The order affects Boston, Seattle, Los Angeles, Baltimore, Portland, Chicago, and many more.
A federal judge ruled on Aug. 22 that the federal government cannot suspend funding to 34 โsanctuaryโ jurisdictions across the country that limit or refuse cooperation with federal immigration enforcement.
U.S. District Judge William Orrick in San Francisco ordered the extension of a preliminary injunction that bars the administration from blocking funding or placing conditions on federal money for those jurisdictions. The judge also blocked the administration from imposing immigration-related conditions on two particular grant programs.
The Trump administration has tried to block funding to dozens of cities and counties by cutting off their Housing and Urban Development grants because they either have not cooperated with or have obstructed the federal government in its enforcement of immigration law.
Those protected under Orrickโs order include the cities of Boston; Chicago; Denver; Seattle; Los Angeles; San Diego; Baltimore; San Jose, California; and Albuquerque, New Mexico. Some of the major counties covered under the order are Multnomah County in Oregon, which encompasses Portland, Oregon; Allegheny County in Pennsylvania, which encompasses Pittsburgh; and Hennepin County in Minnesota, which encompasses Minneapolis.
The Trump administration has ratcheted up pressure on sanctuary communities as it seeks to make good on President Donald Trumpโs campaign promise to remove millions of people who are in the country illegally.
One executive order issued by Trump directs Attorney General Pam Bondi and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem to withhold federal money from sanctuary jurisdictions. Another order directs every federal agency to ensure that payments to state and local governments do not โabet so-called โsanctuaryโ policies that seek to shield illegal aliens from deportation.โ
In May, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) released a list of more than 500 โsanctuary jurisdictionsโ and said that all of those municipalities and counties would be sent a formal notification deeming them to be noncompliant with the Trump administrationโs orders. Those officials would also be informed by DHS of whether they were considered to be in violation of any federal laws.
Orrick said in his order that the administrationโs decisions to withhold federal funding in those jurisdictions are a โcoercive threatโ that he deemed to be unconstitutional.