TEXAS (KXXV) — A Texas Senate panel on Monday heard a mix of staunch opposition and measured support for a bill that would require sheriffs to collaborate with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
Sheriffs of Texas counties with more than 100,000 residents would be mandated to request and enter partnerships with ICE — known as 287(g) agreements — under Senate Bill 8, filed by state Sen. Charles Schwertner, R-Georgetown.
SB 8 — designated a top priority by Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick — would offer some funds for sheriffs of counties with fewer than 1 million residents to partner with ICE for performing limited immigration enforcement but not for the largest Texas counties. Gov. Greg Abbott has also endorsed the idea.
ICE has three models for 287(g) agreements. Two are for local jails, where officers can be deputized to question inmates about their immigration status or serve administrative warrants. In the field, officers can be permitted to question people about their immigration status through a program the Trump administration has revived after it fell into disuse following allegations it led to racial profiling.
Forty-three Texas law enforcement agencies had 287(g) agreements in place as of early March, all but three of which are for the jail programs, according to ICE.
On Monday, the calculated endorsements of SB 8 came from sheriffs concerned about the strain it could place on their budgets and resources, immigration hardliners who said the bill did not go far enough and at least one representative from a left-leaning advocacy group who said that with modifications it could be legislation the group “could” let go of their opposition.
Among those who testified before the Senate State Affairs committee was Chambers County Sheriff Brian Hawthorne, who also serves as the legislative chair of the Sheriffs’ Association of Texas.
Hawthorne said the group supported the bill, but not every member supported making ICE agreements mandatory because many sheriffs already operate under tight budgets and adding more responsibilities costs money.
“This could potentially be another budget issue,” Hawthorne testified. “We think it would be wonderful for the state Legislature to fund the program.”
Other sheriffs raised concerns about the staffing impact of sending officers to the ICE training for the program, which means traveling to the East Coast for several weeks. During an exchange about those worries, Schwertner said President Donald Trump’s immigration adviser, Tom Homan, is considering shortening the training and holding regional training sessions.
Chris Russo, the president of anti-immigration group Texans for Strong Borders, testified that the 287(g) program is essential to strengthen interior immigration enforcement but that SB 8 should require all Texas law enforcement, not just sheriffs, to enter into the agreements.
“Although we support this bill, we think the mandate for participation should be broadened,” Russo said.
Luis Figueroa of Every Texan, a public policy group that advocates for equity, told lawmakers it was “problematic” to pass costs onto counties and that SB 8 could be strengthened by limiting it to the jail programs and ensuring that any agreements require training. Still, the group was worried about the blurring of jurisdictional lines between local and federal authorities, who have long been solely responsible for immigration enforcement, he said.
“Would your organization support the bill with those changes?” Schwertner asked Figueroa.
“I think we could let it go,” Figueroa said. “If we could limit this to jails, that would be a very big improvement to the bill, and we'd love to work with you on that.”
Meanwhile, a series of speakers from organizations, including the American Civil Liberties Union and the Texas Civil Rights Project, blasted the bill as a waste of money and a slippery slope into racial profiling.
“This is a completely unfunded mandate,” said Sarah Cruz of the ACLU of Texas, pointing to Harris County — the state’s most populous — ending its participation in the program a few years ago after determining money was better spent on bolstering public safety through other initiatives. “How much more are we willing to put towards an anti-immigrant agenda than the needs of our communities?”
Disclosure: Every Texan has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism. Find a complete list of them here.
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This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2025/03/17/texas-legislature-immigrants-ice-partnerships-sheriffs-requirement/.
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