A group of 20 states are calling for the United States Department of Transportation and Secretary SEAN Duffy for new requirements to cooperate with immigration and the application of the US customs or to end their transport grants.
The dispute comes from a letter Duffy sent to federal transport financing recipients in April, warning that the money could be canceled if the adjudicators establish diversity, equity and inclusion goals or cannot cooperate with the application of immigration. States’ lawyers said that in their complaint, which was filed in the Federal Court of Rhode Island, on May 13, that Dot officials have already begun to include the requirements in funding agreements.
“As recipients of these dowry funds, you have signed legally required agreements with the U.S.
Imposing the immigration execution requirements exceeds the dowry authority, they argue the states, because Congress did not add them as a condition for receiving funding. They also say that the application of immigration is not related to the transport and infrastructure financing programs in question.
Duffy has explained a similar one to explain his withdrawal of the requirements related to the environmental justice and social justice initiatives of Biden of the subsidy agreements, which were realized that these provisions had not been included by Congress in their funding packages. Dot has not yet responded to the lawsuit and the representatives of the Department did not immediately comment on the case.
State’s general lawyers say that the condition is strike as a written and can be widely interpreted as they require their police or other staff to participate in the application of federal immigration, forcing states to pay related administrative costs and add loads to their limited staff, which can have any experience in the application of immigration. This could also expose the states to civil liability in relation to their acts related to the application of federal immigration, wrote state officials in their complaint.
“ We are clear about what happens here: the President threatens to gain funds to improve our roads, keep our aircraft in the air, prepare for emergencies and protect them from terrorist attacks if the states do not meet their demands, ” said California’s Attorney General Rob Bonta in a statement. “It is treating these funds, which have nothing to do with the application of immigration and everything that has to do with the security of our communities, as a negotiation chip.”
The states involved in the dress include California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington and Wisconsin, all with the administrations of democrat.
They want the Rhode Island court to declare the requirements for the application of unconstitutional immigration and prevent Dot from applying or applying. The same states also filed a separate lawsuit against the United States National Security Department for similar issues.