As immigration raids proceed to comb via Santa Ana’s automotive washes and Residence Depot parking tons, spreading worry throughout the 77% Latino neighborhood, the town has created a $100,000 fund to assist affected households cowl fundamental requirements similar to meals, lease and utilities.
The emergency fund was proposed by Mayor Valerie Amezcua, who mentioned that the town is in a disaster due to ongoing Immigration and Customs Enforcement operations. Santa Ana’s sister metropolis of Sahuayo in Michoacán, Mexico, has supplied an extra $50,000 present to help with the initiative, she mentioned.
“That is in regards to the wants of our neighborhood,” Amezcua mentioned at Tuesday’s Metropolis Council assembly. “If the daddy or mom who’s the breadwinner is taken from their house, we don’t need them to lose their residence.”
The proposal marked a pointy shift for the mayor, who has confronted calls to resign over her silence on the outset of President Trump’s immigration crackdown in Southern California in early June. Throughout final week’s Metropolis Council assembly, greater than 100 annoyed residents flooded the general public remark interval, with many lambasting Amezcua for her response to immigration raids and associated protests and criticizing the Santa Ana Police Division’s use of pressure on demonstrators.
Amezcua initially proposed making a $1-million help program by canceling eight city-sponsored occasions: Fourth of July, Chicano Heritage Pageant, Fiestas Patrias, Noche de Altares, Tet Pageant, Santa Ana Enjoyable Run, Summer time Film Sequence and Juneteenth.
“We’ve seen in different cities the place they’ve massive occasions and ICE reveals up. The troops are going via the parks and taking our households,” she mentioned. “I don’t need to have any massive occasions the place they’ll come and hurt or take our households.”
However a number of council members opposed the thought, saying that it is very important proceed celebrating the neighborhood’s tradition and noting that many of those occasions are months away, when ICE is probably not as lively.
“I’m not going to be supportive of defunding cultural occasions within the brownest metropolis in Orange County and making the general public select between celebrating our tradition or giving mutual help,” mentioned Councilmember Johnathan Hernandez. “We needs to be doing each.”
Hernandez identified that Santa Ana is the one metropolis within the nation to have a Chicano Heritage Pageant celebrating the contributions of trailblazing journalist Ruben Salazar and the one metropolis in Southern California to host a Fiestas Patrias celebrating Mexican independence. “I don’t suppose it’s the proper factor to defund these occasions.”
The council then launched into a heated hourlong debate over the place to drag cash to create the fund.
Hernandez instructed utilizing cash allotted for vacant positions within the Santa Ana Police Division. Amezcua, nonetheless, pushed again, calling his proposal reckless. Then, Councilmember David Penaloza proposed taking the $1 million from the town’s wet day fund, however metropolis employees defined that the method for pulling from the reserves would require further conferences and votes.
In the end, the council settled on a compromise resolution, pulling 10% of funding from city-sponsored occasions to get a $100,000 emergency fund operating instantly. Councilmember Thai Viet Phan, who got here up with the movement, added that employees ought to report again in 90 days or sooner on the efficacy of the fund and options to extend its finances.
In the course of the public remark interval, many residents spoke in regards to the ache and trauma ICE raids have been persevering with to inflict on Santa Ana’s neighborhood.
“We now have operations occurring at our native automotive washes, at our native Residence Depots, our distributors are being taken. Loads is occurring on a regular basis and our group has by no means seen this type of ache and affected by our Santa Ana residents,” mentioned Sandra De Anda, a employees member on the Orange County Fast Response Community, which helps observe immigration raids and join affected households with assets.
De Anda mentioned she conservatively estimates that 20 to 30 individuals are being detained a day. “I can confidently let you know that as a result of I work with a really dedicated group of ICE watchers, dispatchers, attorneys, clergy members, and most of us are volunteers,” she mentioned.
Maria Ceja, a lifelong Santa Ana resident, wrote a letter in help of the fund, asking that the town craft a dignified and accessible course of for households to obtain help.
“It’s most essential that the Metropolis offers monetary help as households navigate life after their liked one has been illegally taken with out warning,” she wrote. “We’re seeing that a lot of our neighbors which were kidnapped are the first breadwinners of their household. This fully destabilizes their households, particularly given the present state of our economic system as we proceed to see costs increase whereas wages stagnate.”
Santa Ana’s fund follows within the footsteps of close by Anaheim, which created the Anaheim Contigo web site final month, providing assets to households affected by immigration enforcement and offering emergency help grants via a partnership with the Anaheim Group Basis.
In the course of the assembly, council members additionally authorized a movement to submit a Freedom of Data Act request searching for information pertaining to latest ICE operations in Santa Ana in addition to a decision calling on Congress members representing Orange County to advocate for the elimination of immigration brokers and the Nationwide Guard from the town.