Immigrant Advocates Cheer New Bedford School Committee’s ‘Safe Zone’

The resolution will affirm New Bedford Public Schools’ protocols when it comes to handling interactions with immigration authorities

A New Bedford School Department building.
A New Bedford School Department building.
Ben Berke/The Public’s Radio
Share
A New Bedford School Department building.
A New Bedford School Department building.
Ben Berke/The Public’s Radio
Immigrant Advocates Cheer New Bedford School Committee’s ‘Safe Zone’
Copy

Immigrant advocates in New Bedford cheered a recent vote by the city’s school committee to establish a “Safe Zone” for immigrant students.

On Monday, the school committee passed the resolution, which was first introduced in February. It doesn’t change district policy per se. Rather, it affirms that New Bedford Public Schools would follow federal law regarding student privacy and the state Attorney General’s guidance on dealing with immigration officers. For instance, school officials should check for a judicial warrant when ICE officers want to speak to a student.

Cynthia Roy, a member of the New Bedford Coalition to Save Our Schools, said several local organizations had been pushing for the resolution’s passage in the wake of ICE raids in New Bedford.

“There have been so many deeply traumatizing experiences in New Bedford already that we knew in order for kids to return to school this school year and feel that they are welcome and cared about and safe, that we had to do something,” Roy said.

Roy went on to say that the resolution would only be effective if “people stick to it.”

“I think it goes back to the organizing, the grassroots organizing, the people-power that it’s going to take to continue to hold New Bedford Public Schools and other leaders accountable,” Roy said.

The resolution also suggests the school district create a “rapid response team” to prepare for a situation in which a student is “deprived of adult care, supervision, or guardianship outside of school due to a federal law enforcement action, such as detention by ICE or a cooperating law enforcement agency.”

Alicia López Gonzalez, co-director of the local organization Mujeres Victoriosas, said she hopes other local school districts pass similar resolutions soon.

“If we don’t do anything about this, then they’re just going to repeat this again,” López Gonzalez said. “And they’re going to traumatize our community, and they are going to make (the kids) feel that they’re the worst criminals, when they’re not.”

Scientists warn that rising ocean temperatures have pushed northern shrimp to the brink, prompting regulators to extend a decade-long moratorium on a fishery that was once a New England winter staple
Developed to catch health issues emerging in the ‘fourth trimester,’ the van provides daily blood-pressure monitoring, counseling, and community-based follow-up for Rhode Island mothers
The Wilbury Theatre Group’s latest production, “Octet,” explores the many ways technology can damage our lives and relationships
With band members straddling the Seekonk River, the Providence-based Moonlight Ramblers released a single about a driver hoping to get home on a broken bridge
From choir takeovers to Krampus markets, here are our picks for what to see and do across Rhode Island this week
From housing and health care to AI and economic anxiety, Amo says his party must reconnect with voters at home and present a stronger alternative to Trump