Chicago Sun-Times

DETAINING UNDOCUMENT­ED IMMIGRANTS A CASH COW FOR SUBURBAN COUNTY

Holding undocument­ed immigrants for ICE becomes county’s $10M cash cow

- BY RACHEL FRAZIN AND ALEXANDRA ARRIAGA,

In the early 2000s, McHenry County’s population was booming — and officials needed a bigger jail. To save money, the county cut a deal: the federal government gave the county millions of dollars toward expanding the jail, and in return, the county agreed to detain undocument­ed immigrants for the next decade.

But three years after that first contract ended, McHenry County’s population growth has slowed to the point it doesn’t need the extra room in its jail in Woodstock — but it has continued to hold detainees for the federal government.

And while the number of detainees ebbed and flowed over the years — to the point that some county commission­ers wanted to end the contract — a spike in detainees recently has turned the contract into a cash cow for the county.

The bed-rental program will bring in more than $10 million by the end of 2018, up from $8.3 million last year for housing detainees, officials said. McHenry County administra­tor Peter Austin said that is among the most, if not the most, the contract has ever raised for the county in any one year.

“We still have all kinds of available capacity in our jail, so we’re utilizing that capacity in a manner that makes revenue sense for us,” he said.

‘ICE has really been weaponized’

But Carlos Acosta, the former head of the McHenry County Latino Coalition who was elected to the county board this month, asked whether the contract is worth the money it brings in.

“It’s been a divisive issue because it raises the question, is there a profit motive when the county sheriff is making traffic stops?” Acosta asked, referring to stops that could lead to the arrest and detention of an undocument­ed immigrant.

Given President Donald Trump’s emphasis on cracking down on undocument­ed immigrants, Acosta questions the relationsh­ip between the county and U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t.

“Over the last two years, ICE has really been weaponized. Do we really want to be part of that weaponized system?” he asked.

Attorney Hannah Cartwright, of the Chicago-based National Immigrant Justice Center, denounced McHenry’s longstandi­ng contract as a “consistent partnershi­p that shows that basically detention is for profit.”

The McHenry County Correction­al Facility is the largest that holds ICE detainees in the Chicago-area.

Since 2005, McHenry County has held detainees for ICE after the federal government gave McHenry about $7 million to expand its existing facility.

In addition, ICE pays McHenry County $95 per inmate, per day, according to the contract between the federal government and the county. That’s up $21 from the initial contract.

This year, the jail’s average daily population through Oct. 1 was 270 people, according to a facilities list published monthly by ICE.

McHenry’s undocument­ed inmate population has grown substantia­lly in recent years, from 167 in 2015 to 233 last year, according to figures obtained by Detention Watch Network, a group based in Washington D.C. that advocates against immigratio­n detention.

It’s difficult to determine what it costs to house the detainees, but administra­tors believe with the higher census of recent years, the county is more than breaking even.

“It doesn’t really cost us that on an incrementa­l basis,” Austin said. Since there is room in the jail, he said, it doesn’t matter “whether you turn on the oven to make 200 biscuits or 300 biscuits.”

However, a low census in 2014 led several county board members to question the contract after one estimate suggested it costed more than $130 to hold each detainee each day. But that estimate didn’t factor in the fixed cost of running the jail, which holds county inmates facing criminal charges.

Yet, the report stirred up controvers­y, with some county leaders lamenting what, according to that estimate, is a loss of money.

“This never should have happened,” McHenry County Board member Donna Kurtz told the Northwest Herald in 2014. “Government is not designed to be a consistent generator of positive cash flow with outside programs.”

Job generator

Lt. Mike Lukas of the McHenry County sheriff’s office said the county was also paid $450,000 for transporti­ng detainees last year, for example.

“It’s beneficial to the county because there’s jobs that wouldn’t be here if we weren’t doing this,” he said.

Acosta said he will start his term on the county board by posing questions on the detention facility to get more thorough data on what conditions are like inside.

“Immigratio­n policy is now county policy and county policy is now immigratio­n policy,” Acosta said.

 ??  ?? McHenry County Jail in Woodstock
McHenry County Jail in Woodstock

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