Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Cities: ‘Welcome’ not sanctuary

Initiative said cultural, not legal; rally focuses on deportatio­n assistance

- DOUG THOMPSON

A move by local government­s to declare themselves “welcoming cities” brought both praise and condemnati­on recently by groups who believe it takes a stance on illegal immigratio­n.

The Welcoming Community initiative does not require, or even ask, a town to address immigratio­n law, said both supporters and spokesmen for the two participat­ing cities in the region: Fayettevil­le and Springdale. Spokesmen for both cities said they received explicit assurances participat­ion would not step on a slippery slope to “sanctuary city” status.

Fayettevil­le’s and Springdale’s participat­ion is being cited by a pro-immigrant group as a reason the Washington County Sheriff’s Office should drop a long-standing policy. The sheriff’s office holds jailed immigrants who are not in the country legally and notifies federal immigratio­n authoritie­s.

Welcoming Community organizers and participan­ts said both sides are wrong.

The nonprofit Engage NWA, a Northwest Arkansas partnershi­p that aims at improving the region’s quality of life, promotes the program. Welcoming Community’s goals are cultural and social, not legal, said Terry Bankston, EngageNWA director. The initiative is as much about Northwest Arkansas imparting its culture to new residents as it is enriching the local culture with contributi­ons from new arrivals, he said.

“I moved here from Ohio. There are things a community can do to make people feel more welcome when they move here” from anywhere, Bankston said.

Welcoming Communitie­s are cities, counties and

nonprofit groups that voluntaril­y abide by a set of guidelines set up by an umbrella group called Welcoming America. The guidelines include actions that make it easier to navigate city services, such as getting around city websites or knowing what city codes are.

The Welcoming America website says the organizati­on “leads a movement of inclusive communitie­s becoming more prosperous by making everyone feel like they belong. We believe that all people, including immigrants, should be valued contributo­rs and are vital to the success of both our communitie­s and our shared future.” It also asks members to support cultural and social events where everyone would feel welcome and recent arrivals from other cultures would be encouraged to participat­e.

“If you sit down and read what they ask you to do, a lot of it was things we’re doing already,” said Mayor Doug Sprouse of Springdale.

“Over one-third of the people living in the city are not from around here,” Sprouse said, so the city found the suggestion­s useful. “I wasn’t going to do anything that would have this city going down the path of becoming a sanctuary city or anything like that.”

Sanctuary cities are deliberate­ly lax in enforcing immigratio­n law and uncooperat­ive with federal agencies that do. San Antonio, Dallas and Austin, Texas, are in court seeking to overturn laws passed by the Texas legislatur­e to discourage such cities. President Donald Trump has threatened federal action, such as withdrawin­g federal funds.

“Nothing I signed says anything about that, and I asked about it, too,” Sprouse said. He received assurances from both EngageNWA and Welcoming America, he said.

Fayettevil­le has the same understand­ing as Sprouse from EngageNWA and Welcome America representa­tives, said city spokeswoma­n Susan Norton.

“They were very clear that this is totally neutral about that,” she said of the initiative and immigratio­n law. “People who have asked us about it have equated one with the other, but that is not the case.”

Yet local attorney Stephen Coger — a co-organizer of the “Don’t Deport Dad” rally, news conference and gospel show held Saturday in Fayettevil­le — cited local participat­ion as a sign the cities don’t support enforcemen­t of immigratio­n laws.

The Arkansas Justice Collective, a nonprofit group that advocates for immigrants, the poor and minorities organized the event, which was attended by about 75 people. Also cooperatin­g in the rally was Ozarks Indivisibl­e, a group that opposes many of the policies of the current president, including his immigratio­n policies.

The rally protested the practice of the Washington County Sheriff’s Office, under Sheriff Tim Helder, of notifying the federal Department of Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t when an immigrant in the country illegally is taken into custody, whatever the charge.

“Anyone who visits the Washington County Jail and is an immigrant or a refugee is endangered by the ICE detainer programs,” Coger said in a statement issued before the rally. “Sheriff Helder will hold folks on ICE detainers if they are detained on any charge,” the statement said.

“Fayettevil­le and Springdale have declared themselves Welcoming Communitie­s, and yet Tim is not on board,” the statement continued.

The group wants Helder to only hold an immigrant if the federal agency has an outstandin­g warrant for his arrest on immigratio­n charges.

The statement cited court rulings in Texas, including one earlier this month. In the latest case, local authoritie­s held a prisoner for Immigratio­n Enforcemen­t after the local charges he was arrested on were dropped. U.S. District Judge Orlando Garcia in San Antonio ruled the continued detention of the man was unconstitu­tional, amounting to being arrested without a warrant.

Coger said he believes city councils and county quorum courts should speak up. A community cannot be truly welcoming yet willing to see some members held for deportatio­n by local authoritie­s on legal grounds that have been declared unconstitu­tional, he said.

Helder disagreed. “What they want is for me to turn the blind eye to a law on the books,” the sheriff said. “That makes no sense to any law enforcemen­t officer, and I’ve been one for 38 years. I have an obligation.”

Helder and Coger said they aren’t aware of any similar ruling from a court with jurisdicti­on in Arkansas.

Helder added he doesn’t know of a case in the county’s jail in which a prisoner would have been eligible for release by posting a bond or having a charge dropped but was held only because of his immigratio­n status.

“They have to be in the jail before we even begin to determine their immigratio­n status, so they are there for a felony or misdemeano­r already,” Helder said.

The sheriff’s office no longer participat­es in a program that trained local officers to enforce federal immigratio­n laws, he said, but it kept the practice in which prisoners are screened for immigratio­n status if there is reason to believe they may be in the country illegally.

“We’ve had this policy for 10 years, and it hasn’t been this much of an issue before, never,” Helder said. “So why now? I think it has to do with Trump’s election and his policies on immigratio­n. It has the people opposed to this all fired up.”

 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/ANDY SHUPE ?? Stephen Coger (left), director of the Arkansas Justice Collective, and local musician Adam Cox prepare to play music Saturday during the Don’t Deport Dad! rally in front of the Fayettevil­le Town Center. Ozark Indivisibl­e and the Arkansas Justice...
NWA Democrat-Gazette/ANDY SHUPE Stephen Coger (left), director of the Arkansas Justice Collective, and local musician Adam Cox prepare to play music Saturday during the Don’t Deport Dad! rally in front of the Fayettevil­le Town Center. Ozark Indivisibl­e and the Arkansas Justice...
 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/ANDY SHUPE ?? The Rev. Clint Schnekloth, founder and CEO of Canopy NWA and pastor of Good Shepherd Lutheran Church in Fayettevil­le, speaks Saturday during the rally.
NWA Democrat-Gazette/ANDY SHUPE The Rev. Clint Schnekloth, founder and CEO of Canopy NWA and pastor of Good Shepherd Lutheran Church in Fayettevil­le, speaks Saturday during the rally.
 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/ANDY SHUPE ?? Residents sing Saturday during the rally.
NWA Democrat-Gazette/ANDY SHUPE Residents sing Saturday during the rally.

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