The Marin County TRUTH Act forum stirred up debate about how local agencies work with federal immigration authorities. Supervisors, sheriffs, and immigrant-rights advocates all weighed in, with plenty of disagreement.
The focus quickly shifted to 2025 data, county budget choices, and how people across Marin—from San Rafael to Sausalito, Novato to Mill Valley—feel about jail transparency and federal enforcement in their neighborhoods.
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Overview of Marin County’s TRUTH Act forum
At a community forum that drew folks from Fairfax to San Anselmo, Sheriff Jamie Scardina stood by his office’s role under state law. Critics called for more transparency and tighter limits on working with federal authorities.
The numbers showed 23 referrals to ICE in 2025, up from 14 the previous year, but only four arrests by the Marin County Sheriff’s Office. San Rafael police made 12 referrals, while other agencies handled the rest; every person referred was male—21 Hispanic and two Asian.
Activists pushed Marin County to stop participating in the SCAAP reimbursement program and to end the practice of publicly listing booked inmates by name. They also wanted the county to reject ICE requests without a judicial warrant.
Earlier, Marin County cut SCAAP funding from its upcoming budget and set aside two separate $500,000 allocations for immigration services. That included support for the Marin Rapid Response Network.
Sheriff Scardina said his office doesn’t deport people or conduct immigration sweeps. He explained that fingerprint and booking data go to the California Department of Justice, which then shares with federal agencies.
Marin received 141 ICE notifications in 2025. The sheriff’s office only responded when charges involved violent offenses.
People from Sausalito and Tiburon to San Rafael and Novato voiced concerns that more federal enforcement could damage trust in local public-safety institutions. Supervisors Mary Sackett and Dennis Rodoni seemed open to policy changes that would limit ICE access and improve jail transparency.
Impact on Marin communities
Residents from all over Marin County spoke up, describing how ICE tactics and officers without clear identification create fear. In Novato’s neighborhoods and on the winding streets of San Anselmo and Corte Madera, people said fewer residents show up at civic meetings or seek public services when they’re worried about immigration enforcement.
The fear isn’t just in the bigger cities. Smaller places like Larkspur and Fairfax also see people pulling back from town hall gatherings, anxious about roster postings and law-enforcement inquiries.
Policy implications and the road ahead
Marin supervisors said they’re considering reforms to protect immigrant communities while still keeping public safety in mind. One big question is whether to limit access to jail rosters or change how and when law enforcement refers people to ICE.
The conversation also keeps circling back to transparency—mainly, how inmates are identified when booked and whether public postings should include names. A lot of residents say that practice puts privacy and safety at risk.
Budget decisions and what they mean for Marin towns
- SCAAP funding cut in Marin’s latest budget points to a shift toward local control over costs tied to jail and immigration services. This change affects cities from San Rafael to Novato.
- Two allocations of $500,000 each for immigration services, including support for the Marin Rapid Response Network, aim to give communities in towns like Mill Valley and Sausalito more resources during enforcement actions.
- Calls for jail roster reforms are growing louder, not just at Marin City Hall. Residents in Corte Madera and Fairfax want clear rules about who gets listed and how that info is shared with outside agencies.
What residents are saying and next steps
People all over Marin—whether in Ross, San Anselmo, or Tiburon—say enforcement practices need to strike a balance between civil rights and public safety. They’re asking for more accountability, clearer data-sharing, and policies that don’t push people into federal processes without fair treatment.
Supervisors Sackett and Rodoni hinted at possible changes. They might limit ICE access and improve how the county posts jail rosters online. That could really shift how Marin County works with federal authorities in the future.
Residents and local leaders in places like San Rafael and Novato—and honestly, even folks who feel conflicted about all this—are watching for real action. The big question? How does Marin keep people safe, trust local institutions, and protect immigrant families who call the North Bay home?
Here is the source article for this story: Marin TRUTH Act forum reveals how a blue county responds to national ICE crackdown
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