| On Wednesday night, people filled the Newport Council Chambers and spilled out into the hallway where monitors had been placed. Three rooms at the nearby recreation center were also crowded. And for more than two hours, people came to the microphone to passionately share their concerns and outrage that the quiet removal of the helicopter puts lives at risk, and that an ICE detention center is not welcome here. We heard from fishermen worried about safety, businesspeople troubled about the effect on our hospitality industry, and most poignantly, from fearful immigrants and a young woman whose father had been arrested.
In my own remarks, I said that the removal of the helicopter is a threat to lives and safety, and that a possible detention center is “inconsistent with local values, incompatible with our local economy, contrary to our stated city goals, and likely in conflict with local zoning – not to mention that the airport is just a few feet above the tsunami inundation line”.
“If, in fact, the helicopter is gone and an ICE complex is planned, it means that somewhere, someone is more interested in detaining lives than in saving lives.” I renewed my demand that the federal government share its plans so that Newport can decide its own future.
While no one appeared to support ICE activities, I am well aware that there are a variety of opinions about immigration and ICE across our district. Rumors have the potential to divide us, which is why I’m continuing to press for transparency, openness, and honesty from our federal agencies. Good government demands nothing less.
I will believe this matter to be concluded when our helicopter returns to Newport and we get a definitive response indicating that the federal government has no plans here.
I am calling on the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the Trump Administration to explain themselves to our community. If you want to turn Newport into the West Coast epicenter of your immigration plans by December 1, then at the very least, you need to explain your plan and communicate with the people who you were sworn to serve. This isn’t how good or honest government operates.
You can listen to the meeting, my remarks, and the response of the Council here on KYAQ. You can also watch the hearing here. You can watch Abril at 47:30 and my appearance at the 1:13:00 mark. |