Hey, I think people are overreacting.
Besides, I'm thinking of getting into the tent rental business. I hear the City is a good customer.
Our sanctuary city's future
By Monica Eng, Justin Kaufmann and Carrie Shepherd.
Axios news
Nov 7, 2023
City Council is expected today to resume a heated debate about putting Chicago's sanctuary city status up for a referendum vote next year.
Why it matters: Several alders are calling for the status to be reconsidered in response to the more than 20,000 migrants who've recently arrived in Chicago, but others say sanctuary protections are largely irrelevant to the current crisis.
Context: Chicago has been considered a sanctuary city since 1985, when then-Mayor Harold Washington issued an order prohibiting local officials from withholding city services, investigating or prosecuting people solely based on their immigration status.
Driving the news: The debate has divided the council, culminating in Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa's resignation from his role as floor leader yesterday after acknowledging that he had acted disrespectfully toward a fellow alder over the issue last week.
What they're saying: "When … Harold Washington did this, times were different. We didn't have people coming into this city by the thousands," Ald. Anthony Beale said at last week's contentious council meeting.
He says the proposed referendum is "a non-binding question" to ask taxpayers funding millions a month for migrant services "if they want to continue down this road."
The other side: "The people who are attacking the sanctuary city ordinance don't know what they're talking about," Ramirez-Rosa told ABC 7 on Thursday. "[The ordinance] has nothing to do with refugee resettlement and has nothing to do with the current crisis."
Reality check: Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights spokesperson Brandon Lee points out that sanctuary rules apply to undocumented residents, while most new arrivals are asylum seekers and those with Temporary Protected Status — statuses that carry federal protections.
Plus: Even if the referendum made it to the ballot, was approved and somehow became binding (it's not), the state's Trust Act, signed by Gov. Bruce Rauner in 2017, would still prohibit the Chicago Police Department from cooperating with immigration authorities, ICIRR tells Axios.
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