Only 2 of the 28 local politicians invited to hear stories from families affected by ICE terrorism even bothered to show up to the Cosecha community forum
On Saturday, Movimiento Cosecha and GR Rapid Response to ICE held a public forum to hear stories from members of the immigrant community that have been terrorized by ICE. All Grand Rapids City Commissioners and County Commissioners were invited 3 weeks prior to the forum. Out of the 28 commissioners, only 2 showed up.
Cosecha organizers facilitated the first half of the forum stating, “This forum is not about closed-door conversations, It is about public accountability and listening to the people most directly impacted.
We also know time is limited. We had hoped that Mayor LaGrand, along with the other absent commissioners, would have taken at least thirty minutes out of their day to listen to the very people who put them in power. Their absence is felt, noted, and will be remembered by our community.
We thank those of you who are here, and we ask you, our elected officials, to use these moments wisely: to listen deeply, to reflect on what leadership and public accountability truly mean to you, and to stand with us in dignity, safety, and solidarity by proposing and passing local ordinances that provide real protections for our entire community, regardless of immigration status.
The forum was live-streamed, but you can watch the video here.
Stories from Immigrants who were terrorized by ICE
The Story of Carlos Menjivar and His Family – Carlos Menjivar, his wife Johanna, and their children fled violence in El Salvador and settled in Grand Rapids in 2017. They built a life here, followed every rule, and never missed an ISAP/immigration check-in. When their refugee status was terminated, ICE offered them Voluntary Departure. The family complied, purchasing plane tickets back to El Salvador. But on June 4, 2025, when Carlos attended his ISAP check-in in Grand Rapids to show proof of their tickets and passports, ICE agents detained him instead, confiscating the family’s documents. He was taken first to Calhoun County Jail and then to an overcrowded detention center in Louisiana, where he was held in solitary with other detainees. Carlos’s detention devastated his family. Johanna and their three children were left vulnerable, terrified of further separation, and unable to leave the country without their passports. Forced to abandon their home and belongings, they sought refuge in a sanctuary church. Movimiento Cosecha GR, GR Rapid Response to ICE, and Fountain Street Church rallied to support the family and demand Carlos’s release. He deserves to return to El Salvador with dignity, alongside his family, not deported like a criminal after honoring every requirement of the immigration system.
The story of the family with the newborn baby – A father, the only one in the household working at the time to support his family, was unexpectedly detained by ICE. Without explanation or the chance to say goodbye, he was immediately deported, leaving behind his wife, who had just given birth to their youngest daughter two months earlier. From that day on, she was forced to take on all the household responsibilities alone, facing not only the pain of separation but also the enormous burden of providing for her family without one of its most important pillars: her husband and the father of her children. With admirable strength, this mother began cooking from home to earn a living for her family. She wakes up every day at 1 a.m. to prepare a wide variety of foods — tortas, empanadas, enchiladas, champurrado, rice pudding, and fresh drinks — which she sells to workers who start their day very early. She does all this while also caring for her children, including her newborn. This story not only highlights a deep injustice but also the courage and tireless effort of a mother who, despite the adversity, refuses to give up.
The story of the deported person who was injured and lost their sight. – A devoted father, originally from Mexico, a country where violence is far too common, was deported just two months ago. His sudden removal left his wife and children in the U.S. heartbroken and confused, struggling to understand how one of the main pillars of their home could be taken away without warning. As devastating as his absence was, the worst was still to come. Upon arriving in Mexico, a country he had not called home in over 20 years, this loving father was violently attacked. He was beaten and robbed, leaving him in a coma for nearly a month. When he finally regained consciousness, his life had changed forever: the assault left him *completely blind and unable to walk*. He was discharged from the hospital in a wheelchair, facing a terrifying and uncertain future. Physically disabled, separated from his family, and forced to survive in a place he no longer knows, he now endures daily struggles that no one should have to face, especially alone. What began as a heartbreaking deportation has now become a profound tragedy. A man who once worked tirelessly for the well-being of his family now finds himself dependent and vulnerable, far from the people who love him the most
The story of Britany was done via video, which you can watch here.
The story of a Guatemalan business owner who was arrested by ICE and deported – In February, ICE detained a Guatemalan man who owned Tienda Xela at 1509 Cesar Chavez Way SW in Grand Rapids. He and his wife had run their family business for more than a decade. Now, his wife is left to manage it alone.
The story of a family with 5 children – Just days ago, ICE arrested another Guatemalan man at 28th Street and Clyde Park. He was sent to an ICE detention center, leaving behind his wife and five young children with no source of income. While we have been raising funds and connecting them to resources, these children may never see their father again. This is what family separation looks like.
Sanctuary Policies
Cosecha organizers then shifted the conversation to two commissioners who attended the community forum and urged them to pass the sanctuary policies that both Movimiento Cosecha and GR Rapids Response have been demanding since the beginning of 2025.
- Policies restricting the ability of state and local police to make arrests for federal immigration violations, or to detain individuals on civil immigration warrants.
- Policies restricting the police or other city workers from asking about immigration status.
- Policies prohibiting “287(g)” agreements through which ICE deputizes local law enforcement officers to enforce federal immigration law.
- Policies that prevent local governments from entering into a contract with the federal government to hold immigrants in detention;
- Policies preventing immigration detention centers from being established in Grand Rapids.
- A policy that will not allow the GRPD to share Flock camera images or any other information gathered by the city of Grand Rapids with ICE or any other law enforcement agency seeking to arrest, detain and deport immigrants.
Grand Rapids City Commissioner Ysasi spoke a great deal when asked to respond to the requests to adopt these sanctuary policies. Commissioner Ysasi would not acknowledge that the GRPD was cooperating with ICE, even though Cosecha and GR Rapid Response to ICE have witnessed the cooperation numerous times over the past 9 months. Commissioner Ysasi also said she didn’t think sanctuary would “do any good.” This comment probably had more to do with her belief that the forum organizers were asking the City to declare themselves a sanctuary, when in fact what Cosecha has been saying all along is to adopt concrete sanctuary policies and not the symbolic sanctuary status. One other strange comment from Commissioner Ysasi had to do with looking at the City’s Master Plan and city codes, which would be more productive than doing things like getting the city to oppose the construction of an ICE detention facility in the city. Commissioner Ysasi would not commit to any of the sanctuary policies listed above.
Kent County Commissioner Morales talked about how the county would not take a position on immigration matters, since it is a federal issue and they deal only with county issues. Morales also believed that the Kent County Sheriff was doing a good job, but this statement flies in the face of what we know to be just the opposite. While the County no longer has a contract with ICE, which Cosecha and GR Rapid Response to ICE helped to end in 2019, the Sheriff’s department continues to cooperate with ICE regarding people who are in the county jail who are undocumented. The Sheriff’s department contacts ICE about undocumented immigrants who then get sent to a detention facility. Commissioner Morales also suggested to those in attendance that they should run for a county commission seat or for sheriff, even they wanted to make real changes. Commissioner Morales would not commit to adopting any of the sanctuary policies listed above.
A Movimiento Cosecha organizer said at the end: “At today’s forum, 26 empty chairs reminded us that too many of our leaders would rather look away than face the truth. But our community will not be ignored. We will continue to organize, to tell our stories, and to demand sanctuary policies that protect every family. Local leaders must choose: either stand with us in dignity and safety, or stand complicit with ICE’s cruelty.”
Palestine Solidarity Information and Analysis for the week of September 28
It has been nearly 2 years since the Israeli government began their most recent assault on Gaza and the West Bank. The retaliation for the October 7, 2023 Hamas attack in Israel, has escalated to what the international community has called genocide, therefore, GRIID will be providing weekly links to information and analysis that we think can better inform us of what is happening, along with the role that the US government is playing. All of this information is to provide people with the capacity of what Noam Chomsky refers to as, intellectual self-defense.
Information
“Gaza Is Burning”: How Zionist Hate Fuels Genocide?
Israel Gives Evacuation Orders Before a Bombing. Many Gazan Families Can’t Afford to Leave
Zionist terror attacks surge across West Bank
How the West Normalizes the Crimes of Zionism
When Genocide Is Confirmed, But Nothing Changes
Israel strikes 170 targets in Gaza; Trump unveils 21-point Gaza framework
WHAT IT’S LIKE ON THE GAZA-BOUND FLOTILLA ATTACKED BY DRONES
Analysis & History
A Comment On the New UN Report On Gaza
“On Our Way to Annihilation”: Al Jazeera’s Hani Mahmoud Reports Live from Outside Gaza City
Image used in this post is from https://visualizingpalestine.org/visual/anti-palestinian-racism-healthcare/
Why is Rep. Scholten celebrating a DeVos created charter school?
Recently, Rep. Hillary Scholten posted a picture of herself in front of the West Michigan Aviation Academy, which is located next to the Gerald R. Ford Airport.
The photo of Scholten in front of the DeVos created school is accompanied by these words:
“At a time when aviation professionals are needed more than ever, the West Michigan Aviation Academy is a huge asset to our community and our nation. It’s a launching pad for high schoolers interested in the aviation field, allowing them to SOAR to new heights. Always great to pay a visit to the students and instructors there!”
Some people might say that since Scholten is on the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure she should meet with institutions that are connected to transportation. This would be nothing more than a weak apologetic argument that doesn’t reflect the real context in this case.
Dick DeVos created the West Michigan Aviation Academy in 2010. Dick and Betsy DeVos have been at the forefront of the anti-public education movement for more than four decades. They both embraced the Heritage Foundation’s effort to undermine the public school system, which began during the Reagan years.
In 2000, Betsy DeVos led a campaign to put the issue of school vouchers on the ballot in Michigan. That ballot initiative failed, but DeVos did not give up. Betsy made the decision to diversify the kind of tactics that the so-called School Choice movement would use in the years to come. These tactics included financially backing candidates at the state and federal level, candidates who would push for an anti-public education platform, creating new anti-public education front groups like the Great Lakes Education Project and attacking teacher unions across the country.
This is why it is so egregious for Rep. Scholten to engage in a photo op in front of the West Michigan Aviation Academy. Scholten knows exactly who runs and funds this school, which is the same family that has helped get Donald Trump and other Republicans like him elected to office locally, across Michigan and at the federal level.
Lastly, where was Rep. Scholten in recent weeks when the teachers from the Grand Rapids Public Schools were showing up in big numbers to demand better pay? Rep. Scholten didn’t show up for public school teachers in Grand Rapids, she chose to engage in a photo op at a charter school created by the DeVos family.
Community forum will share stories of how ICE is impacting the immigrant community, and an opportunity to discuss sanctuary policies in Grand Rapids
On Saturday, Movimiento Cosecha and GR Rapid Response to ICE are hosting an event entitled, How ICE does harm to families in Kent County: A Community Forum. The event description says:
This forum is specifically designed for two reasons. First, we want to create a safe space for people who have been impacted by the harm that ICE/La Migra has done in Kent County to talk about the fear they experience and the trauma of having family members abducted by ICE. In addition, Movimiento Cosecha and GR Rapid Response to ICE have invited Grand Rapids and Kent County Commissioners to attend, listen to what the affected community is experiencing, and to have a conversation about the sanctuary policies that have been presented to City and County Commissioners since the beginning of 2025.
Hearing from members of the affected community is vitally important, not only to know how people are being impacted by ICE repression, but these stories can also act as a catalyst to move people to want to become involved.
Movimiento Cosecha invited the Mayor of Grand Rapids, all 6 six City Commissioners, along with the 21 Kent County Commissioners, all of which would benefit from hearing stories of those most affected by ICE repression.
During the late July Grand Rapids City Commission meeting, several commissioners said that they were open to having a conversation about the sanctuary policies being put forth by Movimiento Cosecha and GR Rapids Response to ICE. However, some commissioners thought it was “unfortunate” that the immigrant justice activists didn’t stick around after the commission meeting to further the dialogue. I’m not sure if the commissioners were even paying attention, since after roughly 50 people urged the city to adopt the sanctuary policies Movimiento Cosecha and GR Rapids Response to ICE, the activist engaged in a disruptive action. The Mayor of Grand Rapids then instructed GRPD officers to arrest activists if they didn’t leave. Thus, the commissioner’s comments about people not sticking around had to do with the fact that they did not want to get arrested at that time.
In addition, Cosecha organizers did not want to have a conversation about sanctuary policies and ICE repression in Grand Rapids behind closed doors with specific commissioners. Cosecha’s approach to being in conversation with local elected officials is to invite them to a public forum where people can hear each other openly, rather than meeting behind closed doors, which limits accountability.
As a reminder, here are the sanctuary policies that Cosecha and GR Rapid Response to ICE are wanting the City and the County to adopt:
- Policies restricting the ability of state and local police to make arrests for federal immigration violations, or to detain individuals on civil immigration warrants.
- Policies restricting the police or other city workers from asking about immigration status.
- Policies prohibiting “287(g)” agreements through which ICE deputizes local law enforcement officers to enforce federal immigration law.
- Policies that prevent local governments from entering into a contract with the federal government to hold immigrants in detention;
- Policies preventing immigration detention centers from being established in Grand Rapids.
- A policy that will not allow the GRPD to share Flock camera images or any other information gathered by the city of Grand Rapids with ICE or any other law enforcement agency seeking to arrest, detain and deport immigrants.
These policies are vitally important, especially now when the $170 billion of addition funding for immigration enforcement is being spent throughout the country. These additional funds for ICE and other immigration enforcement agencies will mean more ICE agents and more resources, such as the recent news about ICE looking to rent additional office space in Grand Rapids, which I wrote about earlier this week.
We are at a critical juncture right now, so it is vitally important that we do whatever we can to be in solidarity with immigrants in this community and not succumb to fear.
The Cosecha hosted community forum begins at 12:00pm, this Saturday, September 27. The forum will be held at the SECOM Resource Center located at 1545 Buchanan Ave. SW, Grand Rapids. Members of GR Rapid Response will be there as Crowd Safety to prevent ICE or police repression.
“Michigan House Speaker Matt Hall recently praised the WMPF and Board Chair John Kennedy for backing House Republicans’ focus on core needs—like fixing roads and protecting pensions—while cutting red tape and rejecting tax hikes.”
The quote above was taken from the Facebook page of the West Michigan Policy Forum. In fact, in a video clip what was included in the WMPF Facebook page, Republican leader of the Michigan House said the West Michigan Policy Forum is, “the most respected policy organization in the State of Michigan.”
So, why would Rep. Matt Hall make such a claim about the West Michigan Policy Forum? It could be because Rep. Hall has been the recipient of campaign funds from several board members of the West Michigan Policy Forum since 2017.
However, I believe that the reason the current Speaker of the Michigan House praises the West Michigan Policy Forum is because they are the best policy organization in the state. To be clear, when I say the West Michigan Policy Forum is the best policy forum in the state, I mean that they have had the largest impact on state policy since they were founded in 2008.
The West Michigan Policy Forum was an outgrowth of the Grand Rapids Chamber of Commerce, with the intent of working to influence state policy in Michigan. Their Leadership Team and their Board of Directors are pretty much a who’s who of the wealthiest people and most politically powerful in the area. If you look at their list of achievements it is an impressive list of ways they have won policies at the state level, policies that benefit their ideological, political and economic interests.
GRIID has been tracking the West Michigan Policy Forum since they first hosted their massive policy conferences in 2010. Since then, I have written over 50 articles on the organization that House Speaker Matt Hall praises because they have had a tremendous impact on economic policies at the state level, on taxes, public education, environmental regulation, development issues, labor unions and wages. The West Michigan Policy Forum is also an integral part of the Grand Rapids Power Structure and is one of only a handful of groups that wield tremendous power in this city.
I rarely agree with politicians regardless of the party they belong to, but I agree with House Speaker Matt Hall that the West Michigan Policy Forum is the most effective policy organization in the state. And this point should scare the shit out of us, or at least those of us who care about collective liberation. Whatever social movements we are part of, whatever organization we are part of, and whatever autonomous groups were are involved in, we cannot afford to ignore the role that the West Michigan Policy Forum plays in state politics.
Movimiento Cosecha organizers call out Senator Slotkin for not responding to their requests and for not challenging the Trump Administration’s immigration policies
On Monday, the immigrant-led group Movimiento Cosecha organized a rally just outside the federal building in Grand Rapids.
They gathered there to call attention to a fellow Cosecha comrade, who is currently sitting in an ICE detention facility in Texas. In a Press Advisory that Cosecha sent out they wrote:
Last week, an immigration judge confirmed that Catalina “Xóchitl” Santiago cannot be deported because she is protected under DACA. Yet, instead of releasing her, ICE continues to keep her detained in El Paso while it appeals the case. Meanwhile, Senator Slotkin has not responded to repeated community appeals for her leadership.
While Cosecha members were leading a small rally, two people who were not at risk of being apprehended by ICE or the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) went into the federal building to deliver a stack of letters that people from this community had written to Senator Slotkin to use her power as a Senator to get Catalina “Xóchitl” Santiago released from detention in Texas.
You can watch the video that Cosecha took regarding the rally at this link.
The two people who delivered the letters to Senator Slotkin’s office let everyone know that the Senator was not in and the office looked pretty dark. However, one of Slotkin’s staff members came to the door, took the letters and said that the letters would be “processed” and that the messages would be given to Senator Slotkin.
You see, there was no back and forth, no commentary from the Senator’s staffer about the issue of ICE and immigrants in detention, nor the specific case of Catalina “Xóchitl” Santiago, or the fact that Senator Slotkin has failed to respond to this issue or Cosecha’s requests.
For the immigrant-led group Movimiento Cosecha the failure of Senator Slotkin to fight for immigrants or to even respond to immigrant demands is not surprising. Movimiento Cosecha organizers are used to unresponsive politicians and politicians who don’t fight for immigrant justice, both Republicans and Democrats. Let’s talk about the reason why.
Last week I noted in an article entitled, When rhetoric and voting records don’t match up: Sen. Slotkin on immigration and ICE, that the Michigan Senator doesn’t a great track record regarding immigration policies and immigrants. In fact, if you go back and look at her voting record while she was a representative, Slotkin didn’t have a problem with the several million immigrants that were deported during the Biden Administration, plus she voted for funding to further militarize the US/Mexican border.
We have to come to terms with the fact that Republicans and Democrats have pretty consistently voted against any real progressive immigration policies, as I noted in an article earlier this year. This is also the point of Daniel Denvir’s book, All-American Nativism: How the Bipartisan War on Immigrants Explains Politics as We Know It.
It doesn’t matter if there are lots of voters who oppose repressive immigration policies, members of Congress have not voted to adopt an immigration justice platform. One difference between the Biden and Trump Administration’s is their rhetoric. The Democrats use less xenophobic rhetoric, while the Republicans are very up front about hating on undocumented immigrants. However, the practice of both parties on immigration has been very similar.
This leads us to the reality of why Senator Slotkin and many other Democratic politicians will not fight for immigrant justice, because they know that Democratic voters will continue to vote for them. Democratic voters will continue to vote for people like Senator Slotkin because they are not as evil as the Republicans. Therefore, there is no incentive for Democratic politicians to fight for immigrant justice, since they only need to be the lesser of evil when it comes to immigration and immigrants.
This is exactly why Movimiento Cosecha does not engage in partisan politics, or as they say, they don’t dance with politicians. Movimiento Cosecha believes in social movements and the power that comes with organized resistance. Putting our faith in politicians is a dead end, since they only time they do the right thing is when they are forced to by organized resistance. This is essentially the history of the US regarding how change happens, which is so well documented in Howard Zinn’s book, A People’s History of the United States.
Where is Senator Slotkin on the issue of immigrants and immigrant justice you ask? She is doing what most politicians do, which is to maintain the status quo, which means supporting the ongoing arrest of immigrants by ICE, the detention of immigrants, and the deportation of immigrants, regardless of who sits in the White House. Slotkin is not on the side of immigrant justice.
Did property management companies or Real Estate Investment businesses lease office space to ICE in Grand Rapids recently?
Last week, the General Services Administration — the U.S. agency that manages government facilities and procurement – posted a solicitation for “as-is, fully-finished and furnished office space in support of administrative operations for law enforcement” in 19 cities across the country. The listing estimates each lease would include workstations for 70 people and notes the “unique” quick period of one week to submit bids, according to a report from NPR.
Of the 19 cities in the US that were named in the NPR story Grand Rapids is one of them.
- Cities/States: Birmingham, AL; Boise, ID; Charleston, SC; Columbia, SC; Columbus, OH; Des Moines, IA; Fort Lauderdale/Sunrise, FL; Fort Myers/Naples, FL; Grand Rapids, MI; Jacksonville, FL; Louisville, KY; Milwaukee, WI; Oklahoma City, OK; Pittsburgh, PA; Raleigh, NC; Richmond, VA; Spokane, WA; St. Louis, MO; Tampa, FL
I did a quick search for office space that was available for leasing and found dozens of listings in Grand Rapids, which included on Wealthy Street, the Beltline, Knapp’s Corners, on Monroe Center and even in the Grand Rapids Downtown Market. Most of these listing include the name of the company that ICE could rent space from, like NAI Wisinski of West Michigan.
In 2018, Movimiento Cosecha GR and GR Rapid Response to ICE held and action and began a campaign to boycott the Edmark Development Company in Grand Rapids, which was renting space to ICE at that time.
The kind of office space that ICE wants to lease must be fully furnished and meet specific requirements, requirements you can read about at this link.
This scramble by ICE to rent office space is part of the $170 billion allocated for “immigration enforcement”, which was part of the Big Beautiful Bill Act that was adopted earlier this year. The $170 billion will be distributed to numerous immigration enforcement agencies and private entities, which the National Immigration Law Center breaks down in a recent post.
This money goes to federal agencies, with the largest amounts to Immigration & Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP), including:
- $30 billion to detain and deport more immigrants, more quickly
- $45 billion to build new immigrant detention facilities
- $47 billion to build more border walls and other barriers
- $16 billion for increased border security, including surveillance and technology
- $14 billion for state and local agencies that participate in immigration enforcement
- $12 billion for more Border Patrol checkpoints, vehicles, and agents
An additional $11 billion goes to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Department of Defense, Department of Justice, and the Bureau of Prisons for uses including immigration enforcement and detention. The Office of Refugee Resettlement gets $330 million for extreme vetting of unaccompanied children and their sponsors.
The fact that ICE has probably decided to rent office space in Grand Rapids is probably a consequence of the Grand Rapids City Commission’s refusal to adopt the Sanctuary policies that Movimiento Cosecha and GR Rapid Response to ICE have been pushing for since the beginning of the year. It further demonstrates that the City of Grand Rapids puts undocumented immigrants at greater risk by not adopting Sanctuary policies that would make it harder for private entities to rent office space to ICE. Since the public cannot rely on local government to keep people safe, they should look to social movements to make that happen. If you have information on ICE renting office space in Grand Rapids recently, please contact GR Rapid Response to ICE info@grrapidresponsetoice.org.
With the increase number of ICE agents that will be operating in Kent County, there will no doubt be an increase in ICE arrests. If you want to be part of the community-based work that is resisting ICE, contact GR Rapid Response to ICE and sign up for their next training on October 21st.
Palestine Solidarity Information and Analysis for the week of September 21
It has been more than 23 months since the Israeli government began their most recent assault on Gaza and the West Bank. The retaliation for the October 7, 2023 Hamas attack in Israel, has escalated to what the international community has called genocide, therefore, GRIID will be providing weekly links to information and analysis that we think can better inform us of what is happening, along with the role that the US government is playing. All of this information is to provide people with the capacity of what Noam Chomsky refers to as, intellectual self-defense.
Information
15K Gaza Students Have Been Killed. Survivors Are Denied Their Education
Housing Ethnic Cleansing: How Airbnb Legitimizes Occupation
Trump Sanctions Palestinian Human Rights Groups for Doing Their Job. Anybody Could Be Next
Analysis & History
1948: Israel, South Africa, and the Question of Genocide
Israel expands aggression across the region as it moves to obliterate Gaza City
“Perish or Leave”: Hundreds of Thousands Flee As Israeli Military Invades Gaza City
Image used in this post is from https://visualizingpalestine.org/visual/anti-palestinian-racism-healthcare/













