← All bills

Res 1416-2020

Dept of Homeland Security to halt all deportation proceedings for the length of the COVID-19 pandemic, as a means of restricting the global spread of this disease.

ResolutionAdoptedCommittee on Immigrationintroduced 2020-09-16

Adopted by the full Council.

Official record · Legistar

Agenda: 2020-09-16Passed: 2021-02-25
Committee on ImmigrationMayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs and other matters affecting immigration.

How it compares

40% of similar bills passed

20 passed · 30 died

This bill: 161 days in committee

Similar bills: median 323 days · 15 days when passed

Sponsors (5)

Lifecycle

IntroducedIntroduced by Council
2020-09-16 · City Council
ActionReferred to Comm by Council
2020-09-16 · City Council
HeardHearing Held by Committee
2020-09-17 · Committee on Immigration
HeldLaid Over by Committee
2020-09-17 · Committee on Immigration
HeardHearing Held by Committee
2021-02-25 · Committee on Immigration
ActionAmendment Proposed by Comm
2021-02-25 · Committee on Immigration
ActionAmended by Committee
2021-02-25 · Committee on Immigration
AdvancedApproved by Committee
2021-02-25 · Committee on Immigration
AdvancedApproved, by Council
2021-02-25 · City Council

Votes (5)

Aye (5)
Carlos MenchacaMargaret S. ChinDaniel Dromm Mathieu EugeneFrancisco P. Moya

Heard at (4)

City Council · 2021-02-25 · 1:30 PM · - REMOTE HEARING (VIRTUAL ROOM 1) -
Committee on Immigration · 2021-02-25 · 11:30 AM · - REMOTE HEARING (VIRTUAL ROOM 1) -
Committee on Immigration · 2020-09-17 · 12:00 PM · REMOTE HEARING (VIRTUAL ROOM 2)
City Council · 2020-09-16 · 1:30 PM · - REMOTE HEARING (VIRTUAL ROOM 1) -

Attachments (15)

Full text
By Council Members Eugene, Kallos, Rosenthal, Ayala and Louis Whereas, SARS-CoV-2 is the virus responsible for causing the new infectious disease known as COVID-19; and Whereas, The first cases of humans infected with COVID-19 were identified in December 2019, and by mid-February 2021, there were more than 112 million cases reported across the world, with more than two million deaths linked to the disease; and Whereas, At the same time, the United States (U.S.) continues to lead in the number of confirmed COVID-19 cases worldwide, with more than 28 million positive cases and 502,000 deaths; and Whereas, Many countries are struggling to deal with the ever-evolving COVID-19 pandemic, so much so that the United States Department of State (DOS) issued a global "Level 4 - Do Not Travel" warning, as of March 19, 2020, recommending that all U.S. citizens avoid all international travel due to the virus; and Whereas, While the Department of State lifted this warning in August, 2020, the U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) continues to recommend against all travel to more than 150 destinations due to COVID-19; and Whereas, The possibility of disease transmission remains as the United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS) continues to conduct international deportations to many of these locations; and Whereas, Deportees pose a risk to both the U.S. and the countries receiving them, many of which are ill-equipped to handle large-scale COVID-19 outbreaks; and Whereas, In the case of detained individuals, United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facilities have been rife with COVID-19 clusters, raising the risk that if detained individuals are deported, they could infect individuals in their countries of origin; and Whereas, In standards governing detention facilities, the CDC has advised that transfers should be restricted unless absolutely necessary, as transfers of detained individuals risk spreading the virus; and Whereas, Against CDC standards, DHS has transferred and deported thousands of people in its custody to their countries of origin since the onset of the pandemic; and Whereas, As part of its removal procedure, ICE conducts a "visual screening consistent with its own guidance," and checks body temperatures prior to boarding airplanes, which are insufficient protocols for determining if a person is infected with SAR-CoV-2; and Whereas, International advocates including Amnesty International called on former DHS Acting Secretary Chad Wolf to halt deportations for domestic and international public health; and Whereas, By the end of April 2020, one in five COVID-19 cases in Guatemala were individuals recently deported from the United States, prompting the Guatemalan government to place a cap on the number of deportees from the U.S. it would accept on a weekly basis; and Whereas, By July 2020, individuals deported to at least eleven different countries tested positive for COVID-19 following removal proceedings; and Whereas, The former Trump administration coerced countries to assist in the United States' immigration policy by accepting deportees at the risk of visa denials and access to critical medical supplies; and Whereas, As of February 2021, 14,087 individuals were detained in ICE custody nationally, and in the New York City-area, there have been over 7,000 new removal orders filed in immigration courts in fiscal year 2020 alone, with a backlog of immigration court cases well over 108,000; and Whereas, While more than 200 detained individuals in New York City-area ICE facilities have been released on case-by-case basis, ICE continues to deport individuals contravening expert guidance, putting immigrant New Yorkers at risk of infection, and risking further transmissions internationally; now, therefore, be it Resolved, That the Council of the City of New York calls on the United States Department of Homeland Security to halt all deportation proceedings for the length of the COVID-19 pandemic, as a means of restricting the global spread of this disease. LS14724 EK 2/24/2021