The Commercial Appeal

Mississipp­i Senate sends anti-sanctuary bill to governor

- JEFF AMY

JACKSON, Miss. - Mississipp­i took another step March 21 toward banning sanctuary cities when Gov. Phil Bryant said he would sign a bill that would keep government agencies from sheltering people in the country illegally.

Senate Bill 2710 says cities, state agencies and public colleges can’t prevent employees from asking someone’s immigratio­n status. These public agencies also can’t give legal status to people who entered the country without permission, such as by issuing an identifica­tion card. Critics say the bill is discrimina­tory.

Senators agreed with changes made by the House, with 11 senators voting against the bill. Bryant, a Republican who has long voiced concerns about people entering the country illegally, said he would sign the measure into law.

“Taxpayers expect their state and its political subdivisio­ns to abide by federal immigratio­n laws,” Bryant said in a statement.

The bill would override Mississipp­i’s only sanctuary policy. A 2010 ordinance in the city of Jackson prevents police officers from asking about immigratio­n status. Supporters said the new bill would ensure local government­s can’t hamper efforts to remove people who have entered illegally.

“We’ve had issues where there have been cities that have attempted to ignore federal law or instructed law enforcemen­t from inquiring about the immigratio­n status of people they stop,” said Senate Judiciary A Committee Chairman Sean Tindell, R-Gulfport.

Since President Donald Trump signed an executive order last month to strip funding from sanctuary cities, states have taken action, with some moving to limit such communitie­s and others adding protection­s for immigrants.

Critics say the bill isn’t necessary, has no penalties for anyone breaking the law and is just a way of discrimina­ting against immigrants.

“Immigratio­n is a federal issue, governed by federal law and the federal government,” said Sen. David Blount, DJackson.

The University of Mississipp­i’s student government briefly considered a call to designate the campus as a sanctuary in November, but withdrew the resolution. Chancellor Jeffery Vitter said Ole Miss would follow the law.

“No government entity - whether at city hall or a university campus - can grant amnesty to illegal aliens and violate federal laws,” Lt. Gov Tate Reeves, a Republican, said in a statement.

In 2014, Mississipp­i had about 25,000 immigrants who had entered the country without permission, the Pew Research Center estimates. As a share of total population, Mississipp­i’s overall foreignbor­n population is among the smallest in the nation.

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