. What we’re talking about here is families using their children to soak up U.S. jobs and money.”

They are indeed using children — a Center for Immigration Studies analysis notes that illegal immigrants are barred from directly receiving welfare themselves but may obtain it through their U.S.-born children.

Additionally, illegal immigrant families receive an average of about $1,000 more annually in federal welfare benefits than the households of non-immigrant recipients, the September 2015 CIS report found.

Unpacking federal cost data, the CIS found that the welfare payout to likely illegal immigrant households averages $5,692 a year. The average welfare payout to non-immigrant households is $4,431 a year.

Don’t look to Hillary Clinton to put families first — not legal families, anyway. In the Democratic land of illusion, reality is what you choose to call it. Speaking at the Democratic National Convention last month, President Obama said both illegal immigration and the crime rate are “as low as they’ve been in decades.”

“Tonight, I ask you to do for Hillary Clinton what you did for me,” he said to the cheering crowd. So Hillary plans to do for us exactly what her predecessor did.

If there’s any doubt, by the way, that Prescott loves its undocumented students — they’re invited to step right up. “At Prescott College, the application process and financial aid are open to all students, including both undocumented and DACA-status [Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals] students. Students interested in applying for the Freedom Education Fund scholarship should contact Admissions,” the school says.

There is no question undocumented students in this country have a shot at special grants, scholarships, and other opportunities — they just have to ask.