The Signal

Miami-Dade ends ‘sanctuary’ status

In emotional hearing, commission votes to abide by Trump order

- Alan Gomez @alangomez USA TODAY

The Miami-Dade

MIAMI County Commission rejected emotional pleas from residents Friday and voted to become the first county in the nation to drop its “sanctuary” status by agreeing to fully cooperate with federal immigratio­n officials.

The commission voted 9-3 to adopt the resolution, citing worries about President Trump’s threat to withhold federal funding from communitie­s that refuse to cooperate with federal agents seeking to deport undocument­ed immigrants.

The vote was particular­ly significan­t given MiamiDade’s mostly immigrant population, earning it the informal title of the capital of Latin America.

The county started down its path when Mayor Carlos Gimenez, a Cuban-born immigrant, issued an order on Jan. 26, directing jail officials to honor all requests by Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t (ICE) in order to shed the county’s “sanctuary” label. That came one day after Trump signed an executive order threatenin­g to crack down on “sanctuary cities.”

Gimenez said his decision was a purely financial one. He doesn’t want to put at risk about $355 million a year the county receives in federal funding.

Even so, dozens of people lashed out at Gimenez and

“Miami of all places, we of all people, should be the last ones willing to throw them under the bus.”

Frank Corbishley, an Episcopali­an

reverend

the commission, calling his order a betrayal against residents of a county where the majority of people are foreign-born. One by one, in English and Spanish and fighting through occasional tears, Miami-Dade residents pleaded with the commission to vote down the resolution.

Attorneys challenged the legality of the mayor’s order. Human rights advocates said the order would traumatize families. Undocument­ed immigrants explained the fear they’re now living with. U.S.-born children whose parents have been deported asked who will raise them. And religious leaders questioned the morality of adopting a policy that punishes the most vulnerable.

“It’s convenient to have (undocument­ed immigrants) around, yet it seems that so many of us are willing to throw them under the bus at the first hint of inconvenie­nce,” said Frank Corbishley, an Episcopali­an reverend. “Miami of all places, we of all people, should be the last ones willing to throw them under the bus.”

After the commission voted, dozens stormed out of the hearing, chanting, “Shame on you.”

At issue is Trump’s executive order that prohibits federal grants going to cities and counties deemed “sanctuary jurisdicti­ons.” That term has been used in recent years to describe more than 300 localities that have a range of policies that limit how much local authoritie­s will cooperate with ICE.

Trump’s order defined a “sanctuary jurisdicti­on” as one that violates a federal law requiring local officials to share informatio­n with ICE about suspects who are detained in their jails.

President Obama’s Department of Justice came to the same conclusion last year, issuing a memorandum that said all local government­s must at least share informatio­n about their inmates with ICE.

Gimenez told the emotional crowd his order has been misunderst­ood and that it brings the county in line with federal law to ensure it is no longer incorrectl­y labeled a “sanctuary city.”

 ?? ALAN DIAZ, AP ?? Nora Sandigo Otero comforts Yardley Vanegas, left, and Sherley Ramirez, right, children under her legal guardiansh­ip, as they leave the hearing.
ALAN DIAZ, AP Nora Sandigo Otero comforts Yardley Vanegas, left, and Sherley Ramirez, right, children under her legal guardiansh­ip, as they leave the hearing.

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