WASHINGTON — Not long after President Donald Trump took office in January, staff at CentroNía bilingual preschool began rehearsing what to do if Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials came to the door. As ICE became a regular presence in their historically Latino neighborhood this summer, teachers stopped taking children to nearby parks, libraries and playgrounds that had once been considered an extension of the classroom. kAmp?5 :? ~4E@36C[ E96 D49@@= D4C2AA65 :ED 36=@G65 w:DA2?:4 w6C:E286 |@?E9 A2C256[ H96? :>>:8C2?E A2C6?ED EJA:42==J 5C6DD65 E96:C 49:=5C6? :? 4@DEF>6D 2?5 D@446C ;6CD6JD 7C@> E96:C 9@>6 4@F?EC:6D] xrt 925 368F? DE@AA:?8 DE277 >6>36CD[ 2== @7 H9@> 92G6 =682= DE2EFD[ 2?5 D49@@= @77:4:2=D H@CC:65 23@FE 5C2H:?8 >@C6 F?H6=4@>6 2EE6?E:@?]k^Am kAmp== @7 E9:D EC2?DA:C6
Child care workers face anxiety over ICE encounters

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