The Denver Post

Aurora police enforce local laws, not immigratio­n laws

- By Mike Coffman Mike Coffman is the mayor of Aurora.

The recent Denver Post editorial reiterated a tired, old, inaccurate trope that Aurora’s police department “will check the immigratio­n status of people and tell ICE what it wants and needs to know for potential deportatio­n cases.” This is patently wrong and misleading.

Aurora police officers enforce state and municipal laws, not federal laws. The city has repeated this message for many years. Immigratio­n law is a federal responsibi­lity.

The recent resolution passed by the City Council does not change that. Someone’s immigratio­n status is immaterial to our police officers.

Our officers work to build positive relationsh­ips with our immigrant communitie­s and regularly encourage anyone — irrespecti­ve and without knowledge of their immigratio­n status — to contact the Aurora Police Department if they are a victim or a witness to crime.

In fact, some of our police officers themselves are immigrants. We recognize that immigrants are particular­ly vulnerable to crime, and we work hard to build trust among them. Although we don’t enforce federal immigratio­n laws, the resolution affirms that the city of Aurora is not a “sanctuary city,” in that we do not seek to block U.S. Immigratio­n & Customs Enforcemen­t officials from doing their job by withholdin­g informatio­n. Our goal is public safety for all members of the community.

Contrary to the editorial board’s assertions on March 3, the resolution passed by the City Council on Feb. 26 is about us being good stewards of taxpayer dollars, not demonizing people seeking a better life.

To conflate the issues is not only inaccurate but unfair, especially in a community that welcomes residents from across the globe.

This is not an either-or situation. We can greatly value our immigrant communitie­s and still not have the resources or be structured to handle the current influx of migrants.

Our duty is to focus limited city resources on delivering essential city services to residents such as police, fire, 911, water, transporta­tion infrastruc­ture and maintenanc­e, recreation and libraries.

The resolution simply affirms that the city does not have the financial capacity to fund services related to the migrant crisis and that it expects neighborin­g municipali­ties or entities to help foot the bills if they want to bus migrants into Aurora.

It notes that Aurora, as a city, not a city and a county like Denver, does not have public health or human services department­s or the profession­als and the funding that comes with them.

Most importantl­y, it calls on the federal government to take swift, decisive action to support municipali­ties around the country that continue to shoulder the enormous burden of this crisis at the expense of their residents.

As our residents and other people across the metro area know, we are exceedingl­y proud of Aurora’s identity as the most diverse and global city in the state and region.

There’s a reason we call Aurora “The World in a City.” We value our immigrant communitie­s greatly and have strong working relationsh­ips with each of them. For many years, we have expressed unwavering support for immigratio­n through establishe­d immigratio­n channels.

We also have maximized our existing resources as efficientl­y as possible to align with the city’s unique Immigrant and Refugee Integratio­n Plan.

If we can agree on one thing, it is that our elected leaders in Washington, D.C., made this mess, and it is their responsibi­lity to clean it up by passing a comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform that secures our borders and fixes our broken immigratio­n system.

Until then, the federal government must assume responsibi­lity for all costs associated with the support of the recently arrived migrants into the Denver area and quit making cities such as Aurora the scapegoats.

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