UCLA faculty are rallying behind a new package of California laws that sharply restrict immigration enforcement across schools, hospitals, and other sensitive settings, arguing the measures are needed to protect families and restore trust after a year of aggressive federal actions in the United States. Signed on September 20, 2025, the laws shift power back to the state on where and how federal agents may act, with new identification and notification rules and firm limits on warrantless operations. Professors and policy leaders at UCLA say the changes will reduce fear in classrooms and clinics, prevent racial profiling, and reinforce due process, even as they warn that rising federal resources for detention and raids could test the limits of state protections.
What the new laws do and why UCLA supports them

The new laws—SB 805 (the “No Vigilantes Act”), AB 49, SB 81, SB 98, and SB 627—create a clear system of checks on immigration enforcement in California. They include immediate provisions affecting how school districts and healthcare facilities respond when federal agents appear.
Key features include:
- Clear identification by officers and limits on mask-wearing.
- Judicial warrants required before entry onto school campuses.
- Notification duties for schools when immigration agents show up.
- Prohibition of enforcement in treatment areas of healthcare facilities.
UCLA faculty emphasize that these rules reflect California’s ongoing stance against enforcement overreach and build on earlier state efforts, including the California Values Act (SB 54), which limited cooperation between state/local police and federal immigration agencies.
“These measures are meant to protect children, patients, and families while preserving due process and trust in public institutions,” say UCLA professors and policy leaders.
Campus rules: AB 49 and SB 98
AB 49 and SB 98 target school settings directly.
- AB 49
- Bars warrantless immigration enforcement on school campuses.
- Requires a judicial warrant for officer entry.
- Prohibits schools from sharing student or family information unless a court orders it.
- SB 98
- Requires schools to notify parents, students, teachers, and staff when immigration agents are on site.
UCLA faculty note these rules:
– Protect students’ rights.
– Help school leaders avoid legal risk by setting clear procedures.
– Encourage attendance by reducing parents’ fear of enforcement actions during school hours.
Healthcare protections: SB 81
- SB 81 bars immigration agents from entering treatment areas and healthcare facilities for enforcement.
- UCLA experts stress this is essential for public health: people are more likely to seek care when they do not fear arrest in clinics or emergency rooms.
- The law aims to preserve access to vaccines, screenings, prenatal care, and ongoing treatment for chronic conditions—protecting both individual and community health.
Identification and masking rules: SB 805 and SB 627
- SB 805 (“No Vigilantes Act”)
- Requires immigration officers (ICE, Border Patrol, DHS personnel) to clearly identify themselves during operations.
- Bans masks or face coverings in enforcement operations; the identification requirement took effect immediately, and the masking ban will be fully in force in January 2026.
- SB 627
- Reinforces the ban on mask-wearing for federal officers during enforcement actions.
- The masking prohibition is enforceable starting January 2026.
UCLA faculty call these steps basic transparency measures that:
– Make it easier for residents to tell who is acting under color of law.
– Lower the risk of intimidation and mistaken identity.
– Make it easier to report problems and file complaints.
Legal and moral rationale
Supporters at UCLA, including Professor Ahilan Arulanantham and Professor Hiroshi Motomura, frame the laws as both legally justified and morally necessary.
They argue:
– Federal operations have at times used broad sweeps that blurred civil and criminal enforcement.
– Such tactics can lead to racial profiling and due process violations.
– When people fear interacting with police or school staff, serious crimes go unreported and classroom support systems break down.
By demanding judicial warrants where appropriate and requiring identification, the state seeks to protect constitutional norms while keeping communities engaged with public institutions.
Practical steps for schools and hospitals
The laws formalize practices many districts and hospitals had followed informally. UCLA faculty recommend clear, simple procedures:
- For schools:
- Confirm whether an officer has a judicial warrant.
- Designate a single point of contact to review documents.
- Contact counsel before sharing information.
- Notify the community in multiple languages.
- Document the interaction.
- For hospitals:
- Keep treatment areas off-limits to enforcement actions.
- Route enforcement requests to legal teams.
- Use clear signage and staff scripts.
- Train intake and security staff on steps to take.
These measures aim to reduce confusion, avoid conflict, and protect rights while allowing staff to focus on education and medical care.
Broader context and federal guidance
California’s rules join a national debate about protected spaces. Federal agencies have internal guidance limiting enforcement in places such as schools and hospitals—but those internal rules are uneven and can change.
For federal background, see the DHS guidance: DHS guidance on immigration enforcement actions in protected areas.
California’s move to put boundaries in state law gives communities a stronger, more stable set of protections.
Summary of the laws (quick reference)
- SB 805 (“No Vigilantes Act”)
- Agents must clearly identify themselves.
- Mask ban enforceable starting January 2026.
- AB 49
- Warrantless enforcement on school campuses is barred.
- Schools cannot share student/family information without a court order.
- SB 81
- Immigration officers cannot enter healthcare treatment areas for enforcement.
- SB 98
- Schools must notify parents, students, faculty, and staff when agents are present.
- SB 627
- Federal officers cannot wear masks during enforcement actions in California starting January 2026.
Expected benefits and limits
Benefits UCLA faculty highlight:
– Reduces chilling effects that keep students and patients away.
– Preserves access to education and healthcare.
– Provides consistent statewide rules to prevent a patchwork of district policies.
– Encourages reporting of crimes and cooperation with public health officials.
Limitations and caveats:
– The laws do not prevent lawful federal arrests with proper warrants.
– Rising federal enforcement budgets in 2025 could increase raids and detention, challenging state protections.
– Without more judges, legal aid, and humanitarian support, court backlogs may grow, leaving families in limbo for months or years.
Concerns about enforcement capacity
UCLA analysts warn that increased federal funding for immigration enforcement in 2025 could:
– Lead to more arrests and longer detention stays.
– Increase immigration court backlogs.
– Intensify emotional and economic strains on children and caregivers.
– Undermine the state’s ability to fully shield communities despite the new legal guardrails.
Institutional responses and advocacy
UCLA’s Latino Policy & Politics Institute condemned recent military-style raids in Los Angeles, citing harms to trust and mental health. UCLA faculty continue to advocate for:
– Sanctuary-style measures and state protections.
– More legal clinics, social services, and mental health care for affected people.
Legal grounding
The laws rest on established state responsibilities:
– Schools and healthcare facilities have privacy duties and child welfare obligations that states oversee.
– Requiring a judicial warrant aligns with court-based review and limits arbitrary enforcement.
– Identification and mask rules address conduct, not content, and aim to further public interests in transparency and safety.
Practical outcomes for families and institutions
Immediate and practical effects include:
– Parents feeling more comfortable sending children to school.
– Patients more likely to keep medical appointments.
– Administrators having a common script to reduce panic and confusion.
– Clearer community communications in multiple languages.
Final remarks from UCLA faculty
UCLA experts describe the laws as a measured, lawful response to real harms. They do not erase federal power but insist that federal actions affecting state institutions proceed with transparency and judicial oversight.
As the mask bans take effect in January 2026, and as schools and hospitals refine procedures, UCLA faculty will watch how the rules work on the ground and whether rising federal enforcement budgets produce more arrests and court backlogs. Their core concern: if arrests rise while due-process resources lag, the need for state-level protections will only grow.
For communities, the practical rules are straightforward:
– Schools cannot allow warrantless enforcement or share private student information without a court order.
– Schools must notify their communities when agents arrive.
– Hospitals and clinics must keep treatment areas off-limits to enforcement.
– Starting January 2026, federal officers cannot wear masks during enforcement actions in California.
UCLA faculty argue these guardrails make public life safer and fairer while continuing to press for policies that protect dignity and due process for all.
This Article in a Nutshell
California enacted five laws on September 20, 2025—SB 805, AB 49, SB 81, SB 98, and SB 627—to sharply limit immigration enforcement in sensitive settings like schools and healthcare facilities. The package requires clear officer identification, bans masks during federal enforcement beginning January 2026, mandates judicial warrants before entering school campuses, forbids enforcement in treatment areas, and obliges schools to notify communities when agents are present. UCLA faculty support the measures as protections for children, patients, and families, arguing they reduce fear, prevent racial profiling, and uphold due process. They caution, however, that rising federal enforcement budgets and increased raids in 2025 could strain state defenses and legal resources, requiring continued advocacy, clear institutional protocols, and expanded legal and humanitarian support.