Officials from New Bedford school districts in the region said it was too soon to confirm whether attendance has gone down.
Officials from New Bedford school districts in the region said it was too soon to confirm whether attendance has gone down.
9_fingers_/Envato

Immigrant Parents Fear ICE Will Take Action at Local Schools

In the wake of Trump’s numerous executive orders targeting immigrants and refugees, some parents in Rhode Island and the South Coast of Massachusetts are feeling anxious about their children’s safety at school

In the wake of Trump’s numerous executive orders targeting immigrants and refugees, some parents in Rhode Island and the South Coast of Massachusetts are feeling anxious about their children’s safety at school

Share
Officials from New Bedford school districts in the region said it was too soon to confirm whether attendance has gone down.
Officials from New Bedford school districts in the region said it was too soon to confirm whether attendance has gone down.
9_fingers_/Envato
Immigrant Parents Fear ICE Will Take Action at Local Schools
Copy

Immigrant support organizations, who wished to remain unnamed due to concerns of being targeted, throughout Rhode Island and southeastern Massachusetts say they’ve received a large number of calls and messages from parents who are concerned that their children may be apprehended by ICE either at school or on the way to and from their schools.

Officials from school districts in the region said it was too soon to confirm whether attendance has gone down. But Helena DaSilva Hughes of the Immigrants’ Assistance Center in New Bedford says she’s heard from teachers in Fall River and New Bedford who are seeing a noticeable drop in attendance.

“They’re afraid of everything right now. I mean, that’s why I think that what this will create is this – these families will go further underground,” DaSilva Hughes said. “And they are not going to be calling the police if there’s anything that happens to them, or if they get robbed.”

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

McKee discusses legal advice behind withholding the audit, the bridge’s ongoing case and the impact on Rhode Island’s infrastructure recovery
More than 11,000 Rhode Islanders work for the federal government, and thousands of households rely on programs such as WIC and SNAP. As the shutdown begins, an economics professor warns it could strain families and local businesses.
Brown University Health will add 40,000 primary care patients to secure approval for its physicians group merger
Trump defends using troops in U.S. cities; Sen. Jack Reed of Rhode Island calls plan ‘dangerous’