Complete Colorado

Aspen school district rolls out ICE resistance guidance for staff

ASPEN—Information obtained by Complete Colorado through an open records request shows the Aspen School District introducing “guidance” intended to keep federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents off school property.  This despite a lack of evidence of any illegal immigration enforcement on Aspen-area school grounds.

According to that guidance, the district is committed to educating “every student who walks through our doors” and “that commitment extends to all students, regardless of their immigration status.”

The statement goes on to proclaim: “Our job is to teach, support, and protect—not to engage in fearmongering or reactionary politics.”

Despite President Trump removing ICE enforcement restrictions from “sensitive areas,” including schools as part of his deportation strategy, there are no known cases of school raids in Colorado.

According to Alice Black, executive assistant and special projects manager for Aspen schools, the guidance was shared with district staff in February. The anti-ICE strategy lays out a three-pronged set of protocols:

  1. School Grounds Are Safe from Enforcement Actions: ICE agents will not be allowed access to people or information without a valid judicial warrant, and all staff are instructed to refer any inquiries to the district office. Schools are places of learning, not immigration checkpoints.
  2. Student Privacy is Protected: The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) prohibits the unauthorized release of student records. We will not share student information unless required to do so by law.
  3. Support for Students and Families: Our district will provide resources, legal information, and emotional support to students and families who may be impacted by immigration issues. No child should be distracted from their education because they are afraid.

 

The Aspen schools’ efforts coincide with the passage of Senate Bill 25-276, which both reinforces and expands Colorado’s existing protections for immigrants living in the country illegally. The bill, among other things, restricts federal officers from entering schools throughout the state or obtaining personal, immigration status-related data without a warrant.  Governor Polis signed the bill into law in May.

Rampant rumors of ICE activity in Pitkin County were tamped down in late May after local law enforcement agencies throughout the Roaring Fork Valley reported being unaware of any federal immigration enforcement activity in the area, other than the detainment by ICE of an individual with an outstanding warrant in Carbondale on May 21.

Several calls to the Pitkin County Sheriff’s Office by Complete Colorado regarding ICE activity in the area since then went unreturned.

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