
Boston City Councilors defend pro-immigrant Trust Act as President Trump threatens funding cuts
Immigration and Customs Enforcement crackdowns.
'They're not accessing healthcare. They're not sending their children to school. They're not going to work,' Mejia said.
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The hearing came as President Donald Trump's administration has
Trump's border czar Tom Homan promised to
Following Wu's testimony, Republicans on the House Oversight Committee released a
Council President Ruthzee Louijeune said the Trust Act benefits public safety by increasing trust between Boston police and immigrant communities.
'It doesn't prohibit the federal government from doing their job,' she said. 'It just focuses on what our job is.'
And Councilor Ed Flynn described Boston as a 'city of immigrants,' while expressing hope that city police could maintain a good relationship with federal authorities to investigate major crimes.
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'We don't want to harm neighbors who have been here for generations as part of our community,' Flynn said. 'At the same time, it is also important that we ensure the safety of our city and our residents when it comes to serious and violent crimes
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Amy Grunder, director of state government affairs with the Boston-based Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy Coalition, credited the Trust Act with improving relations between immigrants and city government.
'It has done so much to build the confidence of Boston's immigrant communities in all of Boston's public institutions, not just law enforcement,' Grunder said.
Trump administration officials have called on cities such as Boston to do more to assist their efforts for mass deportations, under the threat of federal funding cuts and even criminal and civil charges for public officials who interfere with those efforts. On his first day as president, Trump
In 2017, the Massachusetts' Supreme Judicial Court issued a ruling that barred all local law enforcement from holding people based solely on civil detainer requests, which are communications from ICE asking a police department, court, or sheriff's office to continue to hold someone who they would otherwise release.
Boston's Trust Act directly bars Boston Police from working on federal immigration enforcement, though police can work with ICE if criminal acts are involved. It also extends beyond the SJC ruling, prohibiting police from asking people about their immigration status or sharing an arrestee's release time with civil immigration authorities.
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The City Council initially passed the Trust Act ordinance in 2014, strengthened the law in 2019 and reaffirmed it in a vote in December.
But Trump did have some success blocking law enforcement and public safety grants — funding areas which could significantly affect Boston's violence reduction efforts.
While federal grants are a small percentage of the Boston Police Department's $474 million budget, those funds pay for programs that Cox describes as vital: DNA testing to solve cold murder and rape cases, anti-gang and anti-terrorism intelligence and hardening against nuclear threats, among others.
Last year, the Department of Homeland Security awarded nearly $12 million in Urban Area Security Initiative funds to promote security in Greater Boston, according to the state Office of Grants and Research. About $1 million of that money went to the Boston Police Department and another $1.9 million went to the Boston Regional Intelligence Center, which supports local anti-gang and counterterrorism operations.
Dan Glaun can be reached at
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