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Today — 27 February 2026Main stream

Community members, public officials push back against ICE expansion into metro Detroit

27 February 2026 at 16:21

Roughly one thousand protesters gathered outside Romulus City Hall this week to voice opposition towards plans for a new Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center. Among the crowd were concerned residents, public officials, faith leaders, and Michiganders from across the state. 

Melody Karr was one of the many protestors picketing the building. She said she lives just an hour away from the detention facility that opened last year in Baldwin and has been to multiple demonstrations protesting it’s opening.

“We don’t need any more concentration camps in Michigan. Anybody that’s paying attention can see that we’re not concentrating on the worst of the worst, that they’re running rampant over our constitutional rights,” said Karr.

City officials say they oppose the detention center

The demonstration preceded the weekly City Council meeting, where a resolution opposing any detention center within city limits was unanimously passed. 

Following the vote, Romulus Mayor Robert McCraight said he and the city are doing everything they can to stop the development of an ICE detention facility. Citing his letter of opposition sent the previous week to ICE Director Todd Lyons and Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem, McCraight said a detention center would conflict with current zoning regulations and be too close to residential homes less than a quarter mile away.

McCraight said that, despite not hearing from any officials on the federal level since news broke, he would do what he could to prevent the plans from moving forward.

“While I’m sitting in this position as mayor, we will not issue a permit or certificate of occupancy for this structure unless we’re mandated by a federal judge,” said McCraight.

As the mayor spoke, demonstrators could be heard chanting outside the building. Only 49 of the protestors outside were let into the meeting due to safety codes set by the fire marshal. Those in attendance reiterated their opposition during public comment.

Residents urge more action

Dan Doyle lives less than a mile from the proposed detention center. He urged the city to do more to stop the plans.

“I’m requesting immediate action. Cut the utilities, condemn the building, demo it, take it under eminent domain, whatever you can do. Make it impossible for them to use our neighborhood for these concentration camps,” said Doyle. “This will not be solved by a harshly worded letter or a resolution. We need action.”

Outside in the bitter cold, protestors continued their picket at city hall. Darrin Camilleri, who represents Romulus as a member of the Michigan Senate, was one of many public officials who came to support demonstrators. So far, Camilleri has been one of the only state legislators to reach out to Romulus officials after the plans for a detention center went public. He said he has been working with the city to uncover details about the building purchased by ICE.

“We know that an auto supplier, they put a bid in to buy this building, but ICE came in and outbid the auto supplier. So the Trump administration is literally taking away American jobs from our community that would love an opportunity like that,” said Camilleri. “Now we’re getting stuck with a detention center that no one wants, and it’s down the street from where people live. It’s down the street from where kids go to school.”

ICE Detention center Romulus, MI
Outside of ICE Detention Center

The building, located at 7525 Cogswell Street, was previously owned by the real estate investment firm Crestlight Capital. John Coury, managing partner at the firm, said he can’t disclose the selling price or the specific agency the building was sold to due to a signed non-disclosure agreement, according to reporting from Crain’s Detroit Business.

Pattern of quiet-buying

Secrecy surrounding these purchases aren’t unique to Romulus, either. In Social Circle, Georgia, officials were blindsided when they heard of plans to convert a warehouse in the city into a detention center. The previous owner of the warehouse, a commercial real estate firm called PNK Group, said they signed an NDA and couldn’t disclose any information to the city or residents. One month later, a deed for the warehouse was obtained that showed the federal government paid over $100 million more than the most recently assessed price.

When asked by WDET if the Romulus warehouse was purchased for an inflated price compared 2025 assessed value of $6,988,500, Crestlight Capital did not respond for comment.

At the time of writing, the city of Romulus has not received any documents indicating how much the property was purchased for.

Southfield ICE offices

Earlier this month, the city released a statement saying offices in Southfield’s One Towne Square were to be leased by the US General Services Administration (GSA) to “support administrative and legal functions associated with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.” 

The statement aligns with reporting from last year that showed the GSA was working with ICE to acquire offices across the country to expand it’s operations

Statements from REDICO, the landlord of the office space, said the lease was with the GSA, not ICE, and “the lease explicitly prohibits any law enforcement, detention or similar activities to take place on the premises.” REDICO’s statement prompted the city to remove their statement on the purchase from its website.

When asked about the city’s removed statement, Southfield Mayor Kenson Siver said he has only heard from REDICO, not GSA or ICE, and the city doesn’t have authority to intervene in tenant/landlord issues as long as they are compliant with zoning laws.

Still, residents and lawmakers are on edge amid the confusion. During the Southfield City Council meeting that took place the same time as the Romulus demonstration, residents packed the building to speak out against any potential presence of ICE in the city.

Romulus City Council Meeting
Protesters wait to be let in at the Romulus City Council meeting. Most are turned away, told that the room already reached capacity.

Southfield resident Lauren Fink said the city still needs to do more to address the offices potentially used in association with ICE.

“I’ve seen statements intended to calm our anxieties about this office opening here in our own community, telling us that this office cannot house armed and uniformed agents,” said Fink. “There seems to be this idea that the work being done by people in offices like this is acceptable, but the work being done by the people they enable is not. That kind of attitude is what allows the horrors of an authoritarian regime to continue.”

Southfield City Council unanimously passed a resolution “affirming community safety, civil rights, and local policy” during the meeting. The resolution does not mention the lease with GSA or the planned office.

A call for community action

Following the possible expansion of ICE in the metro Detroit area, Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib released a statement condemning the encroachment and urging more collective action from the community.

“Across the country, people are coming together and fighting to prevent this massive expansion of ICE’s network of abuse and cruelty. We must organize and use every tool at our disposal to keep ICE out of our neighborhoods,” said Tlaib.

The Southfield office and planned detention center in Romulus come as the Trump administration massively increases the budget for ICE and plans on spending $38.3 billion to turn warehouses across the country into detention centers. Both actions have been made possible through last year’s passing of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which has allocated billions of federal funds for the Trump administration’s mass deportation agenda.

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Before yesterdayMain stream

When an infrastructure fail flooded Southwest Detroit, community put it back together

23 February 2026 at 22:19

During a City Council meeting earlier this month, Councilwoman Gabriela Santiago-Romero critiqued the city’s response to last year’s devastating water main break in the Springwells neighborhood in Southwest Detroit.

 “We all know, and we should know as a city, that we did not do them right,” Santiago-Romero said. “We need to all be actively speaking on this so that we can bring the narrative right, so that we continue, so that we’re able to work on this together.” 

One year ago, a 54-inch water main burst in the neighborhood. During freezing temperatures, water filled the streets early in the morning of Feb. 17, affecting hundreds of residents across several blocks. Homes were damaged. Personal belongings and cars were destroyed, and many of the impacted residents were displaced.

Obstacles to a quick response

The city quickly ran into obstacles in the days following the infrastructure failure.

Many wouldn’t answer their doors. Southwest Detroit is the home of a large immigrant population. After the election of Donald Trump, community members had been preparing neighbors for the increased presence of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). This included advising people to not answer their doors for anyone.

Language also quickly became an obstacle. When city officials who facilitated the evacuation and inspections of flooded homes needed translators, they relied on bilingual community members to volunteer for help.

This is how Sonia Rose, a local business owner and organizer for Detroit Southwest Pride, first got involved.

More people answered their doors once trusted neighbors began to accompany city employees. But Rose said most people answered after they started distributing meals without anyone from the city.

“People started opening up the door cause now they’re a few days hungry, right,”  Rose said. “So, ‘do you need anything?’ ‘Can we get you more stuff? And they’re like, you know, ‘we don’t have blankets’ … So we started to understand what people were needing very, very quickly. Like, before the city was even thinking about stuff.” 

Community fills the gaps

In the days following, a network of individual volunteers, nonprofits, and businesses quickly started to organize and address blind spots in the city’s response. Volunteers on the ground were assigned specific blocks to monitor and help. There was even a community-driven database of needs created by the nonprofit Urban Neighborhood Initiatives.

Rose said that without the coordinated response of the community, the situation could’ve been more dire.

“We didn’t have any deaths. We didn’t have any. And there should have been.”

When the city moved people into hotels, tasks for volunteers grew. Food needed to be delivered outside of the neighborhood when people said they weren’t getting three meals at the hotel or only received junk food like hot dogs, pizza, and bologna sandwiches.

Concerns about ICE followed residents

Veronica Rodriguez was one of the volunteers making regular trips to the hotels, mostly in Southfield. She said that, while ICE was less present in the blocks directly affected by flooding, they increased their focus around the hotels where displaced residents were being housed.

Volunteers would try to monitor ICE activity whenever they provided rides to school or work, but many people were still afraid to leave.

“Most of them weren’t able to get their cars out of here, it was just a mess,” Rodriguez said. “The ones that could get rides from that area were scared cause it was quite away to travel for work. So many lost their jobs or they didn’t work for at least thirty days.”

Rodriguez turned down a job offer so she could assist with the response to the water main break. She described volunteering as a 24/7 task. Many who helped in the first sixty days could be out as late as 10 p.m. Even when she got a job months later, she was still taking calls for residents seeking reimbursement from the city for damages.

“It changed their lives but it also changed mine to where you don’t trust your government,” Rodriguez said. “As much as the City of Detroit and the Water Department want to take credit for the water, the food, the donations, the meals, and all that, 85% of all that was community.”

Laura Chavez, founder of Raices Detroit, was another community member who was deeply involved in the volunteer efforts and offered what she believes is the most important lesson from the city’s response to the water main break: “If community is not a part of the discussion when you’re creating an emergency response program or initiative, then you’re going to miss certain things.”

One year later, freezing temperatures led to over 50 water main breaks across the city. Increasing failures in Detroit’s aging water infrastructure make questions of emergency plans more urgent than ever.

Trusted, accurate, up-to-date.

WDET strives to make our journalism accessible to everyone. As a public media institution, we maintain our journalistic integrity through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today.

Donate today »

The post When an infrastructure fail flooded Southwest Detroit, community put it back together appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

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