Politics & Government

Los Alamitos Declares Sanctuary From Sanctuary City Law

The Los Alamitos City Council declared its intentions on Monday to declare sanctuary from becoming a sanctuary city.

LOS ALAMITOS, CA — Los Alamitos City Council just said no to the California "sanctuary law" on Monday, at the city council meeting, thereby exempting itself from having to limit cooperation between local agencies and federal immigration authorities.

After two hours of testimony from residents, discussing both sides of the issue, the Los Alamitos City Council voted 4-1 to not be a sanctuary.

While the crowd had dwindled both in and outside the chamber when the vote came, people erupted in cheers after the vote and began chanting "USA." But on the pro-immigrant rights side, there was this chant: "The people united, will never be divided," the Orange County Register reported.

Find out what's happening in Los Alamitos-Seal Beachfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Councilman Warren Kusumoto introduced the legislation and said the issue was not about immigration.
"This council is looking out for the constituents in our city," he said.

Mayor Troy Edgar said he hoped mayors in other cities consider similar local legislation.

Find out what's happening in Los Alamitos-Seal Beachfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The council went one step further, the Register reported. The majority also voted to direct the city attorney to write an amicus brief to a federal lawsuit filed earlier this month against California, alleging that three of the state's laws are unconstitutional. One of those laws was the same one the Los Alamitos council looks to opt-out of: the "California Values Act," which limits cooperation between law enforcement agencies and federal immigration authorities.

Kusumoto and Edgar joined council members Shelley Hasselbrink and Richard Murphy in support of the new local law. Councilman Mark Chirco voted against it, saying adopting it would lead to litigation, according to the Register.

To those who oppose the ordinance, the vote was a disappointment, the newspaper reported.

"There's been a real shift to a national, xenophobic acceptability in our society that is heartbreaking," said Rabbi Jonathan Klein, executive director of the Clergy & Laity United for Economic Justice group, the Register reported. "We're in an era of open bigotry."

Council members in the majority said that California's so-called sanctuary law, SB-54, puts them at odds with the U.S. Constitution.

City News Service, with Ashley Ludwig, Patch Editor

Shutterstock Photo

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.