Moorhead council and members discuss federal enforcement activity, urge community support while noting legal limits
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Summary
Council members and a read statement from a resident addressed recent federal enforcement actions in Minnesota; speakers urged residents to support affected neighbors, attend trainings and use community resources, while the mayor warned the city has limited legal authority to act against federal operations.
A discussion about recent federal enforcement activity in Minnesota and how Moorhead can support affected community members dominated new business at the Jan. 26 Moorhead City Council meeting.
Council member Emily Moore read a statement from Jessica Hauser honoring the legacy of Alex Preddy and urging residents to "stand up for peace" and to engage in community support. Following the reading, a council member asked the community not to look away from videos and accounts of federal agent activity in the Twin Cities and elsewhere and encouraged residents to attend constitutional observer training and to help neighbors who may be frightened.
Mayor Shelly Carlson acknowledged community pain and thanked city staff — the city manager, police chief, city attorney, government relations director and communications staff — for researching legal parameters and providing timely information. She said the city lacks legal authority to bar federal agents, prohibit face coverings for federal agents, or order local officers to intervene in federal operations; those questions, she said, are governed by state and federal law and are being litigated in courts.
Other council members urged community engagement and resources: Council member Heather Niesmeyer offered multilingual "know your rights" cards and described local nonprofit resources; Council member Wayne emphasized public safety and thanked staff; former county attorney Lisa Borgen cautioned against broad claims that local law enforcement does not work with federal agencies and highlighted training differences among agencies while acknowledging community concerns.
Why it matters: Residents raised urgent public-safety and civil‑rights concerns stemming from federal enforcement actions elsewhere in Minnesota. The council used the public meeting to surface those concerns, provide resources, and clarify the city's constrained legal authority.
What’s next: Council members and staff will continue community outreach, provide information about legal parameters, and coordinate with regional partners as requested by affected residents.

