
Demonstrators gather outside Gov. Maura Healey’s Arlington home. A crowd of more than 40 protesters demonstrated in front of Gov. Maura Healey’s Arlington home Monday morning at 5 a.m., calling on her to end a Massachusetts Department of Correction (DOC) cooperation agreement with ICE.
“Governor Healey, while you sleep in your bed our families are being torn apart,” one demonstrator chanted. “Governor Healey, stop the kidnappings in our community.”
The demonstrators wore masks and did not identify themselves. According to one, who spoke on condition of anonymity, several of those present were undocumented immigrants. Their target was a so-called 287(g) agreement between ICE and the DOC that allows state prisons to be used to detain immigrants on behalf of the federal government.
Just one prison in Massachusetts — the Plymouth County Correctional Facility — has entered into such an agreement with ICE. But activists who oppose the state’s participation in Section 287(g) of the Immigration and Nationality Act say the presence of an ICE detention facility in Massachusetts endangers immigrants here.
Cindy Rowe, executive director of the Jewish Alliance for Law and Social Action (JALSA), cites a study by the nonprofit Detention Watch Network that found a high correlation between detention facilities and ICE apprehensions of immigrants.
“Where there are beds available, that’s where ICE will go,” Rowe said. “JALSA believes
that every individual deserves to be treated with dignity and respect.
Right now, our federal government is not treating immigrants with the
dignity they deserve.”
State
Sen. Adam Gomez, whose district includes most of Springfield and part
of Chicopee, is sponsoring Senate Bill S.997, called Dignity not
Deportation, which would bar all prisons and law enforcement in
Massachusetts from entering into such agreements with ICE.
“We know ICE has been terrorizing communities
with total disregard for law enforcement,” he said. “Local communities
are left to deal with the consequences.”
The
increased ICE raids that have come in the first six months of President
Trump’s second term in office has added a sense of urgency to the
bill’s backers. Organizations including JALSA, ACLU Massachusetts and
the Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Coalition are pushing for the
bill to pass.
The
activists who demonstrated in front of Healey’s home Monday morning
said the governor could have a significant impact by barring the DOC
from participating in 287(g) agreements.
“Governor
Healey, use your power. End the agreement 287(g),” the demonstrators
chanted, before they marched back toward Cambridge, two Arlington Police
cruisers following.
Whether
Healey will end the 287(g) agreements is an open question. Responding
to criticism from Republican challenger Brian Shortsleeve that she’s
supporting “sanctuary policies,” Healey stressed her cooperation with
federal authorities, speaking July 6 on the WBZ News show “Keller at
Large.”
“Massachusetts
is not a sanctuary city,” she said. “Just for information to folks. I
continue to work with state, local and federal law enforcement when it
comes to getting bad guys off the streets. Always done that, always
will.”
Healey’s interview sparked worry among immigrant advocates.
“It’s
become increasingly clear that she’s more worried about Republicans
attacking her than she is about this rogue agency that’s engaged in
political theater,” said Chelsea City Councilor Roberto Jiménez-Rivera.
“Either she’s oblivious to what’s actually happening, or her values
don’t align with the majority of the people in the state. I hope it’s
the former.”
This story originally appeared on flipsidenews.net.