Hundreds Demand Protections for Immigrant Communities
Hundreds of students, educators, advocates and clergy testified for 11 hours before the Judiciary Committee of the State Legislature in support of bills to establish protective areas including places of worship, medical facilities, schools and playgrounds, where law enforcement including ICE would be barred from carrying out arrests without a judicial warrant signed by a judge.
Examples of ICE terrorizing communities in Minnesota and other states were cited as the reason state protections are needed, in case such federal actions were unleashed in Connecticut.
The measures would enhance the existing Connecticut Trust Act and establish policy at the state level that was erased at the national level under the Trump Department of Homeland Security.
Many young people described how hard it is to live in constant fear of being kidnapped without reason. Teachers told of students afraid to come to school not knowing if they or their parents would be taken away. Experiences of missing important medical appointments were shared.
Along with Connecticut Students for a Dream (C4D) and Husky 4 Immigrants, the entire Connecticut for All coalition organized testimonies including SEIU, AFT, Make the Road and ACLU.
Judiciary Committee chair Sen. Gary Winfield conducted the hearing, inviting questions from his colleagues after each speaker. Republican lawmakers challenged the testimonies claiming these policies would protect criminals. Speakers emphasized that the bill is necessary to protect the constitutional rights of all residents in the current national climate.
Recalling her family's experience of being hounded and discriminated against during the 1950s McCarthyite repression, Joelle Fishman, representing the CT Communist Party USA, recounted working in the civil rights movement to end lynchings and terror against African American people. Asking “Are we going to defend and expand civil rights for all? Or are we going to go down the path of repression and fascism with all the harmful lived consequences for our communities, state and nation?” she called upon the Judiciary Committee to pass the bills and play its role.
Accountability language was urged so anyone wrongfully detained in protected locations could challenge that detention and seek relief.
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