DHS would have to use detention less often and prove when it is needed. The bill adds quick custody hearings, stronger facility rules, public reports, and community programs instead of jail-like detention.
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Dignity for Detained Immigrants Act is a House bill in Congress.
Who this affects: This bill mainly affects immigrants held by DHS while their immigration cases or removal orders are pending. It also affects children, vulnerable people, and primary caregivers because they would get stronger limits on detention. DHS, ICE, immigration judges, detention center operators, local governments, nonprofits, and private prison companies would all face major changes in how detention and supervision work.
Why this matters: This bill matters because it could mean fewer immigrants are held in jail-like detention while their cases move through the system. It would give the public more information about detention conditions, deaths in custody, contracts, and facility problems. It could also shift money and control away from for-profit companies and toward DHS-run facilities and nonprofit case management. The tradeoff is that DHS, courts, and inspectors would need to handle many more hearings, reports, inspections, and program changes.
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