ICE drops search for contractor to build detention facility near Chicago
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has canceled its search for a contractor to build a detention facility near Chicago that would have held people facing deportation, according to a website that tracks federal contracts.
The update was made Tuesday on a website that is part of the U.S. General Services Administration. In a statement, ICE said it canceled its search because it “did not have a viable offer and will not be awarding a contract.”
An ICE official said the lack of a detention facility in Illinois could mean that those detained and facing deportation could be moved to facilities farther away.
Chicago-based immigration advocacy groups the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights and the National Immigrant Justice Center released a statement saying the organizations were “elated” by the change.
“Our organizations will continue to fight to hold [the Department of Homeland Security] and ICE accountable, to stop the harms they are inflicting and the fear they are creating in our communities, and to make Illinois welcoming for all,” the statement read.
In 2019, ICE sought bids for a contract that would have brought a detention facility with the capacity to hold up to 1,000 people within a 150-mile radius of Chicago. ICE currently contracts with suburban local jails to detain people facing deportation. But Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed a law in June 2019 that expanded the state’s ban on private prisons to include detention facilities.