The Commercial Appeal

What the sanctuary cities law means for Memphis

- Ryan Poe Memphis Commercial Appeal USA TODAY NETWORK - TENNESSEE

Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam announced last Monday that he will allow a bill banning sanctuary cities to become law without his signature, beginning a new era of mandated cooperatio­n between federal immigratio­n agents and local law enforcemen­t.

Here are three things to know about what the law will mean for Memphis and Shelby County:

There are no sanctuary cities in Tennessee

The new law will ban sanctuary cities throughout the state — even though the state currently has no sanctuary cities.

Although Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland has described the city as “welcoming” to immigrants, Memphis Police spokespers­ons say they have little interactio­n with U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agents.

However, Shelby County is a different matter. The county doesn’t assist on ICE actions but regularly holds immigrants for ICE upon request.

The state chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union released a statement from executive director Hedy Weinberg, who is concerned the law makes any local law enforcemen­t officer a “de facto immigratio­n agent.” Here’s more of the statement:

“By allowing this bill to become law, the governor has ensured that thousands of Tennessean­s will be forced to live in the shadows, in fear of reporting when they are victims or witnesses to crimes and underminin­g local law enforcemen­t’s ability to use their discretion and resources in the way that they believe best protects public safety in their local community.”

The Shelby County Commission voted 7-0 in April — the bare minimum of votes needed — to ask Haslam to veto the legislatio­n. That movement was led by Republican Commission­er Mark Billingsle­y, who said the bill “invites racial profiling.”

One of the six absent commission­ers, Republican firebrand Terry Roland, decided to write his own letter to Haslam asking Haslam to ignore his colleagues and sign the law.

Billingsle­y also objected to the additional financial burden of working closer with ICE, although County Chief Administra­tive Officer Harvey Kennedy said the cost was nil.

The next county sheriff won’t go rogue

Even though the state is threatenin­g some fairly significan­t financial punishment­s for cities violating the law, a municipali­ty could — hypothetic­ally — bite that bullet.

But Shelby County won’t, according to Democrat Floyd Bonner and Republican Dale Lane, the two candidates running for sheriff in the Aug 2 general election. In recent interviews, both men said they would obey the law if elected.

Reach Ryan Poe at poe@commercial­appeal.com or on Twitter at @ryanpoe.

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MARK WEBER/THE COMMERCIAL
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 ?? APPEAL ?? Community members attend an April 10 vigil outside El Mercadito de Memphis in Hickory Hill to support Manuel Duran. The reporter for Spanish-language media was arrested April 3 while doing a live Internet video of a Memphis protest. Duran has since...
APPEAL Community members attend an April 10 vigil outside El Mercadito de Memphis in Hickory Hill to support Manuel Duran. The reporter for Spanish-language media was arrested April 3 while doing a live Internet video of a Memphis protest. Duran has since...

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