(GRAND RAPIDS) Immigration and Customs Enforcement is moving to dramatically grow its footprint in Grand Rapids as part of a nationwide surge in arrests, detention, and deportations that senior officials describe as the largest ICE expansion in history. The push follows a sweeping law passed this summer and new funding that gives the agency $28.7 billion for FY2025, nearly triple last year’s budget. Federal targets now call for 3,000 arrests per day and 1 million deportations each year, with interior cities like Grand Rapids at the center of that drive.
Local advocates, police leaders, and families across West Michigan say the stepped-up immigration enforcement will be felt in daily life. The Department of Homeland Security has pressed cities and counties to sign or widen 287(g) agreements, which let local officers act as immigration agents inside jails and on the street. Since January, more than 500 law enforcement agencies nationwide have entered these deals. In Kent County, attorneys and community groups are preparing for more ICE detainers flowing out of routine traffic stops and county jail bookings.

The surge follows passage of the “One Big Beautiful Act,” signed by President Trump in July 2025, which provides over $170 billion for border and interior enforcement over four years. Of that, $75 billion goes to ICE, plus $10 billion that Congress added in March. The new funding powers a hiring wave of 10,000 new ICE officers and a major expansion of detention, including facilities designed for families with children and the removal of time limits that once restricted how long kids could be held. Nearly 90% of people in ICE custody are now held in for-profit facilities, with GEO Group and CoreCivic expected to gain new contracts.
What Grand Rapids residents will see first
Residents can expect more workplace and neighborhood operations, more jail-to-ICE transfers, and faster movement from arrest to detention.
- ICE operations will expand beyond border areas into interior communities, including West Michigan.
- Agents can now arrest in places previously treated as sensitive, such as schools, churches, and courthouses.
- Daily routines for mixed-status families—school drop-offs, doctor visits, court dates—may become more stressful.
Key operational points:
- ICE teams are aiming for steady daily arrest targets in the interior, not just at the border.
- Local police agencies that sign 287(g) agreements may start immigration checks during jail intake, leading to quick transfers to ICE custody.
- Detention capacity is expanding and there is currently no statutory limit on detention length for families and children under the new law.
Important: Legal capacity is not expanding at the same pace as detention. This gap could lead to faster, less-contested outcomes for many detained people.
Legal system capacity and consequences
Attorneys warn the legal system is not keeping pace with the surge.
- The law caps new immigration judge hires at 800 over 3.5 years, a modest increase compared with a court backlog nearing 4 million cases.
- With legal orientation programs paused, people held in detention near Grand Rapids and across the Midwest may face longer waits and fewer tools to find counsel or understand their options.
- Analysis by VisaVerge.com suggests that detaining more people while growing courts slowly is likely to push more cases toward fast-track outcomes, including expedited removal—especially for those without lawyers.
How policing, schools, and workplaces could be affected
Local government, education, faith communities, and employers all face adjustments.
Police and public safety:
– Grand Rapids Police Department has not announced a new stance on 287(g); neighboring counties could act independently.
– Police chiefs must weigh public safety against loss of trust when departments act as extensions of ICE.
– Supporters argue cooperation helps remove criminals; critics note many interior ICE arrests involve people with no criminal record.
Schools and faith communities:
– School districts in Kent and Ottawa counties expect more absences, anxiety, and counseling needs if parents fear drop-offs could lead to enforcement encounters.
– Faith leaders are reviewing security and sanctuary policies as churches may see more operations.
Employers and workplaces:
– Food processing, manufacturing, and service industries are preparing for stepped-up audits and more I-9 checks.
– ICE has not released a calendar for worksite operations.
Human impact examples:
– A DACA recipient with an expired work permit could be arrested after a traffic stop if booked by a 287(g)-enabled agency.
– A long-settled father with an old voluntary departure order might be detained at a courthouse.
– Families with children risk transfer to distant facilities, making legal support and document gathering difficult.
Administration stance, oversight concerns, and private detention
DHS messaging and debate:
– DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said the agency is meeting the president’s hiring directive and touted a June career expo that generated about 1,000 tentative offers.
– The administration frames the surge as necessary to restore order and enforce immigration law.
Oversight and criticism:
– Civil rights groups call the plan a “deportation-industrial complex,” driven by private detention and weakened oversight.
– Oversight offices at DHS have been reduced, and past rapid hiring waves at ICE and CBP saw spikes in corruption and misconduct, according to independent analysts.
Private detention expansion:
– Nearly 90% of detainees are in for-profit facilities; GEO Group and CoreCivic are expected to receive new contracts.
– New or expanded contracts could place detainees hours from home, complicating family support and legal visits.
– Past attempts (2017–2020) to grow ICE detention faced failed contracts and misconduct cases; advocates warn lessons may be ignored. The administration says monitoring is improved.
Access to legal help and due process concerns
For immigrants in West Michigan, access to legal assistance is the most immediate issue.
- Orientation programs are suspended, and more detainees means private attorneys and nonprofits will be stretched thin.
- Court delays will likely grow as dockets swell faster than judges can be added.
- Detained cases usually move faster than non-detained cases, but with higher volumes, timelines can still stretch.
- Attorneys advise people with prior removal orders to consult counsel now rather than wait for an arrest.
Practical community preparations recommended by local groups:
– List key phone numbers and emergency contacts.
– Arrange child care backups.
– Gather identity and medical records in one place.
– Establish who will pay rent and utilities if a parent is detained.
Policy context, political split, and what’s next
National policy changes:
– The “One Big Beautiful Act” and additional funding shift policy away from the narrower interior enforcement approach under President Biden.
– The current policy widens where arrests can occur and who is targeted, including people with lawful status whose convictions or prior orders can trigger deportability.
Statistics and backlog cited by supporters:
– Supporters say enforcement is needed to execute deportation orders at scale and point to USCIS backlog of over 11.3 million cases pending.
Legal challenges and timeline:
– ICE is expected to keep growing through at least 2029 under current legislation.
– Lawsuits are moving through federal courts over family detention, due process, and the role of private contractors.
Local trade-offs: 287(g) and community policing
- Sheriffs who sign 287(g) agreements gain federal backing and tools to share information.
- Risk: loss of trust among immigrant crime victims and witnesses who may fear calling 911.
- For cities like Grand Rapids, where community policing is central, the trade-off can directly affect public safety—if victims or witnesses avoid contact with police, investigative effectiveness falls.
Resources and where to find official information
For official information on ICE operations, policies, or field office contacts, see the agency’s website: ICE.gov. Residents in the Grand Rapids area typically fall under the Detroit field office for enforcement and removal matters.
Final outlook for Grand Rapids
Looking ahead, the surge means:
- More uniforms on the street and more jail checks.
- Faster transfers from arrest to detention.
- A climate where everyday tasks can carry new risks for mixed-status families.
Whether the promised increase in order materializes—and at what cost to due process and community trust—will define how this chapter is remembered.
This Article in a Nutshell
The federal government is escalating interior immigration enforcement in Grand Rapids as part of a nationwide expansion funded with $28.7 billion for FY2025. New operational targets call for 3,000 arrests daily and one million deportations annually. The funding supports hiring 10,000 ICE officers, expanding detention capacity — including family facilities — and increasing contracts with private detention firms such as GEO Group and CoreCivic. More than 500 law enforcement agencies have entered 287(g) agreements, enabling local officers to assist ICE. Local leaders warn the legal system cannot absorb the surge: only 800 new immigration judges are authorized over 3.5 years amid a backlog nearing 4 million cases, risking faster, less-contested outcomes and limited access to counsel. Communities can expect more workplace and neighborhood operations, more jail-to-ICE transfers, and heightened stress for mixed-status families. Critics call attention to reduced oversight, potential misconduct risks, and the broader social costs of expanded private detention. Residents are advised to gather documents, list emergency contacts, and seek legal help promptly.