Texas Government Code Chapter 752, enacted by Senate Bill 4 in 2017, prohibits any local entity, campus police department, or jail from adopting sanctuary policies. Local officials must honor federal immigration detainer requests and may not bar officers from inquiring about immigration status.
Government Code Chapter 752 forbids local entities and campus police departments from limiting enforcement of immigration laws, prohibiting officers from asking about immigration status, or refusing to honor U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement detainer requests. Sheriffs, chiefs, and constables who knowingly fail to comply face removal from office under Local Government Code Chapter 87. The Attorney General may seek civil penalties of $1,000 to $1,500 for a first violation and up to $25,500 per day for subsequent violations. The U.S. Fifth Circuit largely upheld SB 4 in City of El Cenizo v. Texas (2018). Local jurisdictions cannot opt out.
First-violation civil penalties run $1,000 to $1,500; subsequent violations up to $25,500 per day. Officials who knowingly violate also face removal from office and Class A misdemeanor charges under Penal Code 39.07.
Mission, TX
Mission Code Chapter 42, Article VI governs noise. Quiet hours generally enforced in the evenings and early mornings. Violations are Class C misdemeanors wit...
Mission, TX
Aircraft noise is federally regulated. Mission is in the Rio Grande Valley near McAllen-Miller International Airport. Local ordinances cannot override FAA au...
Mission, TX
Persistent barking is a nuisance violation under Mission's noise and animal ordinances. Officers may issue warnings before citations.
Mission, TX
Construction noise in Mission is governed by Chapter 42, Article VI. Standard South Texas practice allows construction during daytime hours. Verify current h...
Mission, TX
RV and boat storage is regulated under Mission's zoning code. Street parking of oversized vehicles may be time-limited. Verify with Mission Planning & Zoning.
Mission, TX
Abandoned and junked vehicles are regulated under TX Transportation Code Β§683 and Mission's nuisance ordinances. Inoperable vehicles on public streets are su...
See how Mission's sanctuary policy preemption rules stack up against other locations.
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