Los Angeles Times

County to sue Trump officials over treatment of immigrants

San Diego supervisor­s seek costs, restoratio­n of ‘safe release’ for asylum seekers.

- By Charles T. Clark

SAN DIEGO — Last year, the San Diego County Board of Supervisor­s voted to support President Trump’s lawsuit against California over its “sanctuary state” laws.

Now, the county supervisor­s plan to sue the Trump administra­tion for how it treats certain immigrants.

The county board voted in closed session last week to pursue legal action against the administra­tion over its handling of asylum-seeking families.

Prior to October, Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t used to connect asylum seekers with sponsors or family members in the United States while they waited for the legal process to play out. It was called a “safe release” program.

Now, federal policies have changed and asylum seekers are being processed by ICE and then released into communitie­s such as San Diego without any resources, leaving thousands of migrants all but stranded.

The suit aims to reimburse the county for the cost of serving asylum seekers and to compel the federal government to re-implement a “safe release” program, said Dianne Jacob, chairwoman of the Board of Supervisor­s.

“We are intent on sending a strong message to the administra­tion that this unacceptab­le,” Jacob said. “It’s wrong that the federal government is dumping on San Diegans not only from a cost standpoint and a humanitari­an standpoint, but this is also a federal issue, and the feds need to be held accountabl­e and do their job.”

The lawsuit will be filed in about 30 days, Jacob said. She did not say how many supervisor­s voted for it Tuesday.

After the safe release practices ended in October, a coalition of more than two dozen nonprofits known as the San Diego Rapid Response Network set up a temporary shelter for migrant families.

The network has provided humanitari­an aid and transporta­tion assistance to more than 5,200 migrants — mostly families with young children — since November. But the network’s shelter had been forced to change locations five times until January, when the county allowed an old courthouse downtown to become a shelter for asylum-seekers until the end of this year.

Under an agreement with Jewish Family Service of San Diego, one of the partners in the Rapid Response Network, the coalition of nonprofits will operate the shelter and bear all ongoing cost.

In a statement Tuesday, the Rapid Response Network commended the Board of Supervisor­s for pursuing the lawsuit and “holding the Trump administra­tion accountabl­e for its anti-immigrant policies and tactics.”

The network added that it is interested in learning details of the lawsuit.

“In the interim, we will continue working with the County of San Diego and other government and nongovernm­ent partners to support these families in exercising their legal, human right to seek safety and protection from violence and persecutio­n in their home countries,” the network said in a statement.

Jacob said the Board of Supervisor­s is not being inconsiste­nt. She explained that Trump’s lawsuit against California deals with illegal immigrants, but the county’s proposed lawsuit against his administra­tion seeks to support legal immigratio­n, including those who are seeking asylum.

Last month, the Trump administra­tion’s “Remain in Mexico” policy went into effect. That policy requires asylum seekers to wait in Mexico while their claim undergoes the legal process.

That policy will probably face a legal challenge, observers say. In the interim, individual­s have been sent back to Mexico, but it is unclear when or if that policy will be enforced on asylumseek­ing families.

Supervisor Nathan Fletcher, who voted for the board’s lawsuit Tuesday, said in a statement: “While we wait for the courts to weigh in, San Diego County will not abandon asylum seekers. We are committed to continuing our work with the San Diego Rapid Response Network and the State of California to ensure humane and compassion­ate treatment for all.”

Gov. Gavin Newsom and state legislator­s representi­ng San Diego have also prioritize­d the asylum-seeker issue. Newsom, who visited San Diego and the network’s shelter last month, has called for the state to spend $20 million over three years to assist nonprofits and community organizati­ons that serve asylum-seeking families. He also asked the Legislatur­e to provide $5 million in immediate funding.

The state Assembly approved that funding last month; the state Senate approved it Feb. 11, and it is awaiting the governor’s signature.

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