This spring, detainees at NORCOR went on a hunger strike to bring attention to the poor conditions at the jail. Local residents and clergy formed a group called the Gorge ICE Resistance and have held rallies and protests outside the jail in support of the detainees.
“People detained at NORCOR and Gorge community members are demanding an end to the unconscionable conditions inside NORCOR,” said Hannah Harrod with the Rural Organizing Project, a statewide network of over 60 all-volunteer groups working for democracy and human dignity. “Gorge communities are setting a powerful example of a community prioritizing the safety and well-being of their neighbors above the racist policies that are tearing apart families and the fabric of entire communities.”
Solea Kabakov, a resident of The Dalles and a leader with the Gorge ICE Resistance, said the situation at NORCOR has rocked the Gorge community.
“Not only are we fundamentally against the unjust detention and deportation policies in effect nationwide, we recognize that the situation at NORCOR is an even greater injustice due to our jail being woefully unequipped to house civil detainees,” said Kabakov. “This is a human rights crisis.”
Dos Santos said NORCOR, which serves four Oregon counties, is regularly holding between five and 30 ICE detainees, a number which could climb dramatically as the Trump administration initiates nationwide immigration enforcement actions. Last year, the jail brought in $500,000 from the federal government for imprisoning immigrants awaiting asylum and deportation hearings. This year, the payments are expected to climb to over one million dollars.
“NORCOR is profiting off of President Trump’s cruel immigration enforcement surge and underwriting the jail on the backs of immigrants,” dos Santos said.
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