After five years, the Kessler Boulevard church is retiring a local overnight shelter opened when temperatures dip below 35 degrees. Who will pick up operations and will a $1.6 million
Private prison ban could limit ICE detention in the Pacific Northwest By Lilly Fowler, Crosscut
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2 Photos Detainees walk past a map of the world in a hallway of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement ICE detention facility Sept. 10, 2019 in Tacoma. The recent canceling of ICE contracts in Cowlitz County and at NORCOR in Oregon, along with a Washington state consideration of banning private prisons in the state, may severely hamper or even halt ICE detention and enforcement in the Pacific Northwest. (Ted S. Warren/Associated Press) Photo Gallery
After years of pressure from activists, the detention of adults and teens by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement could be severely curtailed in the Pacific Northwest, thanks to action in the courts and in the Washington Legislature.
BY LILLY FOWLER / CROSSCUT
Originally published March 2, 2021, on Crosscut.com
After years of pressure from activists, the detention of adults and teens by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement could be severely curtailed in the Pacific Northwest, thanks to action in the courts and in the Washington Legislature.
Last week, the Washington state House passed a bill aimed at banning private for-profit prison companies that contract with local, state and such federal agencies as Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, from operating in Washington state. The proposed legislation, now heading to the Senate, seems to have support and could soon become law.