WATCH: Pressley, Markey Welcome Rümeysa Öztürk Back to Massachusetts at Her Request Following Her Release from ICE Detention

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley (MA-07)

Lawmakers Joined Öztürk, Her Legal Team, and ACLU of Massachusetts at Logan Airport in Her First Public Appearance Since March Abduction

Pressley, Markey, McGovern Met with Öztürk at Louisiana ICE Facility in April

BOSTON – Today, Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley (MA-07) and Senator Edward J. Markey (D-MA) welcomed Tufts PhD student Rümeysa Öztürk at Logan Airport in Boston at her request following her arrival home from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention in Louisiana. Ms. Öztürk, a Somerville resident and constituent of the Congresswoman’s, was released on bail yesterday by a federal judge from Vermont after being unlawfully detained for over six weeks.

Congresswoman Pressley and Senator Markey joined Ms. Öztürk, her legal team, and the American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts at a press conference. Last month, Rep. Pressley, Sen. Markey, and Rep. James P. McGovern traveled to ICE facilities in Basile and Jena, where Rümeysa Öztürk and Mahmoud Khalil were being unlawfully detained and subjected to inhumane conditions in retaliation for their protected speech.

“Today we’re welcoming with open arms a beloved member of our Massachusetts 7th community, a brilliant scholar, a courageous advocate, and a survivor of a shameful injustice – Rümeysa Öztürk. And we’re sending a message to this hostile White House that their efforts to silence Rümeysa, crush dissent, and undermine our constitutional rights are being rejected,” said Congresswoman Pressley. “While we take stock of this important progress, we know this fight isn’t over. We will not rest until Rümeysa is fully exonerated, her visa is restored, and she is free to continue her studies and her service to our community.”

“Today is a day of joy: We welcome Rümeysa Öztürk back to Massachusetts and back to her community in Somerville,” said Senator Markey. “Rümeysa should have never been abducted off the streets of Somerville. She should have never been taken out of Massachusetts and sent to a detention site in Louisiana more than 1,500 miles away from her community. And she should have never had to suffer intolerable living conditions and multiple and worsening asthma attacks while unlawfully detained for more than six weeks. Rümeysa’s case affects every one of us. We cannot allow this administration to trample individuals’ constitutional rights to free speech and due process. Her homecoming is only the beginning of the fight for justice – not only for Rümeysa, but for every family, for every neighbor, and for everyone who wishes to ensure they can live free.” 

A full transcript of Congresswoman Pressley’s remarks at the press conference today is available below, and full video is available here.

Transcript: Rep. Pressley Welcomes Rümeysa Öztürk Home Following Her Release from ICE Detention

Boston Logan Airport

May 10, 2025

Thank you, Ed. Thank you for your friendship. Thank you for your ongoing partnership on so many issues of consequence. In particular, we’ve been shoulder to shoulder in the work of oversight of our carceral settings, our prisons, our jails, our detention facilities. 

But before I get started, I do just, again, want to reiterate that if you care about mass incarceration, you should care about mass deportation. If you care about mass deportation, you should care about mass incarceration. 

This is not only the grave injustice that Rümeysa, Mahmoud, Mohsen and many more have experienced is not only inhumane and cruel, but incredibly profitable. These are facilities owned by corporations, and the same way that those private prisons benefit from mass incarceration, these private detention centers, facilities benefit from mass deportation and incarceration. So I did just want to name that.

You know, y’all, I don’t know if I can stick to my remarks here, because I’m just overwhelmed. One, Rümeysa is home, and two, the Celtics won. But you know, seriously, just bringing a little levity, because we’re long overdue for some joy. 

The second I saw Rümeysa, I just exclaimed loudly “My sister.” I felt an immediate kinship with her. 

And as we approach Mother’s Day, it is important that – and I think the public outcry and the rallying has been a testament to the fact that we see Rümeysa as our sister, we see Rümeysa as our daughter. 

And that is, in fact, how a community should rally and see one another when a harm is done to anyone, because we are one human family and our destinies are truly tied. 

I was also excited to be able to gift Rümeysa with a polished stone with the word “Hope” engraved that I had been carrying for weeks. 

I had two stones with me when we went to rural Louisiana. And again, I thank Senator Markey for steadfast leadership and partnership, my brother colleague, Jim McGovern, for journeying together to rural Louisiana, and I had a polished stone with the word “Courage” engraved for Mahmoud, and a polished stone with the word “Hope” engraved for Rümeysa. 

But ultimately, having visited Jena and the Basile facilities, I decided not to gift it to them, because I was pretty sure it would be confiscated. So I was so excited to be able to place that in the palm of her hand today, because I just wanted her to not lose hope and to know that we had come to see about her, and we were going to continue to do that until she was free. 

So today we come together to welcome home a beloved member of the Massachusetts 7th community, a brilliant scholar, a courageous advocate, and a survivor of a shameful injustice: Rümeysa Öztürk. 

Today marks a significant step forward and a victory, a victory for Rümeysa, a victory for due process, and a victory for our democracy. 

But it is also a somber day, and I know it is bittersweet for Rümeysa, because Rümeysa should never have been abducted and ripped away from her community in Somerville in the first place. 

She should never have had her visa revoked. She should never have been transported almost 2,000 miles away to an ICE facility in rural Louisiana and subjected to squalid, inhumane conditions. 

She should never have suffered multiple asthma attacks and feared for her life so far away from home. 

Last year, Rümeysa authored an op-ed that centered the dignity and humanity of every person and was critical of her university’s response to the crisis in Gaza. She exercised her fundamental First Amendment right. In citing nothing more than an op-ed, she was met with the full force of Donald Trump’s authoritarian project, silenced, detained and punished. 

Rümeysa, we work each morning — since then, we’ve worked with you on our mind. 

Massachusetts did not forget about you for a minute. Your classmates and your neighbors peacefully gathered in the street, lawyers, elected officials and people of good conscience from every walk of life spoke your name daily.

Carol, Mahsa, Jesse ensured that this was the case. 

I also have the incredible good fortune to spend time with people who’ve been privileged enough to know Rümeysa, some for five years, some for seven years, some for 10 years. And I was remarking that I’m jealous they’ve known her that long, because true enough, she is courageous and a bright light, and all of it is contagious. 

But we refused to be silent, sounding the alarm on this injustice and elevating your story time and again, Rümeysa. 

And yesterday, the federal court ordered Rümeysa released on bail. 

When we traveled to Louisiana last month to meet with Rümeysa, what we saw was unconscionable. Rümeysa was being denied proper medical care, left to suffer through intense and worsening asthma attacks without prescribed medications, forced to endure inadequate meals and religious accommodations, denied even basic necessities and subjected to inhumane living conditions. 

Rümeysa, I shared upon our arrival, when Senator Markey and Congressman McGovern and I landed here at Logan, upon leaving here, I went right to Somerville for what had been a long scheduled town hall, and I shared with our Somerville community and the public what you told me of the constant fear, the trauma of being torn away from the community you love, the community that you have given so much to.

But Rümeysa’s spirit was unwavering, and her light shone through for all of us to see. 

When you sat down with us Rümeysa, you spoke first of the women detained alongside you. You carried with you in your heart and in neatly copious written notes, like the qualified researcher that you are, their stories, their fears, their urgent medical conditions, their worry that they had been abandoned. 

I was haunted by those words where Rümeysa said, “the women here have cried aloud. Has God forgotten about us? Has the world forgotten about us?”

Rümeysa’s experience was not just an act of cruelty. Was a deliberate, coordinated attempt to intimidate, to instill fear, and to send a chilling message to anyone who dares to speak out against injustice. 

I’ve said it before, Donald Trump is a dictator. A dictator seeks to silence dissenting voices. He wants a citizenry that is ignorant and uninformed, a citizenry that is indifferent to the suffering of a neighbor, a citizenry that is inactive. 

Today, we’re sending a message of our own to this White House: your efforts to silence Rümeysa, to crush dissent, to undermine our fundamental rights are being rejected.

Rümeysa, my sister, our sister, we welcome you home with open arms. 

We never forgot about you. You are loved, you are seen, and we will not rest until you are fully exonerated, your visa is restored, and you are free to continue your studies and your service to our community. 

But let us also be clear, this fight is not over. Rümeysa is released on bail, but her deportation proceedings continue. 

So while we take stock of this important victory, made possible because of the dedicated people behind me and thousands more, because of public outcry, we are clear-eyed about the work that remains.

To everyone who has stood with Rümeysa, who was spoken out, who has joined in this fight — in Congress, in the courts and in community — thank you. 

We would not be here today if it weren’t for you. Our work is not done, but we are stronger together. 

Throughout my time in public life, I’ve had the privilege and emotional honor throughout these years to say these two words to many people upon their return from prisons, jails and detention facilities: welcome home.

This week, Congresswoman Pressley, along with Senator Markey, Ranking Member Bennie Thompson, Congressman Jim McGovern, and Congressman Troy Carter sent a letter to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) seeking more information on the detention conditions of immigrants held at the Central Louisiana ICE Processing Center (CLIPC) and the South Louisiana ICE Processing Center (SLIPC) after an oversight trip to the facilities last month.

On May 7, 2025, Pressley, Markey, and McGovern applauded the Second Circuit for ordering Rümeysa’s transfer from ICE custody in Louisiana to Vermont and rejecting the Trump administration’s attempt to delay complying with a lower court order to do so.

In a powerful New York Times op-ed, Pressley, Markey, and McGovern discussed their meeting with Ms. Öztürk in detention and warned the American people of the dangers posed by the Trump administration’s unlawful attacks on our constitutional rights to freedom of speech and due process. Full text of the op-ed is available here.

Rep. Pressley, along with Sens. Warren and Markey, have pushed for answers and action since Öztürk’s March arrest. In March, they led over 30 lawmakers in writing to Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, and Acting Director for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Todd Lyons, demanding information about Öztürk’s arrest and detention as well as similar incidents across the country.

In April, the lawmakers sounded the alarm on Öztürk’s medical neglect in DHS custody and renewed urgent calls for her release. Last week, Pressley, Warren and Markey demanded Secretary of State Rubio released any documents related to her arrest after a recent report indicated that an internal State Department memo concluded that the key premise underlying Tufts graduate student Rümeysa Öztürk’s arrest and detention was false. Last month, Congresswoman Pressley issued a statement condemning reports that ICE arrested and detained Rümeysa Öztürk, an international student with legal status in a graduate program at Tufts University. Earlier in the week, Rep. Pressley issued a statement following reports of ICE activity in Boston and other municipalities in Massachusetts.

ICYMI: Stefanik Joined Fox News’ Mark Levin on Antisemitism in Higher Education, Pro-Terrorist Rioters at Columbia University

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Elise Stefanik (21st District of New York)

ICYMI: Stefanik Joined Fox News’ Mark Levin on Antisemitism in Higher Education, Pro-Terrorist Rioters at Columbia University | Press Releases | Congresswoman Elise Stefanik

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Rep. Jimmy Gomez Statement on Newark Mayor Arrest by ICE Agents

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Jimmy Gomez (CA-34)

Rep. Jimmy Gomez Statement on Newark Mayor Arrest by ICE Agents

Washington, May 9, 2025

WASHINGTON, DC — Representative Jimmy Gomez (CA-34) issued the following statement after reports that Newark Mayor Ras Baraka was arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents earlier today:

“I’m outraged by the arrest of a sitting mayor simply for trying to do their job. Oversight is not a crime—it’s a cornerstone of democracy. If this can happen to a mayor and members of Congress, what happens to ordinary people who speak out? To all who are watching this injustice I say, we must not be intimidated. We will fight in the courts, in Congress, and march in the streets until justice and transparency are restored.”

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At Port of LA, Rep. Jimmy Gomez Highlights Real-World Pain of Trump Tariffs

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Jimmy Gomez (CA-34)

You can watch Rep. Jimmy Gomez’s reel visiting the Port of LA here.

LOS ANGELES, CA – Representative Jimmy Gomez (CA-34) visited the Port of Los Angeles to hear directly from port staff and highlight the real-world consequences of President Trump’s tariffs on imported goods — including a projected 35% drop in cargo volume next week. Reps. Gomez is fighting to pass legislation to shut down Trump’s global tariffs, prevent him from punishing allies, and put Congress back in charge of trade.

“I saw the impact of Trump’s tariffs up close today at the Port of LA — and it’s devastating,” said Rep. Jimmy Gomez (CA-34). “Cargo is down, jobs are being cut, store shelves are starting to empty, and small businesses are struggling to keep up. The truth is, Trump hasn’t delivered any real trade wins—just photo ops. His tariffs are self-inflicted wounds on our economy.”

As the busiest container port in the U.S., the Port of LA is a critical economic engine that supports nearly a million jobs across the greater LA area. With 145% tariffs now in effect, port officials are already seeing cancelled sailings, slower cargo movement, and reduced hours for workers — jeopardizing jobs, raising consumer prices, and hurting small businesses and even California farmers who depend on U.S. exports.

Rep. Jimmy Gomez — a member of the House Ways and Means Committee, which oversees trade — has been holding the administration accountable in committee and led the Congressional Dads Caucus in calling out the harm to working families.

Rep. Neguse Slams Natural Resource Republicans’ Late-Night Move to Add Public Land Sales to Reconciliation Bill: “I don’t think that’s the way to do business in the House.”

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Joe Neguse (D-Co 2)

Washington, D.C. — In case you missed it, during Tuesday’s House Natural Resources Committee 13 hour markup on the budget reconciliation bill, Republicans moved to add a late-night, last-minute amendment to the legislation that would order the sale of thousands of acres of public lands in Nevada and Utah. Revenue from the auctioning off of these shared spaces, coupled with proposed cuts to critical programs like Medicaid and Social Security, lay the groundwork for the implementation of President Donald Trump’s radical agenda, which includes a $7 trillion tax giveaway to billionaires and big corporations.  

Congressman Joe Neguse, Ranking Member of the Subcommittee on Federal Lands, immediately reacted to this disastrous proposal.  

Watch Rep. Neguse’s remarks HERE

Highlights from Rep. Neguse’s exchange with Committee Republicans below: 

NEGUSE: A couple of quick questions. One, I would just say, more broadly, for the better part of the last 11 hours, I suppose, we’ve been making the case here on this side of the aisle—13 hours, I stand corrected—that the Republican reconciliation bill, plans to sell off our public lands. Lo and behold, at 11:00pm ET, we finally get an amendment. Does precisely what we said this bill would do. But the question I have, a very simple one. And I think I know the answer from Mrs. Malloy, but I’m not so sure about Mr. Amodei. Ms. Malloy, do you represent the areas in this bill in Utah, Washington County and Saint George that you would like to have those lands conveyed? 

REP. MALOY (UT-02): I do.  

NEGUSE: Okay. Thank you. And this isn’t meant to be a gotcha. I’m actually trying–you all proposed this amendment, so we’re considering it. Mr. Amodei, do you represent Clark County? 

REP. AMODEI (NV-02): I do not represent Clark County, but I have been asked by the Clark County Commission to introduce the bill on their behalf as a member of the majority in the House of Representatives.

NEGUSE: So, you, just to be clear, for all of your Republican colleagues, because I’ve sat on this dais year after year and been lectured by my colleagues on other side of the aisle about how important it is to engage your colleagues who represent areas that may be at issue in a particular bill. You don’t represent Clark County. There are multiple other Nevada representatives who do. 

Mr. Horsford represents this area. Mrs. Lee represents this area. Mrs. Titus represents this area. And I don’t think that we should proceed in considering the amendment until we’ve had an opportunity to hear from them about whether or not they believe that these lands ought to be conveyed. I think that’s a fair request. I think you’d feel the same way.

If any number of the counties that you represent, in western Nevada were at issue in this bill. Is that an unreasonable request? 

AMODEI: Well, I don’t know how it works in Colorado, sir, but I can tell you, in Nevada, we all talk frequently, and this is not going to come as a surprise to any of them. Please feel free to consult them as you see fit—-  

NEGUSE: They support this? They support this amendment? 

AMODEI: They are aware of the—

NEGUSE: They’re aware of it?  

AMODEI: Don’t put words in my mouth. 

NEGUSE: I’m asking you. I’m not putting words. I’m asking you. I’m saying, are they supportive of this amendment? You haven’t asked your colleagues in Nevada whether or not they support the conveyance of land in their district, not yours.

AMODEI: The answer to your question is no. 

NEGUSE: Yeah, well, I think it is deeply irresponsible to put forth an amendment, and I don’t take issue, by the way, I might have disagreements on the merits with Ms. Malloy with respect to the amendment, but I understand her desire on behalf of her constituents to move forward with this amendment. But I would think, at a minimum, Mr. Amodei, that you would do your colleagues in Nevada the courtesy of at least striking that language regarding Clark County, engage with your three other colleagues before this gets to the floor and then have a conversation with them. But to basically say to them that they have no say as to what happens with respect to land conveyances in their congressional districts, I think is a slippery slope.

And I just I would hope that my colleagues and Mr. Chairman in particular, I would hope that you would consider that as you weigh this amendment. I really in good faith, I would hope that you would consider at least striking that provision so that you can give those other members of Congress an opportunity to weigh in here, at least be heard, as opposed to an a 11:00 pm ET last-minute amendment that they’re just finding out about right now as we’re texting them.

I don’t think that’s the way to do business in the House. 

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Unlocking homeownership: A bipartisan approach to building affordable housing

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman John Larson (1st District of Connecticut)

Rep. Larson co-authored the following op-ed with Rep. Mike Kelly (PA-16) that appeared in The Hill:

Erie, Pa. and Hartford, Conn. share much in common — snowy winters, growing technology sectors and, like many other communities across the nation, a pressing need for more affordable homeownership opportunities. 

In cities like Erie and Hartford — which we proudly represent in Congress — as well as dozens of other older industrial cities, we’re witnessing block after block of aging homes deteriorating within a stone’s throw of burgeoning commercial districts. In east Erie, nearly 20 percent of properties are classified as being in poor or unsound condition, with another 37 percent showing the beginnings of disinvestment or neglect.

The intertwined issues of blight, vacancy and an aging housing stock are not unique to older northeastern cities. They represent a truly national crisis, affecting cities from St. Louis and Detroit to Fresno and Jacksonville, from Baltimore to Birmingham and Charlotte. These challenges hit particularly hard in rural communities that have been suffering with outmigration and years of disinvestment.  

Simultaneously, the U.S. is vastly underproducing housing. By some estimates, there is a shortage of 4 million homes. With construction costs on the rise and mortgage rates still high, it is exceedingly difficult to build homes that are affordable for lower- and middle-income families.

The cost of inaction is severe for American families and local economies everywhere. Many families find it challenging to secure a home they can afford to buy, making it harder to build wealth. Moreover, existing homeowners often face extensive repair needs. In order to reverse the United States’ declining homeownership rate, we must build new homes that Americans can afford to own and make repairs to existing housing across the country.

That’s why we proudly lead the Neighborhood Homes Investment Act in Congress. This bipartisan legislation would create a new tax credit to bridge the gap between the cost of building or repairing a home and the home’s value once it is built. By addressing this “value gap,” developers would be incentivized to build and renovate tens of thousands of homes annually in struggling urban and rural communities, helping to revitalize these areas while making homeownership accessible for many first-time homebuyers. 

Our Neighborhood Homes proposal also utilizes a successful public-private partnership model to target communities in the greatest need, especially rural areas and those with high poverty rates. By partnering with the private sector, our bill could result in 500,000 new or rehabilitated homes over the next decade, while also creating good-paying jobs in construction and related industries.

As Congress prepares tax legislation for 2025, we have a rare opportunity for bipartisan action to address our affordable housing crisis and narrow our country’s staggering homeownership gap. The need to keep our neighborhoods safe, vibrant and economically robust transcends party lines. More than 100 members of Congress from both parties supported the Neighborhood Homes Investment Act last Congress, and the bill has been endorsed by a broad coalition of industry and housing trade groups, state housing finance agencies, neighborhood redevelopment organizations, and both nonprofit and for-profit housing developers.

We have just reintroduced the bill and now it’s time to take it across the finish line. Americans deserve more affordable homeownership opportunities, and many neighborhoods require investments to thrive. We must pass the Neighborhood Homes Investment Act. 

U.S. Reps. Mike Kelly (R-Pa.) and John Larson (D-Conn.) are the co-leads of the bipartisan Neighborhood Homes Improvement Act. Kelly serves as chairman of the Ways and Means Subcommittee on Tax, and Larson serves as ranking member of the Ways and Means Subcommittee on Social Security.

LEADER JEFFRIES STATEMENT ON INCIDENT AT DELANEY HALL ICE DETENTION FACILITY

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Hakeem Jeffries (8th District of New York)

Today, Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries released the following statement:

The Trump administration has repeatedly broken the law and skirted court orders while deporting American citizens, including children, without the due process protections guaranteed by the Constitution. 

Members of Congress have a constitutional responsibility to serve as a check on the out-of-control policies of the executive branch, including conducting oversight wherever and whenever it is needed. I thank Reps. Bonnie Watson Coleman, Rob Menendez and LaMonica McIver for showing up, standing up and speaking out today in Newark, along with Mayor Ras Baraka. 

The concerns of elected officials about this unsanctioned facility will not be silenced by the Trump administration’s attempt to intimidate the public. We will never bend the knee. 

The masked agents who physically accosted two Congresswomen must be identified immediately and any trumped-up charges against Mayor Baraka dropped. The specific role played by the for-profit operators of this private detention center in today’s disgraceful events will be heavily scrutinized in this congressional term – and beyond. Presidents come and Presidents go. The House of Representatives will endure. 

Keep your hands off of Members of Congress.

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Jayapal Statement on the Release of Rumeysa Öztürk

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal (7th District of Washington)

WASHINGTON, DC — U.S. Representative Pramila Jayapal (WA-07), Ranking Member of the Immigration Integrity, Security, and Enforcement Subcommittee, released the following statement after Rumeysa Öztürk was released from ICE detention.

“Today, our legal system worked: Rumeysa Öztürk was finally released from ICE detention after being unlawfully detained for more than six weeks. Rumeysa was here lawfully on a student visa and was kidnapped and disappeared off the street for no reason, seemingly other than drafting an op-ed, exercising her constitutionally protected right to freedom of expression. Her detention was a disgrace and a threat to all of our liberties, and her release is a testament to her, her family, and attorneys, and the public that refused to back down. 

“However, the harm caused by Rumeysa’s detention highlights the outrageous nature of Donald Trump’s indiscriminate and unconstitutional arrests of immigrants, including those with legal status, simply because they do not agree with Trump. It also highlights the fact that Donald Trump lied when he said he was only going after ‘the worst of the worst.’ Instead, he has been launching an all-out assault on free speech rights and the due process rights that are the foundation of our legal system. 

“Every American should understand that if Trump can kidnap and disappear Rumeysa off the street, he can do the same to any of us. The First Amendment is not up for debate — and whether it is Mohsen Mahdawi, Rumeysa Ozturk, Mahmoud Khalil, Kilmar Abrego Garcia, Alfredo Juarez Zeferino, or all the other immigrants kidnapped by this administration — we will not back down in defending all of our rights.”

Issues:

Jayapal Statement on CBP Order Revoking the Rights of Pregnant Women to Access Water, Infants to have Diapers

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal (7th District of Washington)

WASHINGTON, DC — U.S. Representative Pramila Jayapal (WA-07), Ranking Member of the Immigration Integrity, Security, and Enforcement Subcommittee, issued the following statement regarding the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) memo revoking protections for the most vulnerable people in its custody.  

“Every day, I think that we have reached the apex of cruelty this administration can inflict on immigrants, and yet it still continues to grow. Now we are learning that CBP has issued an internal memo eliminating four policies that help to protect the most vulnerable people in detention — including pregnant women, infants, and the elderly. These policies simply require basic necessities to be provided — like water for pregnant women and diapers and formula for babies. These policies were necessary in the first place to ensure that CBP treated immigrants like humans, after refusing to give soap or toothbrushes to immigrants during the first Trump administration. 

“Now, CBP’s revocation memo indicates that these policies are ‘misaligned with current Agency guidance and immigration enforcement priorities,” indicating that cruelty—rather than basic humanity—are the only key priorities of this Administration. That is unacceptable.

“We’ve seen what happens when CBP doesn’t have safeguards in place – two children under 10 years old died on Trump’s watch. The Administration’s callous termination of these lifesaving measures will put kids in harm’s way. I have no doubt that this step from the Trump administration will not only inflict unnecessary trauma on already vulnerable people who are seeking a better life in America, but it will cost lives.”

Issues:

Congressman Valadao Reintroduces Legislation to Expand Child Care for Local Law Enforcement

Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman David G Valadao (CA-21)

WASHINGTON – Today, Congressman David Valadao (CA-22) joined Reps. Scott Peters (CA-50), Josh Harder (CA-09), and Darrell Issa (CA-48) to reintroduce the Providing Child Care for Police Officers Act. This bipartisan bill aims to address the nationwide police staffing shortages by making it easier for parents to enter the field. Police shortages have been especially harmful to rural communities, like the Central Valley, who have struggled to recruit and retain enough qualified officers.

“Our Central Valley police departments continue to face staffing shortages, and we need real solutions to support the people who put their lives on the line to keep us safe,” said Congressman Valadao. By making childcare more accessible for officers working long, irregular hours, this bipartisan bill reduces a major barrier for working parents in law enforcement and helps improve public safety in our communities.”

“Access to quality, reliable childcare is essential to recruitment and retention of the best, most representative police force we can have,” said Rep. Peters. “Our officers go out every day and ensure our children are safe — the least we can do is make sure there is someone to watch their kids when they are on duty. San Diego is leading the way to expand childcare opportunities for police officers, and I am working to support those efforts at the federal level.” 

“This is a no brainer – keeping our families safe starts by recruiting and retaining top-tier police officers,” said Rep. Harder. “Making sure our officers have access to quality, affordable child care means we increase the pool of talented, diverse recruits and keeps officers on the streets helping our communities.” 

“We have a responsibility to provide our police officers with the tools, training, and equipment they need to safeguard our streets and protect our communities,” said Rep.  Issa. “This bill represents a creative and innovative approach to not only advance law and order everywhere it is needed, but allowing these brave men and women on the front lines to be both parents and police.” 

Supporting organizations include: 30×30 Initiative, International Union of Police Associations (IUPA), National Association of Police Organizations, Fraternal Order of Police, and Peace Officers Research Association of California (PORAC).

The Providing Child Care for Police Officers Act would:

  • Establish a pilot program under the Administration for Children and Families to supply grants to law enforcement agencies to provide child care benefits to their officers. 
  • Authorize $24 million in funding for each of the next five fiscal years. Law enforcement agencies will be able to use this funding to construct or operate new center for police departments’ exclusive use, offer scholarships to subsidize the cost of care, or provide assistance for care for children with disabilities.  
  • Allow law enforcement agencies, local governments, and child care providers to determine each of their responsibilities while requiring local entities to contribute a scaled matching requirement over a three-year grant period. 
  • Set aside 20% of the total grant funding for police departments employing fewer than 200 officers. 
  • Require HHS to report to Congress the grant recipients, corresponding law enforcement agencies, employee retention and recruitment data, and the unmet child care needs of other first responder sectors. 

Read the full bill here.

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