Santa Barbara

Se programa el Foro de la Ley TRUTH para el 23 de junio de 2026

Se programa el Foro de la Ley TRUTH para el 23 de junio de 2026

Santa Barbara County residents will have a rare, legally mandated opportunity to question how local law enforcement interacts with federal immigration agents when the Board of Supervisors convenes a TRUTH Act Forum on Tuesday, June 23, 2026. The hearing arrives at a moment of heightened tension: immigration enforcement activity across the Central Coast has surged dramatically over the past 18 months, and published investigations have raised questions about whether official county data fully captures the scale of ICE arrests occurring at county jails.

What Is the TRUTH Act — and Why Does It Require This Forum?

The TRUTH Act — formally known as the Transparent Review of Unjust Transfers and Holds Act — was signed into law by Gov. Jerry Brown on September 28, 2016, as Assembly Bill 2792. It went into effect January 1, 2017 and applies to every California county where local law enforcement has provided ICE with any access to a person in custody.

The law does two key things. First, it requires that any individual in local custody be given a written consent form before an ICE interview, explaining that participation is voluntary and may be declined. Second, and most relevant to June 23, it requires the local governing body of any county where that ICE access occurred to hold at least one public community forum per year to share data and receive public comment.

Crucially, records related to ICE access are classified as public records under the California Public Records Act, giving residents a legal right to the underlying data.

What the Sheriff's Office Data Shows for 2025

The Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Office will present its annual ICE-access report at the June 23 forum. According to the Santa Barbara Independent, the numbers for calendar year 2025 break down as follows:

  • 221 total ICE inquiries or requests for access to county jail inmates
  • 193 of those inquiries did not qualify under SB 54 as exceptions to the TRUST Act — meaning no response was provided to ICE
  • 28 inmates did qualify for notification under SB 54 and received corresponding responses sent to ICE
  • 12 of those 28 inmates were transferred to ICE officers after being released from Sheriff's Office custody

For context, those figures represent a notable jump from earlier years. In 2024, ICE made inquiries about 229 inmates, with 190 not qualifying under SB 54, and in 2022, ICE inquiries totaled just 101 inmates. The trajectory of ICE inquiries — from 101 in 2022 to 221 in 2025 — underscores why transparency advocates consider this year's forum especially consequential.

A Contested Picture: Official Data vs. Investigative Findings

The official county figures are already drawing scrutiny. An April 2026 investigation by the Santa Barbara News-Press found that actual ICE arrests at county jails appear to significantly exceed the transfers officially reported by the Sheriff's Office. The Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Office says that in 2025, it transferred 12 people to ICE under SB 54, but the investigation found that dozens more people were arrested in the lobbies and parking lots of county jails in the past year, including many for whom ICE records do not disclose any conviction meeting the SB 54 threshold.

Data from the first two and a half months of 2026 alone showed 26 arrests listed in ICE records, nearly half of them people who did not have any criminal conviction. The Santa Barbara Independent also reported in late April that ICE officers were conducting arrests directly outside county jail entrances — often occupying parking lots, the main entrance, and lobby areas — in operations that the Sheriff's Office said it did not coordinate in advance.

Supervisor Joan Hartmann addressed the gap between official reporting and on-the-ground reality directly. "The Board does not have authority over the Sheriff; we cannot tell the Sheriff how to do his job. Nonetheless, we do have a right to transparency," Hartmann told the News-Press. She added that inaccurate or misleading numbers at TRUTH Act forums "would undermine trust all around."

The broader regional picture is stark. According to 805 UndocuFund's Rapid Response Network, at least 2,050 people were detained by federal immigration enforcement in Santa Barbara, Ventura, and San Luis Obispo counties since January 2025. In Santa Barbara County alone, nearly 850 arrests were reported since the start of last year, with Santa Maria accounting for 531 of those arrests — notably the same city where the June 23 forum will be held.

How to Attend and Participate

The TRUTH Act Forum will take place during the Board of Supervisors meeting on Tuesday, June 23, 2026, at the Board Hearing Room at 511 Lakeside Parkway, Santa Maria, CA 93454, with this agenda item scheduled to be heard at 2 p.m. The public may attend in person or participate virtually — information on how to join remotely is available on the county's official website.

For Spanish-speaking residents, on-site Spanish translators will provide real-time interpretation through headsets at the forum, and will also be available to interpret public comments made in person or via Zoom. Cox and Comcast cable subscribers can watch in Spanish by enabling the SAP function in their language settings, or via the County's Spanish-language YouTube channel. The meeting can also be streamed in English on the county's website, YouTube, or cable channel 20.

Residents who cannot attend but wish to submit written comments may contact the Clerk of the Board's office at (805) 568-2240 or mail comments to Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors, c/o Clerk of the Board, 105 East Anapamu Street, 4th Floor, Santa Barbara, CA 93101.

What Comes Next

The June 23 hearing is not a vote — it is a listening session required by state law. But in the current climate, the forum carries unusual weight. Public testimony and the data presented by the Sheriff's Office will form part of the public record on how Santa Barbara County navigates the boundary between state sanctuary protections and federal immigration enforcement operations.

Advocates are expected to press for clarity on how ICE obtains information about individuals who are released from county custody without any official SB 54 transfer. The Sheriff's Office has said it does not collaborate with federal agents outside the bounds of SB 54, but experts note that ICE agents may have access to a variety of law enforcement databases that can be used for targeted arrests independent of any local cooperation.

This year's forum is the latest in an annual series Santa Barbara County has held since at least 2022. In accordance with Government Code section 7283.1(d), public notice of the June 23 forum was provided on May 21, 2026, in the Santa Maria Times and the Santa Barbara Independent, and the Sheriff's Office publicized it through its social media channels. Agenda materials, the board letter, and related documents are available on the county's Legistar calendar page.

Reported by 805.life

Researched and written drawing on primary sources. Additional reporting: Santa Barbara Independent.

Additional Reporting

Santa Barbara Independent

Published

June 11, 2026

Reported and written by 805.life

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