The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Atlanta calls for ICE to move its detainees

Mayor says that city will no longer hold anyone for the federal agency.

- By Jeremy Redmon jredmon@ajc.com

Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms signed an executive order for transferri­ng all remaining ICE detainees out of the city jail.

Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms on Thursday signed an executive order for transferri­ng all remaining U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t detainees out of the city jail and declaring that Atlanta will no longer hold anyone for the federal agency.

The Democratic mayor’s move follows a separate executive order from June that blocked the jail from taking in any new ICE detainees amid enforcemen­t of the Trump administra­tion’s “zero-tolerance” immigratio­n policy on the Southwest border, which split up many immigrant families. Bottoms has vigorously objected to that federal policy.

“Atlanta will no longer be complicit in a policy that intentiona­lly inflicts misery on a vulnerable population without giving any thought to the horrific fallout,” Bottoms told reporters moments before signing her executive order. “As the birthplace of the civil rights movement, we are called to be better than this.”

Secretary of State Brian Kemp, Georgia’s Republican nominee for governor, criticized the mayor’s move in a statement he released Thursday afternoon.

“The city of Atlanta should focus on cleaning up corruption and stopping crime — not creating more of it,” he said.

A spokeswoma­n for Stacey Abrams, the Democratic nominee for governor, commended Bottoms’ “efforts to combat the impact of the administra­tion’s cruel and inhumane family separation policy. Anyone who stands against keeping families together lacks any kind of moral compass.”

The mayor signed her executive order on the same day the Trump administra­tion moved to withdraw from a 1997 consent decree — nicknamed the “Flores settlement” — that limits the government’s ability to detain immigrant children. The proposed rule change would allow the government to detain immigrant children with their parents for longer than 20 days. Federal officials said they would ensure the children are “treated with dignity, respect, and special concern for their particular vulnerabil­ity as minors.”

“Today, legal loopholes signifi-

cantly hinder the department’s ability to appropriat­ely detain and promptly remove family units that have no legal basis to remain in the country,” U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said in a prepared statement. “This rule addresses one of the primary pull factors for illegal immigratio­n and allows the federal government to enforce immigratio­n laws as passed by Congress.”

Immigrant rights advocates blasted the Trump administra­tion’s move.

“It is sickening to see the United States government looking for ways to jail more children for longer,” said Omar Jadwat, director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s Immigrants’ Rights Project. “That’s the complete opposite of what we should be doing — and it’s yet another example of the Trump administra­tion’s hostility toward immigrants resulting in a policy incompatib­le with the most basic human values.”

Meanwhile, communitie­s across the nation are rethinking their relationsh­ips with ICE amid the Trump administra­tion’s crackdown on illegal immigratio­n. For example, Sacramento County, Calif., officials voted in June against renewing a multimilli­on-dollar contract with ICE to hold the federal agency’s detainees in a county jail.

“What it came down to for me is whether it’s morally supportabl­e to continue doing that, even if it came at a fiscal cost,” Sacramento County Supervisor Phil Serna told Capital Public Radio.

That same month, the Springfiel­d, Oregon, City Council voted to end an ICE contract for holding its detainees in a city jail.

“What began as a routine jail contract in 2012, a contract that requires no direct input from the council, has become a lightning rod for our community in 2018,” Springfiel­d Mayor Christine Lundberg said, according to The Register-Guard. “The fear, hatred and just plain craziness at the national level has drowned out any hope of making a pragmatic decision in Springfiel­d.”

In Atlanta, the mayor’s executive order directs city Correction­s Chief Patrick Labat to permanentl­y stop accepting ICE detainees and to request that the federal agency transfer its remaining detainees out of the city jail as soon as possible.

There were just five ICE detainees in the Atlanta City Detention Center as of Wednesday, down from 205 in June. The number has fallen as ICE has released them, deported others and transporte­d some to its other detention centers in Folkston, Lumpkin and Ocilla.

An ICE spokesman confirmed the five remaining in the jail would be moved out by the end of Thursday. He declined to identify them or their native countries or give any details about their immigratio­n records, citing his agency’s privacy policies.

The city, the mayor added, has entered into a partnershi­p with Uber and a pair of Catholic and Lutheran charities, which will provide free rides and meals to immigrant families that have been separated on the Southwest border and reunited in Atlanta.

Atlanta has been paid $78 a day for each ICE detainee it has held in the jail through a contract with the U.S. Marshals Service, collecting $7.5 million through this arrangemen­t for this fiscal year, as of June. That is more than a fifth of the jail’s annual $33 million budget. City officials said the Atlanta jail will continue to hold detainees for other federal agencies.

 ??  ?? Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms says U.S. policy “inflicts misery on a vulnerable population.”
Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms says U.S. policy “inflicts misery on a vulnerable population.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States