Chattanooga Times Free Press

Bill requiring state help with immigratio­n signed

- BY JONATHAN MATTISE

NASHVILLE — Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee has signed a bill that would require law enforcemen­t agencies to communicat­e with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s if they discover people are in the the country illegally, and would broadly mandate cooperatio­n in the process of identifyin­g, detaining and deporting them.

The Republican signed the measure Thursday, and it takes effect July 1. While the bill’s proponents have argued that Tennessee law enforcemen­t agencies should assist more in immigratio­n enforcemen­t, immigrant advocates have warned that the bill is broad and confusing and could embolden rogue officers to target immigrant families.

“When there is an interactio­n with law enforcemen­t, it’s important that the appropriat­e authoritie­s are notified of the status of that individual,” Lee told reporters Thursday. “I think that makes sense. So, I’m in support of that legislatio­n.”

Tennessee has aligned with other Republican-led states that have also sought to deploy their authoritie­s into more immigratio­n tasks as the presidenti­al election approaches, arguing that President Joe Biden has shirked his duties to enforce federal immigratio­n law.

That includes a Texas law that allows authoritie­s to arrest migrants who enter the U.S. illegally and order them to leave the country, but it remains blocked temporaril­y in court. In Iowa, Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds this week signed a bill that mirrors part of the Texas law. Another approach at a Texas-style bill is advancing in Louisiana. Idaho lawmakers considered a similar measure but adjourned without passing it.

In Tennessee, Republican bill sponsor Sen. Brent Taylor said his proposal is meant to apply when law enforcemen­t officers, including sheriff’s department­s that run jails, learn the immigratio­n status of someone in their custody for another alleged crime.

“This is not going down and hunting somebody who looks Hispanic, pulling them over and demanding papers,” Taylor said.

But the Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition said the law is written broadly and could give more authority than Taylor has claimed. The group criticized Lee’s decision to sign the bill.

“He could have listened to the warnings from police chiefs, educators, domestic violence victims’ advocates and legal experts and stopped this misguided bill from becoming law,” said Lisa Sherman Luna, executive director of the coalition’s voter engagement arm. “Instead, he rubber-stamped the state legislatur­e’s continued descent into authoritar­ianism and green-lit a law that could open the door for racial profiling, unlawful detention, and separated families.”

The Metro Nashville Police Department raised concerns about the bill. A Nashville police spokespers­on has said the proposal could erode the trust its officers have built with immigrant communitie­s and dissuade some victims or witnesses from cooperatin­g in investigat­ions.

The Tennessee bill says law enforcemen­t agencies and officials “shall” cooperate in various immigratio­n tasks already spelled out in state law, instead of saying they “are authorized” to do so, which was put into Tennessee code in a toughening of state immigratio­n law that passed in 2018.

The bill also refers back to a federal law that says it is voluntary for states and local government­s to get involved in certain federal immigratio­n law enforcemen­t tasks.

A legislativ­e fiscal analysis of the bill says “most, if not all, law enforcemen­t agencies already communicat­e with the federal government regarding an individual’s immigratio­n status,” citing informatio­n from the Tennessee police and sheriffs associatio­ns.

Lee has not vetoed a bill while in office in Tennessee, where lawmakers have a simple path to override a governor. He is among the governors who have sent National Guard troops to the border, at a proposed combined cost of $6.4 million for this budget year and the next.

 ?? AP PHOTO/GEORGE WALKER IV ?? On March 19, people gather for a news conference of the Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition outside the state Capitol in Nashville.
AP PHOTO/GEORGE WALKER IV On March 19, people gather for a news conference of the Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition outside the state Capitol in Nashville.

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