Bill
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BILL • US HOUSE

HR 8984

Respect Our Communities Act

119th Congress
Introduced by Joe Morelle,

Requires public notice, 30-day comments, local/state intergovernmental agreement, and congressional reporting before DHS can start new CBP/ICE processing sites or detention centers

Introduced in House
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Bill Summary · HR 8984

Summary of HR 8984 – Respect Our Communities Act

Purpose and intent

  • The bill aims to limit the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) ability to construct, acquire, renovate, or operate any new processing site or detention center for U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) or U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) without specific community engagement and intergovernmental processes.
  • Its core goal is to ensure public participation, state and local government involvement, and advance notice to Congress before such facilities are pursued.

Key provisions and changes

  • Definitions (Section 2)

    • Appropriate Local Government Officials: Includes the elected leaders of the locality where a site would be located (mayor, county executive, etc.) and a majority of the relevant local legislative body (city council, county council, etc.).
    • New Processing Site or Detention Center: Any facility operated or contracted by CBP or ICE, including those designed under the Detention Reengineering Initiative, used to temporarily hold people during immigration removal processes, and that would begin use on or after enactment.
  • Requirements before initiating new facilities (Section 3)

    • Public Notice and Comment: DHS or any federal agency seeking to initiate construction, acquisition, renovation, or operation of a new CBP/ICE site must first issue a public notice in the Federal Register with:
    • A minimum public comment period of 30 days.
    • Description of the scope of the proposed activity.
    • Information about the agency’s due diligence process, including compliance with relevant immigration detention guidance and environmental regulations.
    • Additional information and documentation relevant to the site, including an economic impact analysis and an engineering review addressing waste exportation, water usage, and electricity demand.
    • Community and State Agreement: After the public comment period, the head of the relevant agency must:
    • Consider and respond to significant comments under applicable federal procedures.
    • Enter into a signed, written agreement with appropriate local officials and the state Governor authorizing the proposed construction, acquisition, renovation, or operation.
    • Congressional Advance Notice: At least 30 days after the agency provides a report to key congressional committees (Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, Senate Appropriations, Senate Judiciary, House Homeland Security, House Appropriations, and House Judiciary) containing a fully executed copy of the agreement, the initiative may proceed.
  • Regulatory and procedural sequencing

    • The bill introduces a layered process requiring:
    • Public engagement (30-day comment period) with disclosed scope and assessments.
    • Formal intergovernmental agreement with local and state authorities.
    • A mandatory Congressional reporting/notice window with a fully executed agreement before proceeding.
    • These steps must be completed before DHS/agency can begin construction, acquisition, renovation, or operation of a new facility.

Who would be affected

  • Affected parties include:
    • DHS operating components, primarily CBP and ICE, planning new processing sites or detention centers.
    • Local governments and officials in the jurisdiction where a facility would be located.
    • State governments (Governor’s involvement through the agreement requirement).
    • Congress, via required advance notice and inclusion of the agreement in committee reporting.
    • Communities near proposed facilities, which would gain formal opportunities for public comment and local-state negotiation.

Timing and procedural considerations

  • Public comment period: At least 30 days.
  • Post-comment action: Agency must respond to significant comments and finalize a written intergovernmental agreement.
  • Congressional notice: At least 30 days after a report containing the executed agreement is submitted to specified congressional committees.
  • Overall effect: The bill creates a statutory gatekeeping process that could delay or constrain the initiation of new CBP/ICE processing sites or detention centers absent public input and local/state agreement.

Practical implications

  • Enhanced local and state input into facility planning.
  • Increased transparency through Federal Register notices and public comments.
  • Potential delays in site development due to the added steps and intergovernmental agreements.
  • The bill formalizes a relationship between federal immigration detention planning and local/state authorities, with Congress kept informed through mandatory reporting.

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