S-3894-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.
Sponsored by Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH)
What it does
This bill would prohibit the Department of Homeland Security from constructing, acquiring, renovating, or operating any new immigration processing site or detention center unless it first: (1) creates a mechanism for public comments about the planned facility; (2) enters into a signed, written agreement with appropriate state and local officials; and (3) provides Congress with advance notice of the activity. All three conditions would need to be met before DHS could proceed with a new facility.
Who benefits
State and local governments near proposed facilities, who would gain a formal voice and a written agreement before a facility opens in their jurisdiction. Nearby residents and community organizations, who would gain a public comment mechanism. Congress, which would receive advance notice and greater oversight of DHS detention expansion. Civil liberties and immigration advocacy groups that have sought greater transparency in detention operations. Local elected officials who have previously had facilities placed in their jurisdictions without formal consultation.
Who is hurt
DHS and the executive branch broadly, which would lose flexibility to rapidly expand detention capacity in response to surges in border crossings or other emergencies. Immigration enforcement operations that depend on quickly acquiring or activating new facilities. Detainees themselves could be indirectly affected if the added procedural requirements slow the opening of newer or more modern facilities. Taxpayers could face higher costs if delays in acquiring facilities result in more expensive alternatives or prolonged use of older, costlier sites.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that DHS has repeatedly opened or expanded detention facilities with little or no notice to surrounding communities, leaving local governments without the ability to plan for infrastructure, public safety, or health service impacts. They contend that requiring public comment, a written local agreement, and congressional notice are minimal transparency measures that bring immigration detention in line with standard practices for other major federal facility decisions, and that Congress has both the authority and the responsibility to oversee how and where the executive branch incarcerates people in its custody.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that immigration enforcement is a core executive function requiring operational flexibility, and that mandatory local agreements effectively give state and local governments a veto — or at minimum a significant delay mechanism — over federal detention decisions, in tension with federal supremacy under Arizona v. United States (2012). They contend that advance notice and agreement requirements could compromise time-sensitive enforcement operations and that Congress already has oversight tools, such as appropriations and hearings, making this additional procedural layer redundant and potentially paralyzing during border emergencies.