Los Angeles Times

Malibu votes to adopt ‘sanctuary city’ status

Officials narrowly approve resolution as a gesture of solidarity with workers who are in the U.S. illegally

- By Benjamin Oreskes

The discussion inside Malibu City Hall over whether to become a sanctuary city last week bore the usual hallmarks of the heated national debate over illegal immigratio­n.

While some residents praised the proposal, others blamed those who are in the country illegally for crime and called the move a thinly disguised rebuke of President Trump.

But it being Malibu, there was a celebrity twist. The idea was inspired by one of the town’s many famous residents: actor Martin Sheen. In December, he grabbed the lectern during a City Council meeting and — as if conjuring his inner President Josiah Bartlet from “The West Wing” — urged the city to become a sanctuary city.

Like many sanctuary city resolution­s, Malibu’s is largely symbolic. Backers said the move, which passed

on a 3-2 vote, is a chance for Malibu’s privileged to stand up for the city’s vulnerable population.

Malibu is about 92% white and one of L.A. County’s wealthiest cities. Everyone agrees the city has workers who are not authorized to be in the country, and they tend to serve the food at upscale eateries, clean the beachside mansions, look after children and keep the landscapin­g looking lush.

“When I reached out to some of the people at the schools and other people in the community, they told me people are scared,” said Councilwom­an Laura Rosenthal, who proposed the ordinance after hearing Sheen speak. “That’s people coming into Malibu who may be undocument­ed. I wanted to send a clear message that we are here for you.”

Only about 6% of Malibu is Latino, according to the 2010 census. Rosenthal said officials at the Boys & Girls Club told her there are nearly 80 children in the local schools who are in the country illegally or whose parents are here illegally.

Residents say a good chunk of the service workforce is Latino. And at least some of those people are in the country illegally. Rosenthal said it’s a well-known fact around town, one rarely talked about — even at last week’s council meeting.

“I think some people in Malibu have people working for them who are undocument­ed,” she said.

Lifelong resident Mikke Pierson, 57, a supporter of the resolution, said it’s hard to imagine a Malibu without the many immigrants who toil there. That’s why expressing support for people who are in the country illegally is so important, he said.

“Heck … we would be paralyzed and no one’s houses would be cleaned,” the former surf shop owner said.

Juan Escobar, 32, makes sure the Malibu Country Mart, a collection of upscale boutiques, stays in tip-top shape. Taking a big swig of water and watching a couple with their child eat lunch from John’s Garden Sandwiches and Snacks Shop, he said he came to the United States from Guatemala when he was 16.

If he had his legal papers, he would get a loan and start a business. Instead, he commutes to Malibu from Compton. He said he appreciate­s the city’s resolution, but said he is still concerned about Trump’s rhetoric about illegal immigratio­n.

Most immigrants just want to work, and they end up doing jobs that hardly anyone else, let alone most Americans, want to do, he said.

“In each house, there’s one immigrant here,” Escobar said of Malibu. “You see Spanish speakers taking care of babies in every house. They help people here.”

This all started in December, when Sheen, a wellknown liberal activist, thanked the City Council for its help on another issue close to his heart.

“We want to express our sincere gratitude for the outgoing members for their service, and we take special notice for their unanimous support for the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe’s opposition to the Dakota Access pipeline,” Sheen said. In the face of “that heroic resolution, and the heightened level of fear gripping so much of our nation since Nov. 8, we urge the council to adopt a resolution declaring the city of Malibu a sanctuary city.”

Despite Malibu’s liberal reputation, the sanctuary city proposal was no slam dunk. It passed on a split vote, with Councilmen Jefferson Wagner and Rick Mullen opposing it. And most of the relatively few residents who spoke up several hours into a late-night meeting expressed opposition to declaring Malibu a sanctuary city.

Some complained the March 13 declaratio­n was an empty gesture that will have little effect. The city receives just under $50,000 in federal funds, which it could lose if the Trump administra­tion follows through with a threat to defund sanctuary cities.

Also, the city contracts out its policing and jailing to the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department. So it already follows that department’s policies when it comes to cooperatin­g with immigratio­n authoritie­s.

In his opposition to the measure, Mullen couched his argument in an oddly very Malibu way: as an environmen­tal issue. In an article he wrote in a local magazine titled “The Environmen­talist’s Solution to a Sanctuary City,” he ultimately argued that the measure would undermine the rule of law.

At the council meeting, resident Elizabeth Stevens recalled how she worked two jobs to get through school and get a car, only to have it totaled by someone who was in the country illegally.

“They break the law to come in and they continue to break the law,” Stevens said. “Most illegal immigrants don’t care about the environmen­t like we do, and the city of Malibu thrives on it.”

During the meeting, Rosenthal read a letter from a resident; it was the only nod to a sometimes uncomforta­ble truth about Malibu and many places like it.

“Our city depends on a Hispanic population to support our comfortabl­e lifestyle,” Rosenthal read. “Do we not owe them what comfort and protection­s that are possible in these challengin­g times?”

Malibu joins an estimated 400 sanctuary cities and counties in the country. Most, such as Maywood, Santa Ana and San Francisco, have population­s of people who are not authorized to be in the United States.

“Sanctuary city” is a blanket term that has no single meaning. In general, the designatio­n is reserved for locales that have attempted to offer political support or practical protection­s to people in the country illegally.

For some cities, the sanctuary movement has simply been a push to get people without legal status more involved in government. In places such as San Francisco, local government­s have begun to cut ties with federal immigratio­n officials and have refused to fully cooperate with them.

Back at the Malibu Country Mart, Eric, 35, a gardener, scooped dead leaves from plant beds as shoppers moved through expensive boutiques and children enjoyed the playground under the gaze of mothers and nannies.

Sinewy thin and wearing a long, green polo shirt, Eric declined to give his last name out of fear. He said he came to the United States from Guatemala nearly 20 years ago. Every morning, he wakes up at 4:30 to make it from South L.A. to the ocean an hour later.

It’s a commute he has made for nine years. His three children were born in Los Angeles, and Eric said he pays taxes, has a driver’s license and lives to support his family.

Malibu becoming a sanctuary city was mentioned on Spanish-language television, he said.

“I feel more safe. We can work without being worried,” he said. “Who is going to take care of my kids if they deport me? What’s going to happen to them?”

 ?? Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? A SURFER LEAVES the water at Surfrider Beach in Malibu, which last week declared itself a sanctuary city — a symbol of support for immigrants in the U.S. illegally. City officials adopted the resolution on a 3-2 vote.
Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times A SURFER LEAVES the water at Surfrider Beach in Malibu, which last week declared itself a sanctuary city — a symbol of support for immigrants in the U.S. illegally. City officials adopted the resolution on a 3-2 vote.
 ??  ?? MALIBU Councilwom­an Laura Rosenthal introduced the sanctuary city resolution, an idea inspired by actor and resident Martin Sheen.
MALIBU Councilwom­an Laura Rosenthal introduced the sanctuary city resolution, an idea inspired by actor and resident Martin Sheen.
 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? LIFELONG MALIBU RESIDENT Mikke Pierson, 57, supports the city’s move. He and other residents point to the contributi­ons of immigrants. “We would be paralyzed and no one’s houses would be cleaned,” he said.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times LIFELONG MALIBU RESIDENT Mikke Pierson, 57, supports the city’s move. He and other residents point to the contributi­ons of immigrants. “We would be paralyzed and no one’s houses would be cleaned,” he said.

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