The policy outlines a protocol for county employees who are interacting with ICE or other federal immigration officers, requiring them to ask for their information and business cards, as well as any relevant documents, including warrants, subpoenas or court orders. Employees should then contact their supervisor and give them all relevant paperwork. Supervisors are instructed to contact their department’s solicitor and share information provided by the federal immigration agents as well as all relevant paperwork.
County employees should request information related to any individual’s immigration status only if it is explicitly required by law or necessary for eligibility for a particular program, such as voter registration or state or federal public benefits, according to the policy.
“We’re … making sure that we show members of our immigrant community that we’re here to support them, and at the same time, inform both members of our staff and the community that there are laws in place that will be enforced and we are going to support due process, but the law is what the law is, and unless we change it federally, that’s the position we’re in today,” Makhija said.
In May, Makhija and Winder committed to not collaborating with ICE via 287(g) agreements.
The county also hired Nelly Jiménez-Arévalo as its first ever director of immigrant affairs in February and created an online immigrant resource center in May.
Several speakers at Wednesday’s meeting acknowledged the commissioners’ actions to support the county’s roughly 100,000 immigrant residents, while some continued to ask commissioners to pass a welcoming ordinance and implement other policies, including a municipal ID program, that would be beneficial to immigrant communities.