logo
Mayor Lumumba addresses council's hiring freeze, says recent hires were about serving residents

Mayor Lumumba addresses council's hiring freeze, says recent hires were about serving residents

Yahoo04-06-2025
Jackson Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba defended two recent hires made during the final weeks of his second term — decisions that prompted the Jackson City Council to pass an ordinance implementing a hiring freeze on most city positions through the end of June.
Lumumba recently appointed Tariq Abdul-Tawwab as deputy director of the Public Works Department and former Hinds County Supervisor David Archie as a staff assistant in the mayor's office.
Abdul-Tawwab previously served as 'chief experience officer' at JXN Water in 2023 but left later that year. His wife, Candace Abdul-Tawwab, is a director at the People's Advocacy Institute, a nonprofit founded by the mayor's sister, Rukia Lumumba.
Archie, who ran against Lumumba in the April 1 primary, endorsed the mayor ahead of the April 22 runoff, according to a Facebook post shared by Lumumba on April 18.
Council President and Ward 7 Councilwoman Virgi Lindsay, who introduced the hiring freeze ordinance on May 20, previously confirmed the two appointments influenced her decision to bring the legislation forward.
Speaking after the council's Tuesday meeting, Lumumba initially declined to comment, saying, 'I don't have any thoughts,' when asked about the council's hiring freeze. But he later defended the hires, saying both positions were vacant and essential to city operations.
"Both of those positions were vacant and they both serve the community and our responsibility is to serve the community until the end," Lumumba said. "One vacancy deals directly with constituent complaints every day, so if people are in need of water at senior centers, if people need somebody to come check out their pothole — I would imagine that the residents don't want me to leave them with 60 days of not responding to those issues."
Lumumba also pushed back on criticism that the hires were politically motivated.
"It's not a political thing. It's a responding thing. So both of those positions are about responding to residents needs," Lumumba said.
Before Lumumba addressed the hiring freeze, the council approved an amendment to the original ordinance during its regular meeting to allow for additional hires.
The original ordinance, obtained by the Clarion Ledger, freezes all vacant positions — and those expected to become vacant — within the executive branch, except for roles specifically assigned to the Jackson Police Department and Jackson Fire Department.
Lindsay introduced the amendment to allow JPD to hire critical positions, such as 911 dispatchers. It also permits the hiring of seasonal workers in the Department of Parks and Recreation, including an educational specialist and three zookeepers at the Jackson Zoo, two lifeguards and park maintenance staff.
The amendment further allows the city to hire CDL drivers for the Division of Solid Waste and two employees in the Department of Finance and Administration, positions Chief Financial Officer Fidelis Malembeka said he is prepared to fill.
The council passed the amended ordinance in a 6-0 vote. Ward 3 Councilman Kenneth Stokes was not in attendance when the vote was called.
The hiring freeze remains until June 30.
This article originally appeared on Mississippi Clarion Ledger: Jackson MS mayor Lumumba defends hires as council tweaks city hiring freeze
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Fact Check: 'Alligator Alcatraz' is real. Here's what to know about the Florida detention center
Fact Check: 'Alligator Alcatraz' is real. Here's what to know about the Florida detention center

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Fact Check: 'Alligator Alcatraz' is real. Here's what to know about the Florida detention center

Claim: A migrant detention center known as "Alligator Alcatraz" was expected to open in Florida in 2025. Rating: Amid an immigration crackdown led by U.S. President Donald Trump's administration, posts that made the rounds online in late June 2025 claimed a migrant detention center known as "Alligator Alcatraz" would soon open in Florida. For example, one X user shared the following post: Similar claims circulated on Facebook. An account called "Donald Trump for President" shared this message on June 29, 2025: HUGE: Alligator Alcatraz is set to open in 2 DAYS Thousands of illegal aliens will be housed in the middle of the Florida Everglades surrounded by gators and pythons - and because it's at an airport, they can be deported EASILY! Construction is moving swiftly. Snopes readers also emailed us and searched our website to ask whether "Alligator Alcatraz" was real. A new temporary detention center known as "Alligator Alcatraz" officially opened in Florida on July 1, 2025, according to federal officials and Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier. Therefore, we've rated this claim true. As Snopes previously reported, Uthmeier proposed the detention center for migrants known as "Alligator Alcatraz." He posted a video detailing plans for such a facility on his verified X and Facebook accounts on June 19, 2025, and previously discussed the proposal during a segment with "Fox Business." At the time, Uthmeier described "Alligator Alcatraz" as a "one-stop shop to carry out President Trump's mass deportation agenda." In his video shared on social media, he said, in part: Florida has been leading on immigration enforcement, supporting the Trump administration and ICE's efforts to detain and deport criminal aliens. The governor tasked state leaders to identify places for new temporary detention facilities. I think this is the best one, as I call it, Alligator Alcatraz. This 30-square-mile area is completely surrounded by the Everglades [and] present a efficient, low cost opportunity to build a temporary detention facility because you don't need to invest that much in the perimeter. People get out, there's not much waiting for them other than alligators and pythons. Nowhere to go, nowhere to hide. The federal government confirmed several days later that it was partnering with Florida on "Alligator Alcatraz." In an X post shared on June 23, 2025, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) wrote: We are working on cost-effective and innovative ways to deliver on the American people's mandate for mass deportations. Alligator Alcatraz will expand facilities and bed space in just days, thanks to our partnership with Florida. In the days leading up to the opening of "Alligator Alcatraz," the Florida GOP also advertised official merchandise available to purchase online. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt announced that Trump and DHS Secretary Kristi Noem would travel to Florida on July 1, 2025, for the opening of a new migrant detention center at Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport. The facility located "in the heart of the Everglades" would be "informally known as Alligator Alcatraz," Leavitt said. Uthmeier also announced the opening of "Alligator Alcatraz" in a post on July 1, 2025. The "state-operated facility" located in Ochopee, Florida, is "expected to have up to 3,000 beds," U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) said in an X post. Florida is planning to hold another 2,000 people in a separate detention center at a National Guard facility called Camp Blanding, state Gov. Ron DeSantis said during the visit to "Alligator Alcatraz." Construction on that facility is expected to start "right after" Independence Day, according to Florida Division of Emergency Management Executive Director Kevin Guthrie. During the visit, Noem encouraged other states to explore similar options. She said, in part: Florida was unique in what they presented to us and I would ask every other governor to do the exact same thing. This is unique because we can hold individuals here. They can have their hearings to get due process and immediately be flown back to their home countries. Prior to the opening of "Alligator Alcatraz," Noem also told CBS News that the detention facilities in Florida would be funded "in large part" by the Federal Emergency Management Agency's Shelter and Services Program, an initiative created by Congress that "provides financial support to non-federal entities" to offer shelter and related services to migrants released from DHS custody. The "Alligator Alcatraz" detention center is expected to cost $450 million a year, a U.S. official told The Associated Press. Snopes archives' contributed to this report. X (Formerly Twitter), 19 June 2025, Accessed 20 June 2025. 19 June 2025, Accessed 20 June 2025. Fox Business. "Florida Officials Want to Turn a Piece of the Everglades into the State's Largest Immigration Facility." Fox Business, 17 June 2025, Accessed 20 June 2025. X (formerly Twitter), 23 June 2025, Accessed 1 July 2025. "Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt Briefs Members of the Media, June 30, 2025." The White House, 30 June 2025, Accessed 1 July 2025. Payne, Kate. "Trump toured Florida's immigration detention center in the Everglades. Here's what to know." 1 July 2025, Accessed 1 July 2025. LiveNOW from FOX. "President Trump on Migrant Detention Center, 'Alligator Alcatraz.'" YouTube, 1 July 2025, Accessed 1 July 2025. "President Trump Participates in 'Alligator Alcatraz' Roundtable Discussion | LiveNOW from FOX." YouTube, 1 July 2025, Accessed 1 July 2025. Camilo Montoya-Galvez. "Florida to Receive Federal Funds to Build Immigration Detention Sites, Including 'Alligator Alcatraz,' Noem Says." CBS News, 23 June 2025, Accessed 1 July 2025.

Local officials grow wary of helping ICE detain immigrants
Local officials grow wary of helping ICE detain immigrants

Axios

timea day ago

  • Axios

Local officials grow wary of helping ICE detain immigrants

A growing number of local law enforcement officials are alarmed about their jails and prisons holding immigration detainees without warrants, saying it exposes their departments to legal risks. Why it matters: It's the latest sign of tension between local authorities and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents, whose strong-arm tactics in arresting immigrants have shocked communities across the nation. Zoom in: As part of President Trump 's push to deport "millions" of unauthorized immigrants, ICE has leaned on local agencies to help arrest and temporarily detain unauthorized immigrants. Over the past decade most of ICE's arrests involved people who already were in law enforcement custody, according to a review of 10 years of data from Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC). But with ICE arrests soaring to more than 2,000 a day under Trump, local jail and prison officials are increasingly concerned about being liable for detainees' care — particularly when ICE leaves them in local facilities for lengthy periods. The officials note that in the past, lawsuits filed on behalf of ICE detainees wrongly left languishing in local jails have cost local governments enormously — $92.5 million in one New York City case involving 20,000 people who were held in prison for ICE without due process between 1997 and 2012. How it works: ICE can ask a local agency to hold someone they believe isn't legally in the U.S., using a request called a detainer. Usually there's a 48-hour limit on this request. A detainer request from ICE isn't the same as a warrant issued by a judge, which local agencies require to hold their suspects. "The ICE administrative warrant is not enough to hold somebody's liberty away," Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison (D) told Axios. "It's essentially holding somebody and locking them up when there's no legal, lawful authority to do so." "The risk to the institution that's holding them is civil liability," he added. "They could end up paying a lot of money — and not just money, but injunctive relief." The National Sheriffs' Association has asked the Trump administration to clarify how long someone should be held on ICE's behalf, and has raised the issue with Border Czar Tom Homan. The group also has been lobbying Congress to pass a law addressing the issue for sheriffs, who often manage jails. Between the lines: A few law enforcement officials have spoken publicly about their concerns for ICE detainees' civil liberties under Trump's deportation push — and have faced a backlash from GOP officials for doing so. In February, Sheriff Dan Marx of Winneshiek County, Iowa, aired his concerns about cooperating with ICE detainers in a since-deleted Facebook post. "The only reason detainers are issued is because the federal agency does not have enough information or has not taken the time to obtain a valid judicial warrant," Marx wrote. "These detainers are violations of our 4th Amendment protection against warrantless search, seizure and arrest, and our 6th Amendment right to due process." Marx's post led Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds — a Republican who has ordered the state's local law enforcement to "fully cooperate" with Trump's deportation mission — to file a formal complaint against the sheriff. Marx was investigated by Iowa's attorney general over whether he violated a state law mandating such cooperation. He deleted his first post and issued another statement that said in part: "I do not believe law enforcement officials should have to choose between upholding their sworn duty to the Constitution and following the state statute." He declined to be interviewed because of the investigation. "From a constitutional standpoint, if we're going to hold somebody in jail or detain them, we want to be doing so lawfully and have legal grounds to do so. And I think for a sheriff to ask for a judicial warrant is reasonable," Michael Tupper, a former police chief in Marshalltown, Iowa, told Axios. In a New Orleans court, the Orleans Parish Sheriff's Office is being sued by Louisiana's attorney general for not honoring ICE detainers. Orleans Parish has a policy of honoring ICE detainers only when a detainee has a warrant for a violent offense. The policy stems from has a legal settlement from 2010, when two men in the Orleans jail were held without due process for two months longer than their sentences, waiting for ICE. Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill (R) argues it amounts to a sanctuary policy, in violation of state law. The case is ongoing. Several other jurisdictions nationwide have faced similar lawsuits when people have been held on ICE detainers longer than their sentences or after their cases were dismissed. Some, like Orleans Parish, are changing their policies to limit their exposure to such suits. Montgomery and Delaware counties in Pennsylvania, for example, now require judicial warrants in addition to an ICE detainers to hold immigration detainees. What they're saying: " When a sheriff or a police chief stands up and voices concerns, they are oftentimes painted as soft on crime, or, you know, they don't care about keeping their community safe," Tupper said. "It's really the opposite. These folks are trying to do the right thing for the community."

Breaking down claim bodies of Trump admin deportees washed up in Spain
Breaking down claim bodies of Trump admin deportees washed up in Spain

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

Breaking down claim bodies of Trump admin deportees washed up in Spain

In late June 2025, a claim (archived) circulated online that bodies with their hands and feet tied together that washed up on the coasts of Spain's Balearic Islands were people whom the Trump administration deported from the U.S. @karressmarie4444 #greenscreen #relatable #xyzbca #viral #fyp #politics #political #supremecourt #scotus ♬ original sound - Karress Marie One TikTok user said: You don't find that oddly suspicious? That not one American news company or outlet is reporting that bodies are washing up on shores where their hands are shackled and their feet are shackled? Whose hands and feet are being shackled as they're boarding things in the U.S. right now? The claim was especially (archived) popular (archived) on TikTok. There, users presented news articles side-by-side about deportation flights of shackled migrants in January 2025 and bound bodies (archived) washing up in Mallorca in June that year, hinting at connections between the two. The claim also appeared on Facebook (archived), Threads (archived), X (archived) and Reddit (archived). However, we found no evidence that the bodies found in the Balearic Islands were people deported from the U.S. We also found no evidence that U.S. authorities had placed deported people in the Balearics. Spanish authorities had not yet identified the deceased at the time of this writing. But we did not find evidence of U.S. Customs and Immigration Enforcement (ICE) deportation flights to Spain, though the Trump administration did carry out flights to several African nations. People migrating from Africa often attempt to cross into Europe via the Mediterranean Sea, ending up on islands like the Balearics. White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson dismissed the claim in its entirety, writing via email, "This claim is so stupid and obviously false it hardly dignifies a response." We reached out to ICE to ask for its comments on the claim and whether it had carried out any deportation flights to Europe since January 2025. We also reached out to the Spanish Civil Guard and the Balearic Government Delegation, which governs the Balearic Islands including Mallorca, to ask if they had identified any of the deceased from the Spanish reports as people deported from the U.S. or found evidence to support this claim. We await replies to our queries. The claim appeared to be based on an alleged connection between images (archived) posted by White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt of a deportation flight in January 2025 and news articles about bodies with bound hands and feet washing up on beaches in the Balearic Islands in June. Leavitt's images showed people with shackled hands and feet being led onto a C-17 Globemaster cargo plane. Leavitt wrote, "President Trump is sending a strong and clear message to the entire world: if you illegally enter the United States of America, you will face severe consequences." Reuters reported at the time that the flight was bound for Guatemala, citing an unnamed administration official. According to reports, shackling people on deportation flights is common ICE practice. We asked ICE to confirm this and await a reply. Then, in June 2025, reports circulated about several bodies that washed up on the shores of the Balearic holiday islands of Ibiza and Formentera with their hands and feet tied together. The Spanish Civil Guard opened an investigation into the deaths, suspected to be murders, at the time of this writing. According to local reports, officials recovered the first bound body on May 18, 2025. According to Diario de Mallorca, a local newspaper, at least five bound bodies washed up on Balearic Island beaches by the end of June. Other reports did not provide a total. Police suspected the deaths were connected to people smuggling and migrants attempting to cross into Europe from northern Africa. On June 30, authorities in Ibiza said police believed the deceased were "on a boat that arrived in Alicante," according to local reports. Reports did not indicate that officials suspected the deceased were migrants deported from the U.S. Identification work was ongoing. Migrant boat crossings from northern Africa to the Balearic Islands are a common occurrence, as are deaths on this route. According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, more than 2,700 migrants arrived by sea to the Balearic Islands between January 2025 and June 22. Spanish authorities often step in to rescue migrants in distress at sea. ICE does not publicly publish full lists of deportation flights and destinations. Therefore, it was not possible to confirm from its own data whether it carried out deportation flights to Spain or the Balearic Islands that could have resulted in deported people washing up there. According to Tom Cartwright, a human rights advocate who tracks ICE deportation flights, ICE carried out 3,889 deportation flights between January and the end of May 2025. Though none of these flights appeared to be to Spain, Cartwright's list did include African countries like Mauritania, Senegal, Liberia, Nigeria, Kenya and Angola. It was possible that people deported to these destinations might attempt to migrate to Europe via the Mediterranean Sea. However, without identification of the bodies washed up in the Balearic Islands it was impossible to say whether that was the case. Snopes did not independently confirm Cartwright's data, though news organizations and advocacy groups have acknowledged his database as the most complete that is publicly available. In sum, at the time of this writing, it was not possible to confirm whether the bodies that washed ashore in the Balearic Islands were people deported from the U.S. We found no evidence that ICE was carrying out deportation flights to Spain or the Balearic Islands. It was possible that migrants deported to African nations could have since attempted to cross into Europe via the Mediterranean Sea but we found no evidence of this. Ali, Idrees, et al. "US Military Aircraft Deport Migrants as Pentagon Readies More Troops for Border." Reuters, 24 Jan. 2025. Bohórquez, Lucía. "La Guardia Civil investiga la aparición de cadáveres atados de pies y manos en aguas de Baleares." El País, 23 Jun. 2025, Cartwright, Thomas H. May 2025 and Last 12 Months. 3 Jun. 2025, "El hallazgo de cadáveres maniatados en Baleares se vincula a una patera llegada a Alicante." La Razón, 30 Jun. 2025, Europa Press. "Ascienden a 189 los migrantes llegados en patera en las últimas 24 horas a las costas de Balears." 30 Jun. 2025, Flightradar24. "Flight History for Aircraft - 06-6163." Flightradar24, Accessed 1 Jul. 2025. "Holiday Horror as Five Bodies with Shackled Hands and Feet Wash up on Beach at Tourist Hotspot." LBC, Accessed 1 Jul. 2025. McDonald-Gibson, Charlotte. "Migrants Put in Shackles for Trump Deportation Flights." The Times, 24 Jan. 2025, Miroff, Nick. "The Retired J.P. Morgan Executive Tracking Trump's Deportation Flights." The Atlantic, 28 Mar. 2025, Redacción Digital. "La Patera En La Que Viajaban Los Migrantes Atados de Pies y Manos Llegó a Alicante." Diario de Mallorca, 30 Jun. 2025, Santesteban, Nuria. "Investigan la aparición de cadáveres de migrantes atados de pies y manos en el mar balear - EFE." EFE Noticias, 24 Jun. 2025, Situation Europe Sea Arrivals. Accessed 1 Jul. 2025. Sun, Albert, and Ashley Wu. "Deportations Haven't Surged Under Trump. But Here's How They've Changed." New York Times, 22 Mar. 2025, Xavier Peris. "Aparecen En El Mar Varios Cadáveres de Migrantes Atados de Pies y Manos." Diario de Mallorca, 23 Jun. 2025,

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store