Ron DeSantis' Immigration Crackdown Could Prove Costly
A new directive could impose a hefty financial burden on state taxpayers and reduce community trust toward police.

Last week, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed legislation and announced new actions related to immigration enforcement in the state. Among them is a policy that could impose a hefty financial burden on state taxpayers and reduce community trust toward police.
S.B. 1808 requires each law enforcement agency in Florida that operates a county detention facility to enter into an agreement with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Under a so-called 287(g) agreement, state and local law enforcement officers are deputized by the Department of Homeland Security to carry out duties typically performed by federal agents. Those officers may interview people about their immigration status, detain individuals, transfer noncitizens to ICE custody, and initiate the removal process.
According to the Florida Policy Institute, 46 of the state's 67 counties, as well as the state Department of Corrections and the city of Jacksonville, currently have 287(g) agreements. Counties with a detention facility that aren't involved in a 287(g) agreement will now have to enter one.
State and local governments often pay dearly to implement 287(g) agreements, as they—rather than the federal government—are responsible for the majority of operating costs. Officer salaries, overtime pay, and supply expenses aren't covered by ICE. States and localities also tend to foot most of the costs associated with detaining migrants.
State officials in Florida have so far provided few details on how localities will be paying for the expenses associated with new 287(g) partnerships. "We expect the cost to participate in the 287(g) program to be minimal and able to be absorbed within existing resources for entities that are not already participating in the 287(g) program," DeSantis' press secretary Christina Pushaw told Reason in a statement.
An analysis prepared by the Florida Senate Appropriations Committee in February was similarly vague: "The bill may have an indeterminate negative fiscal impact on a local government that provides funding to a law enforcement agency that is not currently participating in a 287(g) agreement by requiring the local government to expend funds enforcing immigration law in partnership with ICE."
Costs may prove not to be minimal, judging by the experiences of other communities. The sheriff's office in Arizona's Maricopa County had a $1.3 million budget deficit in 2008 largely thanks to 287(g)-related overtime. Prince William County, Virginia, had to raise property taxes to pay the costs associated with its 287(g) agreement, which cost $6.4 million in its first year.
"Most of the counties in Florida are part of the 287(g) program," says Michael Coon, a University of Tampa migration economist who has researched the impacts of 287(g) implementation. "What it's going to do is put a burden on the communities that, for whatever reason, decided not to participate." That includes obvious costs like officer pay and housing detainees—but also secondary expenses that communities incur to settle lawsuits related to 287(g) programs.
These agreements have led to widespread racial profiling in some jurisdictions, prompting legal action against departments. Maricopa County shelled out $43 million in legal fees over its 287(g) program, under which Sheriff Joe Arpaio's deputies carried out regular "sweeps" in Latino neighborhoods before federal officials terminated the county's enforcement agreement. Los Angeles County paid $255,000 to settle a single detainer claim in 2017. "To the extent that these are going to probably continue," says Coon, "what it's going to do is open up the local detention centers or law enforcement agencies to potential liability and extra costs to taxpayers by paying off lawsuit settlements."
Pushaw cites the "hundreds of millions of dollars each year in public education, public health care, criminal justice, the use of public infrastructure systems and other Florida social services and benefits" as costs that would be spared Florida taxpayers if undocumented immigrants are removed. But Florida's undocumented immigrant population paid an estimated $588.3 million in state and local taxes in 2018, according to the American Immigration Council. That's to say nothing of the money they contribute to Florida's economy.
Beyond just financial downsides, 287(g) agreements can negatively impact trust of police and community safety, despite being marketed as a public safety program. "When an immigrant community understands that the local police are cooperating with federal immigration enforcement, it makes them hesitant to interact because they're worried that, in any case, at any time, they could be the ones being detained," Coon explains. "People are going to be afraid to report crimes, or cooperate with the police in investigations."
Those monetary and social costs would perhaps be justifiable if 287(g) programs had a proven track record of ensnaring dangerous undocumented immigrants. But they very often target nonthreating individuals for nonviolent offenses. Almost two-thirds of 287(g) detainees in Gwinnett County, Georgia, were booked for traffic infractions. Deportations in Davidson County, Tennessee, were triggered by minor offenses—like trespassing or fishing without a license—"the vast majority of the time." And in North Carolina, Alex Nowrasteh and Andrew Forrester of the Cato Institute found that 287(g) agreements didn't lead to a decrease in crime, but did lead to an increase in assaults against police officers.
Many of the costs to Florida communities will only manifest in time, but the track record of 287(g) agreements elsewhere doesn't bode well for taxpayers or public safety. "It doesn't really have much of an impact on keeping the community safe," says Coon. "It's just going to put an undue burden on communities and that'll trickle through every dimension of society."
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Typical Reason swill.
I am going to assume all the cost numbers from AZ & VA & CA mean you couldn't find anything to support your predetermined position in the actual Florida data from the existing 46 counties already in the program.
Go do your proper due diligence on what is actually happening in the 2/3 of FL that are the real world example and then write chapter two.
Hints:
What percentage of the FL population are in the program already?
What were the inflation adjusted annual costs for the 5 years before the programs began compared to after?
What were the crime rates before and after?
How many officers were assaulted before and after?
What were the costs of services to the illegals before and after?
You know, the stuff they used to teach on how to write a research paper, let alone a "journalistic news article".
(and never again used the cop-out phrase "so called"; research and call it what it is)
Thanks for reading so I didn’t have to. I scanned it though looking for the data you describe. Guess I didn’t miss it.
"...But Florida's undocumented immigrant population paid an estimated $588.3 million in state and local taxes in 2018, according to the American Immigration Council. That's to say nothing of the money they contribute to Florida's economy...."
And in Fiona's pneumatic head, this makes everything illegal totes OK! Pay no attention to those people on the dole.
Exactly.
And, oh by the way, who at the AIC "estimates" that data?
How about they document their assumptions?
I suspect the drug dealers also contribute a lot to the economy, and even though I suspect they don't collect sales taxes, they do PAY sales taxes on all those boats and cars the feds seize.
If they are here illegally, they can't possibly be paying taxes.
Because, to do so, they'd have to have money. Which means they'd have to have a job. Which means some employer somewhere is committing a serious crime by employing someone under the table, and the reason to pay people under the table is to NOT pay the same employment taxes that everyone who plays by the rules has to pay.
Illegal immigration is a boon to unscrupulous employers. Period. Low wage workers and employers who follow the rule suffer.
Also. the whole "they pay taxes" argument is just shite. And it was stale decades ago. Adding up the sales tax and gasoline taxes and the like that average people pay then combining it all to make it sound like a huge number is not data, it's bullshit. $588 million (estimated) is divided up amongst close to 800,000 undocumented. It's like $750 per person. That's sales tax on 10,000 spent. Or gas tax on 400 gallons.
Fiona is now on my "Do not bother even reading a word of it" list. She's in pure Dalmia level.
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"hefty financial burden on state taxpayers"
And that's not even the worst part!
Restrictions on immigration put a hefty financial burden on Charles Koch, the billionaire who funds Reason.com. You see, the secret of Mr. Koch's success, the crucial insight that enabled his rags-to-riches journey, is simply this: Immigrants (especially Mexicans) will work for lower wages than native-born Americans.
So please. For Mr. Koch's sake. Vote Democrat. Keep the borders open. Keep the cheap labor flowing.
#InDefenseOfBillionaires
Given that there are 775000 illegals in Florida, that's less than $1000 per illegal per year. That doesn't even come close to paying for the costs they impose on the state of Florida. Fiscally, illegals are a massive net minus.
What matters for the wealth of a state is not how much they contribute in absolute terms but how much they contribute per capita. Florida's per capita GDP is about $45000. Any person added to Florida who, on average, over their lifetime, contributes less than that makes Florida overall.
The average household of illegal migrants earns about $36000/year and households consists of an average of more than two persons. That that tells you that illegal migrants reduce the per capita GDP of Florida substantially and hence make Florida a lot poorer.
"The average household of illegal migrants earns about $36000/year and households consists of an average of more than two persons. That that tells you that illegal migrants reduce the per capita GDP of Florida substantially and hence make Florida a lot poorer."
This math is flawed. Just because the per-capita average wealth goes down doesn't mean "Florida" is poorer.
If everyone on your block has a per capita income of $100,000 and someone moves next door earning $120,000, everyone didn't become richer. They still all make $100,000. It's just that the aggregate income increased proportionately faster than the number of residents.
I am sympathetic with the notion that illegals cost more to "The Government" than they provide. But that is not proven by per-capita statistics.
We measure the prosperity of a nation/state by the per capita GDP. Switzerland is a more prosperous nation than France because Switzerland has a higher per capita GDP. France is a more prosperous nation than Bulgaria because France has a higher per capita GDP. We do this for good reason.
When higher income families move into a neighborhood, the neighborhood is considered more prosperous; tax revenue would increase, more upscale shops might move in, etc. Also, economic opportunities and income of the existing residents would also increase because the higher income families contribute more to the economy.
I agree. And I pointed out two separate facts two answer the two points raised in the article: the fiscal impact AND the "contribution to the economy". When it comes to the fiscal impact, the less than $1000/year in taxes do not account for the costs illegals impose on Florida, so they are a big net negative. Separately, when it comes to the economic impact, illegals make Florida less prosperous by the usual way we measure prosperity, namely per capita GDP. In other words, both arguments in the article are invalid: illegals are a net negative both to Florida's fiscal situation AND to Florida's prosperity.
Paying cops to stop invaders!! Omg! What a nightmare! /s
I think Mexico and Canada should repeal their invader cops too. We're *entitled* to stomp all over other's nations whenever we want! A nation that has land "borders" is so racist. I'm a cow and as such should have every right to jump fences and eat other people's grass!!! /s
Sounds great to me! This should be funded post haste.
I strongly question the net revenue of illegal aliens if the vast majority of them are single moms with multiple kids who can't speak english and have no skills. No way if they are getting free public housing (it isn't free to the tax payers), food stamps, free school lunches (again not free), WICK and who knows what else.
Single men working jobs..I can buy that but not families. That said just create a work visa program for single persons and there you go. Illegal families will need to go unless they are not on the dole.
"...Costs may prove not to be minimal, judging by the experiences of other communities. The sheriff's office in Arizona's Maricopa County had a $1.3 million budget deficit in 2008 largely thanks to 287(g)-related overtime. Prince William County, Virginia, had to raise property taxes to pay the costs associated with its 287(g) agreement, which cost $6.4 million in its first year..."
Fun with bullshit numbers! Seems I might have wandered over to the NYT.
Now, if you'd like to be considered an adult, Ms. Harrigan, please provide some context. Are these costs something over a rounding error, or did you leave that out since it doesn't support your bullshit?
"The sheriff's office in Arizona's Maricopa County had a $1.3 million budget deficit in 2008..."
Considering that the Sheriff's office has a budget of around $429 million (for 2022, maybe $400 million in 2008). $1.3 million is a drop in the bucket.
https://www.maricopa.gov/ArchiveCenter/ViewFile/Item/5302
Thank you: 1/4 of 1%
That is exactly the sort of dishonest bullshit we get from this flaming asshole.
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Even if every word in that article is true, I would be willing to pay more taxes to remove these illegal invaders.
To make it even more ridiculous. I wouldn't even need to stretch to make this sort of analysis justify The Purge or something similar. Police and social services are expensive. Let's let people kill and murder each other to save on government costs.
After all, think about the tax revenue from sales of ammunition, security systems, and repairs.
>negatively impact trust of police and community safety
Oh no, criminals don't like the police. Whatever shall we do? Whatever shall we do?
Fiona, why do you love illegal aliens so much? What is in it for you besides cheap labor, virtue signaling, and a cushy job spouting off for 'reason'? Oh, wait...
Why is the article author using information from other states when "46 of the state's 67 counties, as well as the state Department of Corrections and the city of Jacksonville, currently have 287(g) agreements." Surely there is information on the cost from the 46 counties currently with agreements. I smell BS from the author. The author doesn't go into the costs to taxpayers of individuals in the country illegally. I'm sure it is extremely substantial and the state and counties are already paying those costs.