Immigration

Colorado Democratic leaders say immigrant protections won’t create sanctuary state



Democratic lawmakers are tackling a number of issues to protect undocumented immigrants — including from federal agents — but they say their measures stop short of creating a sanctuary state, a label the Trump administration has used to target uncooperative communities for punishment.

Sen. Julie Gonzales, D-Denver, has introduced Senate Bill 83 to prevent ICE agents from entering courthouses to effect civil arrests. She’s also planning to introduce a bill that would prevent disclosure of information to ICE from state databases, including the Department of Motor Vehicles.

“In each of the policies that we’re putting forward, there are really clear delineations about the role of the state in setting forward the parameters as to how each of the agencies will operate,” Gonzales said.

Colorado has come a long way since Gabriela Flora first moved here 16 years ago. Flora, the Denver Immigrant Rights Program director at the American Friends Service Committee, cited as an example the state legislature’s 2006 passage of a bill — repealed in 2013 — that required police to report anyone they arrested and suspected of being undocumented to Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Now, undocumented immigrants can get driver’s licenses.

“I see these policies as a step forward, where we can actually allow people to fully contribute to our society,” Flora said.

But, she said, there are still gaps in protecting immigrants’ rights and quality of life, particularly as 70% of immigrant families are of mixed residency status.

Some conservatives, on the other hand, say Colorado has gone too far, making it a sanctuary state for undocumented immigrants, especially after the passage of last year’s House Bill 1124. Despite the bill being watered down to satisfy Democratic Gov. Jared Polis, who favors a more moderate approach on immigration reform, the pushback from the Trump administration has been swift.

About $2.7 million in previously approved federal grants was withheld from law enforcement agencies in Colorado, putting smaller rural sheriff’s departments in a bind because of this stance. The state has sued the federal government for the money.

Last month, ICE subpoenaed Denver law enforcement for information on foreign nationals wanted for deportation, but city officials have refused to release the records because the subpoenas weren’t signed by a judge.

And last week, The New York Times reported that the federal government would be sending elite tactical agents from Border Patrol to sanctuary cities, although it’s not clear if Denver is on that list.

Immigrant advocates, including Gonzales, reject the sanctuary label and say their policies do not prevent ICE agents from enforcement. Rather, they prohibit the state from doing the federal agency’s work.



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