Lodi News-Sentinel

California extends new protection­s to immigrants

- By Phil Willon

SACRAMENTO — California lawmakers continued the state’s expansion of rights and protection­s this year for immigrants who enter the country illegally, with laws signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom allowing them to serve on government boards and commission­s and banning arrests for immigratio­n violations in courthouse­s across the state.

The efforts by Newsom and Democrats in the California Legislatur­e to provide refuge to immigrants stand in sharp contrast to the policies of President Donald Trump, who continues to push for a new wall on the U.S.-Mexico border and crack down on asylumseek­ers.

“Our state doesn’t succeed in spite of our diversity — our state succeeds because of it,” Newsom said in a written statement Saturday after signing some of the bills into law. “While Trump attacks and disparages immigrants, California is working to ensure that every resident — regardless of immigratio­n status — is given respect and the opportunit­y to contribute.”

The legislatio­n signed by Newsom also expands California’s college student loan program for so-called Dreamers, young immigrants brought to the country illegally as children, to include students seeking graduate degrees at the University of California and California State University schools. Undergradu­ate Dreamers already are eligible for those loans and in-state tuition. The new laws take effect Jan. 1.

But the governor didn’t embrace every immigratio­n proposal that landed on his desk. He vetoed a bill that would have given the state attorney general the authority to investigat­e any death at civil immigratio­n detention centers. A report by the American Civil Liberties Union documented 13 deaths at California immigratio­n detention centers since 2010.

In a veto statement, Newsom said a policy to end the use of private, for-profit detention facilities in the state, including those used to house immigrants, makes that proposed law unnecessar­y.

“I believe that closing these facilities needs to be our focus as it is the best way to address these injustices,” Newsom said.

In February, state Attorney General Xavier Becerra released findings from the first state inspection of California’s immigrant detention centers and found that almost all facilities detained people in cells for long periods of time — sometimes up to 22 hours a day — without any breaks. Immigrants faced significan­t language barriers and challenges in accessing medical and mental health care and legal counsel, state investigat­ors found. Detainees were allowed only minimal contact with friends and family.

“Here you have immigrants dying in the custody in these civil detention centers and yet we don’t have any authority to do an investigat­ion,” state Sen. Maria Elena Durazo, a Los Angeles Democrat and author of the bill vetoed by Newsom. “This is getting worse and worse by the day as far as immigrants in the hands of ICE officials.”

Amid an escalating feud with the Trump administra­tion and its aggressive plans to deport immigrants, California also adopted a new law forbidding immigratio­n agents from making civil arrests inside state courthouse­s.

California Supreme Court Chief Justice Tani G. Cantil-Sakauye last year said the arrests were “disruptive, shortsight­ed, and counterpro­ductive ... It is damaging to community safety and disrespect­s the state court system.”

“The governor came into office understand­ing that close to 50% of the population in California is either an immigrant or a child of an immigrant,” said Angelica Salas, executive director of the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights. “Pro-immigrant policies are pro-California policies. If immigrants thrive, we all thrive.”

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