By Duane Campbell
California Governor Jerry Brown signed into law SB 54 on
Thursday Oct 5, the "California Values Act", which built upon the
landmark Trust Act to help protect California immigrant residents from
deportations. It is commonly known as the “Sanctuary State” act.
Immigrant communities around the state led the fight for the
bill, which is considered a "foundation" for additional legislation.
The bill was amended to include criticisms and restrictions insisted upon by
Governor Brown. This sanctuary state act
contributes to building community and state-level resistance to the White House
attacks against the growing "sanctuary" movement among communities,
institutions and local and state governments in California.
As signed, the bill does away with several local deportation
practices, such as local police arrests for "civil immigrant
warrants", and it helps to ensure that spaces like schools, health
facilities, courthouses and other spaces are safe and accessible to all.
State Senate President Kevin de Leon, the lead author of the
bill said, “With today’s signing of SB 54 into law, one of the most important
parts of that legal wall of protections is now in place. Donald Trump and Jeff
Sessions will not be able to use California’s own law enforcement officials in
an effort to round up and deport our fellow Californians.”
The law will go into effect January 1, 2018. Elements of the
bill are already in place in numerous cities throughout the state.
Last month, Sessions called California’s sanctuary state
bill “unconscionable.” Other federal officials also have
sounded off against SB 54, suggesting illegal immigration is tied to increases
in violent crime.
Throughout his campaign and in his tenure as president, Trump
has tried to make this connection, showcasing the relatives of people killed by
immigrants in the country illegally. One of his earliest executive orders put
cities and counties on alert that they would lose
federal funding if law enforcement did not cooperate with immigration agents.
SB 54 prohibits most ( not all) city and county governments from cooperating
with ICE.
Brown and Democratic lawmakers have passed additional legislation to extend financial aid,
healthcare and driver’s licenses to thousands of unauthorized immigrants. Other
bills signed by Brown on Thursday would prevent some cities and counties from
adding beds to immigrant detention centers, and would extend housing protections
for immigrant workers and tenants.
Many cities, most notably San Francisco, Sacramento, and most recently Los Angeles,
have cut ties with federal immigration officials and sought to build up social
services for families, including city-funded legal aid.
Senate President De León defended the final version of the bill,
saying it still accomplished his initial objective to prevent California
resources and police from being “commandeered” for Trump’s policies.
“California’s local law enforcement cannot be commandeered and
used by the Trump Administration to tear families apart, undermine our safety,
and wreak havoc on our economy,” de Leon said at a news conference in Los
Angeles where he denounced Trump and criticized his policies as “racist and
xenophobic.”
ICE Director Thomas Homan released a statement in response to California's
passage of the CA Values Act (SB 54), Homan states, in part:
"SB54 will negatively impact ICE
operations in California by nearly eliminating all cooperation and
communication with our law enforcement partners in the state, voiding the
delegated authority that the Orange County Sheriff’s Office has under the 287g
program, and prohibiting local law enforcement from contracting with the
federal government to house detainees.
ICE will have no choice
but to conduct at-large arrests in local neighborhoods and at worksites, which
will inevitably result in additional collateral arrests, instead of focusing on
arrests at jails and prisons where transfers are safer for ICE officers and the
community. ICE will
also likely have to detain individuals arrested in California in detention
facilities outside of the state, far from any family they may have in
California."
The Los Angeles DSA Sanctuary Working Group and other California
DSA chapters including the Sacramento, and East Bay chapters worked with the
DSA Immigrants’ Rights Committee activists and a wide variety of pro immigrant
groups to support passage of SB 4 consistent with DSA policy adopted at the recent
convention. Sanctuary city battles are active in several places around the
country. Legislation in opposition to
sanctuary status has been advanced in Texas with SB 4, and adopted as law in
several southern and Republican led states. Support materials and organizing ideas for DSA
members working on sanctuary campaigns are available from the Immigrants’
Rights Committee.
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