Trump's immigration crackdown leaves some families weighing the risk of
sending kids to school
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[January 22, 2025]
By OLGA R. RODRIGUEZ, MORIAH BALINGIT, BIANCA VÁZQUEZ
TONESS and JOCELYN GECKER
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — As President Donald Trump cracks down on immigrants
in the U.S. illegally, some families are wondering if it is safe to send
their children to school.
In many districts, educators have sought to reassure immigrant parents
that schools are safe places for their kids, despite the president's
campaign pledge to carry out mass deportations. But fears intensified
for some when the Trump administration announced Tuesday it would allow
federal immigration agencies to make arrests at schools, churches and
hospitals, ending a decades-old policy.
“Oh, dear God! I can’t imagine why they would do that,” said Carmen, an
immigrant from Mexico, after hearing that the Trump administration had
rescinded the policy against arrests in “sensitive locations.”
She plans to take her two grandchildren, ages 6 and 4, to their school
Wednesday in the San Francisco Bay Area unless she hears from school
officials it is not safe.
“What has helped calm my nerves is knowing that the school stands with
us and promised to inform us if it’s not safe at school,” said Carmen,
who spoke on condition that only her first name be used, out of fear she
could be targeted by immigration officials.
Immigrants across the country have been anxious about Trump's pledge to
deport millions of people. While fears of raids did not come to pass on
the administration's first day, rapid changes on immigration policy have
left many confused and uncertain about their future.
At a time when many migrant families — even those in the country legally
— are assessing whether and how to go about in public, many school
systems are watching for effects on student attendance. Several schools
said they were fielding calls from worried parents about rumors that
immigration agents would try to enter schools, but it was too early to
tell whether large numbers of families are keeping their children home.
Tuesday’s move to clear the way for arrests at schools reverses guidance
that restricted two federal agencies — Immigration and Customs
Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection — from carrying out
enforcement in sensitive locations. In a statement, the Department of
Homeland Security said: "Criminals will no longer be able to hide in
America’s schools and churches to avoid arrest.”
Daniela Anello, who heads D.C. Bilingual Public Charter School in the
nation’s capital, said she was shocked by the announcement.
“It’s horrific,” Anello said. “There’s no such thing as hiding anyone.
It doesn’t happen, hasn’t happened. ... It’s ridiculous.”
An estimated 733,000 school-aged children are in the U.S. illegally,
according to the Migration Policy Institute. Many more have U.S.
citizenship but have parents who are in the country illegally.
Schools work to reassure parents
Education officials in some states and districts have vowed to stand up
for immigrant students, including their right to a public education. In
California, for one, officials have offered guidance to schools on state
law limiting local participation in immigration enforcement.
A resolution passed by Chicago Public Schools’ Board of Education in
November said schools would not assist ICE in enforcing immigration law.
Agents would not be allowed into schools without a criminal warrant, it
said. And New York City principals last month were reminded by the
district of policies including one against collecting information on a
student’s immigration status.
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Students arrive for school Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2025, in the East
Boston neighborhood of Boston. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer)
That's not the case everywhere. Many districts have not offered any
reassurances for immigrant families.
Educators at Georgia Fugees Academy Charter School have learned even
students and families in the country legally are intimidated by
Trump’s wide-ranging proposals to deport millions of immigrants and
roll back non-citizens' rights.
“They’re not even at risk of deportation and they’re still scared,”
Chief Operating Officer Luma Mufleh said. Officials at the small
Atlanta charter school focused on serving refugees and immigrants
expected so many students to miss school the day after Trump took
office that educators accelerated the school’s exam schedule so
students wouldn’t miss important tests.
Asked on Tuesday for attendance data, school officials did not feel
comfortable sharing it. “We don’t want our school to be targeted,“
Mufleh said.
The new policy on immigration enforcement at schools likely will
prompt some immigrant parents who fear deportation to keep their
children home, even if they face little risk, said Michael Lukens,
executive director for the Amica Center for Immigrant Rights. He
said he believes it's part of the administration’s goal to make life
so untenable that immigrants eventually leave the United States on
their own.
Some parents see school as one of the last safe places
For Iris Gonzalez in Boston, schools seem like just about the only
safe place for her to go as someone in the country illegally. She’s
had children in Boston schools for nearly a decade and she doesn’t
expect anyone there to bother her or her daughters for proof they’re
here legally. So her children will keep going to school. “Education
is important,” she said in Spanish.
Gonzalez, who came to the U.S. from Guatemala illegally 14 years
ago, does worry about entering a courthouse or driving, even though
she has a license. “What if they stop me?” she wonders.
“I don’t sleep,” she said. “There’s a lot of uncertainty about how
to look for work, whether to keep driving and what’s going to
change."
Carmen, the Mexican grandmother who now lives in California, said
returning home is not an option for her family, which faced threats
after her son-in-law was kidnapped two years from their home in
Michoacan state, an area overrun with drug trafficking gangs.
Her family arrived two years ago under former President Joe Biden’s
program allowing asylum-seekers to enter the U.S. and then apply for
permission to stay. Following his inauguration Monday, Trump
promptly shut down the CBP One app that processed these and other
arrivals and has promised to “end asylum” during his presidency.
Carmen has had several hearings on her asylum request, which has not
yet been granted.
“My biggest fear is that we don’t have anywhere to go back to," she
said. "It’s about saving our lives. And protecting our children.”
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