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Activists with Never Again Action Rhode Island plan to take their second action in four days Monday evening to stop a local prison from locking in its agreement with ICE.
Demonstrators from Never Again and the Alliance to Mobilize Our Resistance (AMOR) on Friday shut down a meeting of the Central Falls Detention Facility Corporation board of directors, chanting and singing in protest. The groups plan to do the same thing on Monday.
chills... hundreds of @NeverAgainActn Jews singing Ozi V'zimrat Yah to shut down a board meeting at the Wyatt Detention Center to vote on doubling down on an ICE contract#NeverAgain pic.twitter.com/FGsr2oWtiC
-- Hal (@hal_triedman) September 13, 2019
It's the latest front in a struggle between activists and President Donald Trump's war on immigrants that's roiled the city of Central Falls in the small New England state through the summer.
Protesters stopped the Central Falls Detention Facility Corporation board from discussing a forbearance agreement between the Wyatt Detention Facility and UMB Bank that, according to The Boston Globe, "would cut out city oversight and lock in a contract for ICE detainees."
"We the people of Rhode Island will not allow UMB Bank to use our state to make profits by dehumanizing our immigrant brothers and sisters," Never Again organizer Fil Eden said Friday. "Never again means never again--for everyone."
As Common Dreams reported Monday, profiteering from ICE detention is a big business. Decades of billion-dollar contracts have created what researchers at the Transnational Institute called in a report the "border-industrial complex." The political and economic power of the border security industry makes protests like Friday's an uphill battle.
The groups declared their intention to stop discussion again on Monday.
"On Friday, we made our voices heard loud and clear: we will not stand idly by and allow unaccountable, out-of-state bondholders to profit off of the inhumane treatment of detainees in Rhode Island," the groups said. "We also promised that we'd be back."
"We once again call on the members of the board of directors to fulfill their obligation to the communities they represent by either voting against this agreement or resigning from their positions immediately," they added.
The protest came after the board canceled a meeting scheduled for September 9 and rescheduled it for Friday, a move that made the timing fall on Shabbat and was decried by members of Never Again as specifically targeted at the Jewish group.
"You canceled your last meeting," proters declared Friday. "We are canceling this meeting. Shabbat Shalom."
The publicly owned, privately operated Wyatt facility is deeply in debt despite an expectation from decades ago that it would be an economic boon to Central Falls, a city of 20,000 to the north of Pawtucket and Providence. UMB has around $130 million invested in Wyatt.
The proposed forbearance agreement would require the 770-bed facility to house at least 625 ICE detainees a day, a mandatory quota that critics warn would effectively convert the facility officially into an ICE prison, critics warn. Under the agreement, the only involvement the city would be allowed to have with Wyatt would be appointing board members to to the Central Falls Detention Facility Corporation.
Wyatt's contract with ICE has been a flashpoint for the Never Again movement. In August, a senior corrections officer at the facility drove his truck into a crowd of protesters outside the prison, injuring five.
Never Again and AMOR, in their statement, expressed their hope that the board could vote against the forbearance.
"It's not too late to choose people over profits," the groups said, "and say 'no' to ICE."
Dear Common Dreams reader, It’s been nearly 30 years since I co-founded Common Dreams with my late wife, Lina Newhouser. We had the radical notion that journalism should serve the public good, not corporate profits. It was clear to us from the outset what it would take to build such a project. No paid advertisements. No corporate sponsors. No millionaire publisher telling us what to think or do. Many people said we wouldn't last a year, but we proved those doubters wrong. Together with a tremendous team of journalists and dedicated staff, we built an independent media outlet free from the constraints of profits and corporate control. Our mission has always been simple: To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. Building Common Dreams was not easy. Our survival was never guaranteed. When you take on the most powerful forces—Wall Street greed, fossil fuel industry destruction, Big Tech lobbyists, and uber-rich oligarchs who have spent billions upon billions rigging the economy and democracy in their favor—the only bulwark you have is supporters who believe in your work. But here’s the urgent message from me today. It's never been this bad out there. And it's never been this hard to keep us going. At the very moment Common Dreams is most needed, the threats we face are intensifying. We need your support now more than ever. We don't accept corporate advertising and never will. We don't have a paywall because we don't think people should be blocked from critical news based on their ability to pay. Everything we do is funded by the donations of readers like you. When everyone does the little they can afford, we are strong. But if that support retreats or dries up, so do we. Will you donate now to make sure Common Dreams not only survives but thrives? —Craig Brown, Co-founder |
Activists with Never Again Action Rhode Island plan to take their second action in four days Monday evening to stop a local prison from locking in its agreement with ICE.
Demonstrators from Never Again and the Alliance to Mobilize Our Resistance (AMOR) on Friday shut down a meeting of the Central Falls Detention Facility Corporation board of directors, chanting and singing in protest. The groups plan to do the same thing on Monday.
chills... hundreds of @NeverAgainActn Jews singing Ozi V'zimrat Yah to shut down a board meeting at the Wyatt Detention Center to vote on doubling down on an ICE contract#NeverAgain pic.twitter.com/FGsr2oWtiC
-- Hal (@hal_triedman) September 13, 2019
It's the latest front in a struggle between activists and President Donald Trump's war on immigrants that's roiled the city of Central Falls in the small New England state through the summer.
Protesters stopped the Central Falls Detention Facility Corporation board from discussing a forbearance agreement between the Wyatt Detention Facility and UMB Bank that, according to The Boston Globe, "would cut out city oversight and lock in a contract for ICE detainees."
"We the people of Rhode Island will not allow UMB Bank to use our state to make profits by dehumanizing our immigrant brothers and sisters," Never Again organizer Fil Eden said Friday. "Never again means never again--for everyone."
As Common Dreams reported Monday, profiteering from ICE detention is a big business. Decades of billion-dollar contracts have created what researchers at the Transnational Institute called in a report the "border-industrial complex." The political and economic power of the border security industry makes protests like Friday's an uphill battle.
The groups declared their intention to stop discussion again on Monday.
"On Friday, we made our voices heard loud and clear: we will not stand idly by and allow unaccountable, out-of-state bondholders to profit off of the inhumane treatment of detainees in Rhode Island," the groups said. "We also promised that we'd be back."
"We once again call on the members of the board of directors to fulfill their obligation to the communities they represent by either voting against this agreement or resigning from their positions immediately," they added.
The protest came after the board canceled a meeting scheduled for September 9 and rescheduled it for Friday, a move that made the timing fall on Shabbat and was decried by members of Never Again as specifically targeted at the Jewish group.
"You canceled your last meeting," proters declared Friday. "We are canceling this meeting. Shabbat Shalom."
The publicly owned, privately operated Wyatt facility is deeply in debt despite an expectation from decades ago that it would be an economic boon to Central Falls, a city of 20,000 to the north of Pawtucket and Providence. UMB has around $130 million invested in Wyatt.
The proposed forbearance agreement would require the 770-bed facility to house at least 625 ICE detainees a day, a mandatory quota that critics warn would effectively convert the facility officially into an ICE prison, critics warn. Under the agreement, the only involvement the city would be allowed to have with Wyatt would be appointing board members to to the Central Falls Detention Facility Corporation.
Wyatt's contract with ICE has been a flashpoint for the Never Again movement. In August, a senior corrections officer at the facility drove his truck into a crowd of protesters outside the prison, injuring five.
Never Again and AMOR, in their statement, expressed their hope that the board could vote against the forbearance.
"It's not too late to choose people over profits," the groups said, "and say 'no' to ICE."
Activists with Never Again Action Rhode Island plan to take their second action in four days Monday evening to stop a local prison from locking in its agreement with ICE.
Demonstrators from Never Again and the Alliance to Mobilize Our Resistance (AMOR) on Friday shut down a meeting of the Central Falls Detention Facility Corporation board of directors, chanting and singing in protest. The groups plan to do the same thing on Monday.
chills... hundreds of @NeverAgainActn Jews singing Ozi V'zimrat Yah to shut down a board meeting at the Wyatt Detention Center to vote on doubling down on an ICE contract#NeverAgain pic.twitter.com/FGsr2oWtiC
-- Hal (@hal_triedman) September 13, 2019
It's the latest front in a struggle between activists and President Donald Trump's war on immigrants that's roiled the city of Central Falls in the small New England state through the summer.
Protesters stopped the Central Falls Detention Facility Corporation board from discussing a forbearance agreement between the Wyatt Detention Facility and UMB Bank that, according to The Boston Globe, "would cut out city oversight and lock in a contract for ICE detainees."
"We the people of Rhode Island will not allow UMB Bank to use our state to make profits by dehumanizing our immigrant brothers and sisters," Never Again organizer Fil Eden said Friday. "Never again means never again--for everyone."
As Common Dreams reported Monday, profiteering from ICE detention is a big business. Decades of billion-dollar contracts have created what researchers at the Transnational Institute called in a report the "border-industrial complex." The political and economic power of the border security industry makes protests like Friday's an uphill battle.
The groups declared their intention to stop discussion again on Monday.
"On Friday, we made our voices heard loud and clear: we will not stand idly by and allow unaccountable, out-of-state bondholders to profit off of the inhumane treatment of detainees in Rhode Island," the groups said. "We also promised that we'd be back."
"We once again call on the members of the board of directors to fulfill their obligation to the communities they represent by either voting against this agreement or resigning from their positions immediately," they added.
The protest came after the board canceled a meeting scheduled for September 9 and rescheduled it for Friday, a move that made the timing fall on Shabbat and was decried by members of Never Again as specifically targeted at the Jewish group.
"You canceled your last meeting," proters declared Friday. "We are canceling this meeting. Shabbat Shalom."
The publicly owned, privately operated Wyatt facility is deeply in debt despite an expectation from decades ago that it would be an economic boon to Central Falls, a city of 20,000 to the north of Pawtucket and Providence. UMB has around $130 million invested in Wyatt.
The proposed forbearance agreement would require the 770-bed facility to house at least 625 ICE detainees a day, a mandatory quota that critics warn would effectively convert the facility officially into an ICE prison, critics warn. Under the agreement, the only involvement the city would be allowed to have with Wyatt would be appointing board members to to the Central Falls Detention Facility Corporation.
Wyatt's contract with ICE has been a flashpoint for the Never Again movement. In August, a senior corrections officer at the facility drove his truck into a crowd of protesters outside the prison, injuring five.
Never Again and AMOR, in their statement, expressed their hope that the board could vote against the forbearance.
"It's not too late to choose people over profits," the groups said, "and say 'no' to ICE."