SECTION 1.
The Legislature hereby finds and declares all of the following:(a) The state’s limited resources should be directed to matters of greatest concern to the state and local governments, which include ensuring the public safety of its residents.
(b) A relationship of trust between California’s immigrant residents and our state and local agencies is essential to carrying out basic state and local functions.
(c) Efforts to carry out mass deportations of California residents would be devastating to our state, and would inflict a terrible cost on our families and our communities.
(d) An economy based upon the for-profit confinement of people, and separation of children from their parents, is immoral.
(e) Diversity provides a strong foundation for California’s economic vitality, cultural vibrancy, and social character.
(f) The state has the right to measure the moral character of its business partners in determining with whom it seeks business relations.
(g) When private companies pursue financial enrichment by providing services that support mass deportations, state funds should be redirected to services that are of greater need and more closely aligned with California’s values.
(h) The state has the right to act as a market participant.
(i) President Donald J. Trump issued an executive order on January 25, 2017, titled “Border Security and Immigration Enforcement Improvements” that created heightened fear and insecurity among many immigrant communities within this state and across the nation.
(j) The state has a moral and legal obligation to protect its residents from persecution.
(k) Immigrants are valuable and essential members of the state.
(l) California enacted Senate Bill 54 of the 2017–18 Regular Session (Chapter 495 of the Statutes of 2017), making this state a “sanctuary state.”
(m) A registry of individuals identified by religion, national origin, or ethnicity, in a list, database, or registry, including that information, could be used by the government to persecute those individuals.
(n) President Trump has repeatedly signaled that he intends to require Muslims to register in a database.
(o) Trump advisers have invoked World War II Japanese American internment as a precedent for the proposed expansion of the registry.
(p) The United States Census Bureau turned over confidential information in 1943, including names and addresses, to help the United States government identify Japanese Americans during World War II for the purpose of relocation.
(q) President Trump has ordered a sweeping expansion of deportations and assigned unprecedented powers to United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers targeting and terrorizing immigrant communities.
(r) President Trump has issued three executive orders banning entry from certain Muslim-majority countries.
(s) ICE’s Enforcement and Removal Operations issued a request for information on August 3, 2017, to obtain commercial subscription data services capable of providing continuous real-time information pertaining to 500,000 identities per month from sources such as state identification numbers, real-time jail booking data, credit history, insurance claims, telephone number account information, wireless telephone accounts, wire transfer data, driver’s license information, vehicle registration information, property information, payday loan information, public court records, incarceration data, employment address data, individual taxpayer identification number (ITIN) data, and employer records.
(t) The United States Department of Homeland Security published a new rule on September 18, 2017, authorizing the collection of social media information on all immigrants, including permanent residents and naturalized citizens.
(u) On September 8, 2017, ICE arrested hundreds of immigrants in intentionally targeted sanctuary cities.
(v) On February 14, 2020, the Trump administration announced that tactical agents from United States Customs and Border Protection will be specifically deployed to sanctuary cities and states to conduct arrests in the interior of the country.
(w) Between October 2014 and July 2018, the Office of Refugee Resettlement received a total of 4,556 allegations of sexual abuse of children in custody, 1,303 of which were referred to the United States Department of Justice.