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Multnomah County extends emergency declaration tied to federal immigration enforcement through April 11

January 09, 2026 | Multnomah County, Oregon


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Multnomah County extends emergency declaration tied to federal immigration enforcement through April 11
Chair Veil Peterson asked the board to extend a 30-day emergency declaration she issued Dec. 12 in response to federal immigration enforcement impacts; the board unanimously approved a 90-day extension through April 11, 2026.

Peterson described outreach from neighbors in the Brentwood-Darlington neighborhood who sought help locating two community members, Mario Cruz and Magdalena, who were taken into ICE custody the day after Christmas. "Both Mauro and Magdalena were the primary breadwinners for their families," she said, urging support for families affected by ICE activity and arguing the extension will preserve operational flexibility, including the ability to suspend purchasing rules to accelerate getting resources into the community.

Commissioners spoke in support. Commissioner Broom Edwards and Commissioner Moyer both expressed strong backing, stressing that local governments must use every available lever to protect community members while acknowledging legal limits on local authority. Public testimony from commenter Lightning urged investment in body-worn cameras for corrections staff and broader community protections; the board heard the testimony but took no immediate action on that specific request.

Motion and vote: Commissioner Jones Dixon moved and Commissioner Moyer seconded the extension; the board adopted the resolution in a roll-call vote with affirmative votes from commissioners present.

Next steps: The emergency declaration extension authorizes continued use of emergency operations coordination and provides county leaders flexibility to deploy resources to communities impacted by federal immigration enforcement while the county pursues additional measures and a related ordinance.

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