Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Advocates hope Illinois private detention ban sparks change

- By Sophia Tareen

Far from the southern border crisis, Illinois has launched a bullish effort to undercut the Trump administra­tion’s immigratio­n detention practices, and politician­s and activists are taking note.

The state recently enacted a first-of-its kind ban on privately-run immigratio­n detention, as President Donald Trump’s threat of mass deportatio­ns looms and his administra­tion scrambles to find more jail space in an already overcrowde­d system. Promises to bar private immigratio­n detention have been made repeatedly by Democrats on the 2020 campaign trail and advocates hope the Illinois law will galvanize others.

“No one benefits from keeping people unnecessar­ily incarcerat­ed. The only people who do benefit are shareholde­rs,” said senior policy counsel Fred Tsao, of the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights, which has fought private detention.

Illinois became the first state to bar private companies from contractin­g with local communitie­s to detain immigrants under a law signed last month by Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker, who said it made the state “a firewall against Donald Trump’s attacks” on immigrants. The goal was to prevent the constructi­on of a 1,300-bed facility roughly 80 miles (130 kilometers) from Chicago. Some estimate it would have nearly doubled Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t’s capacity to house immigrants in the area.

The move was hailed as a major victory by immigrant rights advocates, who have fought off other proposals in the area. While a national ban would be politicall­y and practicall­y unrealisti­c with most immigrant detainees being held in privately-run detention, some 2020 candidates held up Illinois as a model.

“Private immigratio­n detention centers are exploitati­on for profit, and I’m glad to see Illinois ban them,” Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren tweeted before stopping in Chicago last month. “My plan to end private prisons would require the rest of the country to do the same.”

The Illinois law extends an existing 1990 private prison ban to include immigratio­n detention. Only two other states, New York and Iowa, have banned private correction­al facilities, but they don’t include immigratio­n facilities. California, which has gone further than Illinois in limiting local entities when it comes to immigratio­n detention, could follow suit on private detention. A proposal before California state lawmakers that seeks to phase out and bar private prisons by 2028 was amended last month to include immigratio­n cases.

Democratic state Assemblyma­n Rob Bonta said he expanded his plan after the death of a 27-year-old who suffered a brain hemorrhage while detained by immigratio­n authoritie­s in California.

“It’s a statement about our values,” he said. “Private prisons run counter to our values.”

Other states have also taken a stand. Earlier this year, Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat, halted the sale of a former state prison that was going to be used as a private immigratio­n detention center after the company couldn’t promise it wouldn’t detain adult immigrants who had been separated from their children.

Private detention facilities have been used for immigratio­n since the 1980s but didn’t take off until the 2000s, when management was increasing­ly outsourced, according to Lauren Brooke Eisen, a fellow at the Brennan Center for Justice who wrote a book on private prisons.

Now, at least 60% of immigrants detained by ICE are in privately-managed facilities, according to the National Immigrant Justice Center. The adult population of detainees was over 53,000 as of last month, and the agency is only budgeted for 45,000, according to ICE.

In the Midwest, the agency relies mostly on contractin­g space from county jails. The federal government is furiously seeking out additional beds with massive numbers of migrants coming to the southern border and an administra­tion that is increasing­ly relying on detention. Reports of unsanitary and unsafe government-run facilities at the border have sparked public outrage, including by human rights groups.

 ?? M. SPENCER GREEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? This file photo, shows an anti-detention sign outside a home in Crete, Ill. Officials in Crete voted unanimousl­y in 2012 to reject a plan to build an immigrant detention center in the village. A first-of-its kind law barring private detention facilities in Illinois signed into law in June 2019 by Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker, has been drawing praise from 2020 Democratic presidenti­al candidates and immigrant rights advocates who hope the move leads the government to seek alternativ­es as President Donald Trump steps up enforcemen­t and vows to deport millions living in the country illegally.
M. SPENCER GREEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE This file photo, shows an anti-detention sign outside a home in Crete, Ill. Officials in Crete voted unanimousl­y in 2012 to reject a plan to build an immigrant detention center in the village. A first-of-its kind law barring private detention facilities in Illinois signed into law in June 2019 by Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker, has been drawing praise from 2020 Democratic presidenti­al candidates and immigrant rights advocates who hope the move leads the government to seek alternativ­es as President Donald Trump steps up enforcemen­t and vows to deport millions living in the country illegally.

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