“It was a shocker.”
That’s what Chapel Hill Mayor Pam Hemminger said on WCHL last week after agents with Immigrations and Customs Enforcement detained several Orange County residents. “We don’t get advanced notice; we don’t know why they’re here…we do not support this; we do not participate in this.”
Hemminger said there are still many unanswered questions.
“We’re not sure what prompted ICE to come here,” Hemminger said. “We don’t send information [to ICE]; we don’t know if they’re looking for someone, in particular.
“They just established that they have the right to do this.”
Authorities across Orange County have a history of not prioritizing immigration status during law enforcement, including supporting the Faith ID initiative. The effort provides residents – undocumented and documented – with identification cards that are accepted by local police. A Faith ID drive and Know Your Rights seminar was organized by the community advocacy group El Centro Hispano and held in Carrboro on Saturday.
Community Engagement and Advocacy manager at El Centro Eliazar Posada said that the message at these events is simple.
“Everyone has rights, regardless of their status,” Posada said.
Posada said that getting local law enforcement in contact with undocumented residents allows for an opportunity to answers community concerns.
“With a statement and the presence there,” Posada said, “we believe that folks will be reassured that the local law enforcement and elected officials are there to serve them and not to serve a political agenda on the federal level.”
Chapel Hill Police Chief Chris Blue said events like last week’s arrests send shockwaves through the community and erode at work done by local law enforcement to build trust with residents.
“Our position remains unchanged in our community regarding local law enforcement’s role in immigration matters,” Blue said. “But, we recognize when there’s an unexpected presence like happened this week, people are understandably concerned.”
Blue said that he had been encouraged by how many residents called the police department asking for information, which he said proved that the department had already built relationships with the community members.
“I do think that that consistency of message and backing it up with presence and being available to ask questions and to understand when that suspicion may surface has helped us make those relationships really strong.”
Overall, Blue said that there would be no change in the mindset of Chapel Hill Police.
“The ‘Guardians of the Hill’ serve everybody the same way,” the police chief said. “That has not changed and will not change.”
El Centro, meanwhile, has established a GoFundMe campaign hoping to raise $30,000 to cover the legal fees of those who had been detained.
Related Stories
‹

Here Are Ways You Can Donate to Local Drives for Hurricane Helene ReliefAfter Hurricane Helene devastated western North Carolina last week, numerous local organizations, businesses and schools have set up donation drives to help those affected. Below is a list of drives around our area, in alphabetical order by the group: All About Insurance shifted its regular Sock-Tober clothing drive to exclusively support Hurricane Helene relief efforts. […]

Carrboro Businesses Pledge Donation Days to Support The ArtsCenter for Its 50th AnniversaryThe ArtsCenter announced a lineup of businesses participating in "Artstober" to help raise money for and spread awareness of its operations.

Breakaway Carrboro Reopens After Appliance Fire Injures 1Breakaway Carrboro shared on social media Tuesday that a fire broke out during repairs to some of its kitchen equipment.

Club Nova Breaks Ground on New Facility in CarrboroOne local nonprofit held a groundbreaking ceremony for its new clubhouse in Carrboro earlier this month.

U.S. Female Firefighters Fight Discrimination with LawsuitsThe highest ranking female firefighter in Asheville, North Carolina, says she was repeatedly discriminated against because of her sex and fought to keep her job while battling breast cancer. The first female chief of a municipal fire department in the state says she briefly pondered suicide after years of sexual harassment. Joy Ponder and Susanna […]

Fire in Carrboro Townhome Community Displaces FamilyAn overnight fire off Highway 54 left one Carrboro family displaced Friday morning, according to reports. The Town of Carrboro shared a release detailing its fire department’s response to a townhouse fire in the early morning hours. Town officials say the fire began in a six-unit building in the Chambers Ridge community on Cedarwood Lane, […]

Carrboro United, El Centro Partner to Give Groceries to 300 FamiliesA popular Carrboro food initiative’s efforts to raise money for community members in need paid off this past month. Carrboro United partnered with the El Centro Hispano organization to distribute one week’s worth of groceries to more than 300 families in the Rogers-Eubanks Neighborhood community and others connected to the Latinx non-profit. According to a […]
![]()
Orange County Animal Services Receives 7,500 Pounds of Pet Food as DonationAfter a community outpouring of support for a fundraiser to help Orange County Animals Services handle overcrowding, a Virginia-based agricultural company also made a big donation. The GoFundMe reached its $10,000 goal less than a week after the Orange County Animal Services promoted it through a release. But the department received other exciting news for […]

Vigils Press for Action Against Policies Targeting Immigrant CommunitiesThere were drums and musical performances on the Carrboro town commons on Friday evening as a large crowd gathered for a vigil protesting the treatment of migrants in the United States and along the Mexico-U.S. border. This vigil was one of hundreds of similar events on July 12 across the United States and in several […]

Orange County Officials Attempt to Reassure at El Centro Hispano Event After ICE RaidsThat’s what Chapel Hill Mayor Pam Hemminger said on WCHL last week after agents with Immigrations and Customs Enforcement detained several Orange County residents. “We don’t get advanced notice; we don’t know why they’re here…we do not support this; we do not participate in this.” Hemminger said there are still many […]
›