HomeMy WebLinkAboutCorrespondence - Item 28 Zuniga, Diana
From: Ana Gomez <
Sent: Thursday, June 26, 2025 10:23 AM
To: eComment
Subject: City Council Meeting July 1st, 2025, Agenda Item #28 & Non Agenda Items
Attachments: July 1st 2025 City Council Ltr re STR-Vazquez.docx
Attention: This email originated from outside of City of Santa Ana.Use caution when opening attachments or links.
1
Mayor Valerie Amezcua
Mayor Pro Tem Benjamin Vazquez
Councilmember Thai Viet Pham
Councilmember Jessie Lopez
Councilmember Phil Bacerra
Councilmember Johnathan Ryan Hernandez
Councilmember David Penaloza
City Council Chamber
20 Civic Center Plaza M-30
Santa Ana, California 92701
Dear Mayor Pro Tem Vazquez,
I am writing as a resident of [City Name] to express my strong support for
implementing a fair and regulated short-term rental (STR) program, particularly
for both owner-occupied rentals where homeowners rent out a room in their
primary residence and responsible STR homeowners. Rather than continuing with a
full ban on STRs, I urge the Council to adopt a balanced approach that benefits
residents and our city as a whole.
Short-term rentals provide vital financial support to many local homeowners. In
today's economy, this income helps people afford rising housing costs, pay property
taxes, and manage household expenses. For many residents, especially those who
are supporting elderly parents, fixed incomes or dealing with long-term financial
responsibilities, renting a spare room is one of the few flexible and practical ways to
stay afloat. This is not about commercial enterprise it's about staying in our
homes, caring for our families, and contributing to our community.
Importantly, in November 19', 2024, when the city implemented the current STR
ban, the mayor along with Councilmember Bacerra and Lopez, requested that city
staff develop a short-term rental program for consideration. This direction included
developing a regulatory framework and conducting outreach to stakeholders.
However, to date,no visible progress has been made, and STR homeowners continue
to face financial uncertainty and lack of legal, regulated options. This has also
deprived the city of potential revenue from registration fees and transient occupancy
taxes.
Cities across the state have adopted thoughtful fair STR regulations and policies that
distinguish between commercial STR operators and responsible short term rental
homeowners. These frameworks can protect neighborhood integrity, minimize
nuisance concerns, and bring short-term rentals out of the shadows and into
compliance.
I respectfully urge you to act on the statements made on November 19th 2024 and
prioritize development of a short-term rental program. Doing so will provide relief
to residents, and enable the city to benefit from an equitable, regulated system.
Thank you for your time, your service, and your attention to this important matter.
Sincerely,
Ana Gomez
Santa Ana Resident
Ward 3
Statements made by Mayor, Councilmembers Bacerra and Lopez November 19tn
2024.
Mayor Amezcua•
"Mr City manager I would hope that you're going to bring it back at some point so
we can look at placing regulations and generating some revenue for our city..."
Councilmember Bacerra:
"I had advocated for kind of a more nuanced approach to have um short-term rentals
with some sort of limited scope of where they could exist um I think after quite a bit
of interesting deliberation we ended up going with a outright band so um I would at
some point like staff to come back with some potential alternatives.."
Councilmember Lopez:
" [w]e discussed I think uh when we first talked about this having staff meet with
stakeholders to take their input to figure out the possibility in the future especially
for those living at home..."
Zuniga, Diana
From: Ana Gomez <
Sent: Thursday, June 26, 2025 10:26 AM
To: eComment
Subject: City Council Meeting July 1st 2025 Agenda Item #28 and Non Agenda Items
Attachments: July 1st 2025 City Council Ltr re STR-Hernandez.docx;July 1st 2025 City Council Ltr re
STR-Lopez.docx;July 1st 2025 City Council Ltr re STR-Penaloza.docx;July 1st 2025
City Council Ltr re STR-Bacerra.docx;July 1st 2025 City Council Ltr re STR-
Amezcua.docx;July 1st 2025 City Council Ltr re STR-Pham.docx
Attention: This email originated from outside of City of Santa Ana.Use caution when opening attachments or links.
1
Mayor Valerie Amezcua
Mayor Pro Tem Benjamin Vazquez
Councilmember Thai Viet Pham
Councilmember Jessie Lopez
Councilmember Phil Bacerra
Councilmember Johnathan Ryan Hernandez
Councilmember David Penaloza
City Council Chamber
20 Civic Center Plaza M-30
Santa Ana, California 92701
Dear Councilmember Hernandez,
I am writing as a resident of [City Name] to express my strong support for
implementing a fair and regulated short-term rental (STR) program, particularly
for both owner-occupied rentals where homeowners rent out a room in their
primary residence and responsible STR homeowners. Rather than continuing with a
full ban on STRs, I urge the Council to adopt a balanced approach that benefits
residents and our city as a whole.
Short-term rentals provide vital financial support to many local homeowners. In
today's economy, this income helps people afford rising housing costs, pay property
taxes, and manage household expenses. For many residents, especially those who
are supporting elderly parents, fixed incomes or dealing with long-term financial
responsibilities, renting a spare room is one of the few flexible and practical ways to
stay afloat. This is not about commercial enterprise it's about staying in our
homes, caring for our families, and contributing to our community.
Importantly, in November 19', 2024, when the city implemented the current STR
ban, the mayor along with Councilmember Bacerra and Lopez, requested that city
staff develop a short-term rental program for consideration. This direction included
developing a regulatory framework and conducting outreach to stakeholders.
However, to date,no visible progress has been made, and STR homeowners continue
to face financial uncertainty and lack of legal, regulated options. This has also
deprived the city of potential revenue from registration fees and transient occupancy
taxes.
Cities across the state have adopted thoughtful fair STR regulations and policies that
distinguish between commercial STR operators and responsible short term rental
homeowners. These frameworks can protect neighborhood integrity, minimize
nuisance concerns, and bring short-term rentals out of the shadows and into
compliance.
I respectfully urge you to act on the statements made on November 19th 2024 and
prioritize development of a short-term rental program. Doing so will provide relief
to residents, and enable the city to benefit from an equitable, regulated system.
Thank you for your time, your service, and your attention to this important matter.
Sincerely,
Ana Gomez
Santa Ana Resident
Ward 3
Statements made by Mayor, Councilmembers Bacerra and Lopez November 19tn
2024.
Mayor Amezcua•
"Mr City manager I would hope that you're going to bring it back at some point so
we can look at placing regulations and generating some revenue for our city..."
Councilmember Bacerra:
"I had advocated for kind of a more nuanced approach to have um short-term rentals
with some sort of limited scope of where they could exist um I think after quite a bit
of interesting deliberation we ended up going with a outright band so um I would at
some point like staff to come back with some potential alternatives.."
Councilmember Lopez:
" [w]e discussed I think uh when we first talked about this having staff meet with
stakeholders to take their input to figure out the possibility in the future especially
for those living at home..."
Mayor Valerie Amezcua
Mayor Pro Tem Benjamin Vazquez
Councilmember Thai Viet Pham
Councilmember Jessie Lopez
Councilmember Phil Bacerra
Councilmember Johnathan Ryan Hernandez
Councilmember David Penaloza
City Council Chamber
20 Civic Center Plaza M-30
Santa Ana, California 92701
Dear Councilmember Bacerra,
I am writing as a resident of [City Name] to express my strong support for
implementing a fair and regulated short-term rental (STR) program, particularly
for both owner-occupied rentals where homeowners rent out a room in their
primary residence and responsible STR homeowners. Rather than continuing with a
full ban on STRs, I urge the Council to adopt a balanced approach that benefits
residents and our city as a whole.
Short-term rentals provide vital financial support to many local homeowners. In
today's economy, this income helps people afford rising housing costs, pay property
taxes, and manage household expenses. For many residents, especially those who
are supporting elderly parents, fixed incomes or dealing with long-term financial
responsibilities, renting a spare room is one of the few flexible and practical ways to
stay afloat. This is not about commercial enterprise it's about staying in our
homes, caring for our families, and contributing to our community.
Importantly, in November 19', 2024, when the city implemented the current STR
ban, the mayor along with Councilmember Bacerra and Lopez, requested that city
staff develop a short-term rental program for consideration. This direction included
developing a regulatory framework and conducting outreach to stakeholders.
However, to date,no visible progress has been made, and STR homeowners continue
to face financial uncertainty and lack of legal, regulated options. This has also
deprived the city of potential revenue from registration fees and transient occupancy
taxes.
Cities across the state have adopted thoughtful fair STR regulations and policies that
distinguish between commercial STR operators and responsible short term rental
homeowners. These frameworks can protect neighborhood integrity, minimize
nuisance concerns, and bring short-term rentals out of the shadows and into
compliance.
I respectfully urge you to act on the statements made on November 19th 2024 and
prioritize development of a short-term rental program. Doing so will provide relief
to residents, and enable the city to benefit from an equitable, regulated system.
Thank you for your time, your service, and your attention to this important matter.
Sincerely,
Ana Gomez
Santa Ana Resident
Ward 3
Statements made by Mayor, Councilmembers Bacerra and Lopez November 19tn
2024.
Mayor Amezcua•
"Mr City manager I would hope that you're going to bring it back at some point so
we can look at placing regulations and generating some revenue for our city..."
Councilmember Bacerra:
"I had advocated for kind of a more nuanced approach to have um short-term rentals
with some sort of limited scope of where they could exist um I think after quite a bit
of interesting deliberation we ended up going with a outright band so um I would at
some point like staff to come back with some potential alternatives.."
Councilmember Lopez:
" [w]e discussed I think uh when we first talked about this having staff meet with
stakeholders to take their input to figure out the possibility in the future especially
for those living at home..."
Mayor Valerie Amezcua
Mayor Pro Tem Benjamin Vazquez
Councilmember Thai Viet Pham
Councilmember Jessie Lopez
Councilmember Phil Bacerra
Councilmember Johnathan Ryan Hernandez
Councilmember David Penaloza
City Council Chamber
20 Civic Center Plaza M-30
Santa Ana, California 92701
Dear Councilmember Lopez,
I am writing as a resident of [City Name] to express my strong support for
implementing a fair and regulated short-term rental (STR) program, particularly
for both owner-occupied rentals where homeowners rent out a room in their
primary residence and responsible STR homeowners. Rather than continuing with a
full ban on STRs, I urge the Council to adopt a balanced approach that benefits
residents and our city as a whole.
Short-term rentals provide vital financial support to many local homeowners. In
today's economy, this income helps people afford rising housing costs, pay property
taxes, and manage household expenses. For many residents, especially those who
are supporting elderly parents, fixed incomes or dealing with long-term financial
responsibilities, renting a spare room is one of the few flexible and practical ways to
stay afloat. This is not about commercial enterprise it's about staying in our
homes, caring for our families, and contributing to our community.
Importantly, in November 19', 2024, when the city implemented the current STR
ban, the mayor along with Councilmember Bacerra and Lopez, requested that city
staff develop a short-term rental program for consideration. This direction included
developing a regulatory framework and conducting outreach to stakeholders.
However, to date,no visible progress has been made, and STR homeowners continue
to face financial uncertainty and lack of legal, regulated options. This has also
deprived the city of potential revenue from registration fees and transient occupancy
taxes.
Cities across the state have adopted thoughtful fair STR regulations and policies that
distinguish between commercial STR operators and responsible short term rental
homeowners. These frameworks can protect neighborhood integrity, minimize
nuisance concerns, and bring short-term rentals out of the shadows and into
compliance.
I respectfully urge you to act on the statements made on November 19th 2024 and
prioritize development of a short-term rental program. Doing so will provide relief
to residents, and enable the city to benefit from an equitable, regulated system.
Thank you for your time, your service, and your attention to this important matter.
Sincerely,
Ana Gomez
Santa Ana Resident
Ward 3
Statements made by Mayor, Councilmembers Bacerra and Lopez November 19tn
2024.
Mayor Amezcua•
"Mr City manager I would hope that you're going to bring it back at some point so
we can look at placing regulations and generating some revenue for our city..."
Councilmember Bacerra:
"I had advocated for kind of a more nuanced approach to have um short-term rentals
with some sort of limited scope of where they could exist um I think after quite a bit
of interesting deliberation we ended up going with a outright band so um I would at
some point like staff to come back with some potential alternatives.."
Councilmember Lopez:
" [w]e discussed I think uh when we first talked about this having staff meet with
stakeholders to take their input to figure out the possibility in the future especially
for those living at home..."
Mayor Valerie Amezcua
Mayor Pro Tem Benjamin Vazquez
Councilmember Thai Viet Pham
Councilmember Jessie Lopez
Councilmember Phil Bacerra
Councilmember Johnathan Ryan Hernandez
Councilmember David Penaloza
City Council Chamber
20 Civic Center Plaza M-30
Santa Ana, California 92701
Dear Mayor Amezcua,
I am writing as a resident of [City Name] to express my strong support for
implementing a fair and regulated short-term rental (STR) program, particularly
for both owner-occupied rentals where homeowners rent out a room in their
primary residence and responsible STR homeowners. Rather than continuing with a
full ban on STRs, I urge the Council to adopt a balanced approach that benefits
residents and our city as a whole.
Short-term rentals provide vital financial support to many local homeowners. In
today's economy, this income helps people afford rising housing costs, pay property
taxes, and manage household expenses. For many residents, especially those who
are supporting elderly parents, fixed incomes or dealing with long-term financial
responsibilities, renting a spare room is one of the few flexible and practical ways to
stay afloat. This is not about commercial enterprise it's about staying in our
homes, caring for our families, and contributing to our community.
Importantly, in November 19', 2024, when the city implemented the current STR
ban, the mayor along with Councilmember Bacerra and Lopez, requested that city
staff develop a short-term rental program for consideration. This direction included
developing a regulatory framework and conducting outreach to stakeholders.
However, to date,no visible progress has been made, and STR homeowners continue
to face financial uncertainty and lack of legal, regulated options. This has also
deprived the city of potential revenue from registration fees and transient occupancy
taxes.
Cities across the state have adopted thoughtful fair STR regulations and policies that
distinguish between commercial STR operators and responsible short term rental
homeowners. These frameworks can protect neighborhood integrity, minimize
nuisance concerns, and bring short-term rentals out of the shadows and into
compliance.
I respectfully urge you to act on the statements made on November 19th 2024 and
prioritize development of a short-term rental program. Doing so will provide relief
to residents, and enable the city to benefit from an equitable, regulated system.
Thank you for your time, your service, and your attention to this important matter.
Sincerely,
Ana Gomez
Santa Ana Resident
Ward 3
Statements made by Mayor, Councilmembers Bacerra and Lopez November 19tn
2024.
Mayor Amezcua•
"Mr City manager I would hope that you're going to bring it back at some point so
we can look at placing regulations and generating some revenue for our city..."
Councilmember Bacerra:
"I had advocated for kind of a more nuanced approach to have um short-term rentals
with some sort of limited scope of where they could exist um I think after quite a bit
of interesting deliberation we ended up going with a outright band so um I would at
some point like staff to come back with some potential alternatives.."
Councilmember Lopez:
" [w]e discussed I think uh when we first talked about this having staff meet with
stakeholders to take their input to figure out the possibility in the future especially
for those living at home..."
Mayor Valerie Amezcua
Mayor Pro Tem Benjamin Vazquez
Councilmember Thai Viet Pham
Councilmember Jessie Lopez
Councilmember Phil Bacerra
Councilmember Johnathan Ryan Hernandez
Councilmember David Penaloza
City Council Chamber
20 Civic Center Plaza M-30
Santa Ana, California 92701
Dear Councilmember Penaloza,
I am writing as a resident of [City Name] to express my strong support for
implementing a fair and regulated short-term rental (STR) program, particularly
for both owner-occupied rentals where homeowners rent out a room in their
primary residence and responsible STR homeowners. Rather than continuing with a
full ban on STRs, I urge the Council to adopt a balanced approach that benefits
residents and our city as a whole.
Short-term rentals provide vital financial support to many local homeowners. In
today's economy, this income helps people afford rising housing costs, pay property
taxes, and manage household expenses. For many residents, especially those who
are supporting elderly parents, fixed incomes or dealing with long-term financial
responsibilities, renting a spare room is one of the few flexible and practical ways to
stay afloat. This is not about commercial enterprise it's about staying in our
homes, caring for our families, and contributing to our community.
Importantly, in November 19', 2024, when the city implemented the current STR
ban, the mayor along with Councilmember Bacerra and Lopez, requested that city
staff develop a short-term rental program for consideration. This direction included
developing a regulatory framework and conducting outreach to stakeholders.
However, to date,no visible progress has been made, and STR homeowners continue
to face financial uncertainty and lack of legal, regulated options. This has also
deprived the city of potential revenue from registration fees and transient occupancy
taxes.
Cities across the state have adopted thoughtful fair STR regulations and policies that
distinguish between commercial STR operators and responsible short term rental
homeowners. These frameworks can protect neighborhood integrity, minimize
nuisance concerns, and bring short-term rentals out of the shadows and into
compliance.
I respectfully urge you to act on the statements made on November 19th 2024 and
prioritize development of a short-term rental program. Doing so will provide relief
to residents, and enable the city to benefit from an equitable, regulated system.
Thank you for your time, your service, and your attention to this important matter.
Sincerely,
Ana Gomez
Santa Ana Resident
Ward 3
Statements made by Mayor, Councilmembers Bacerra and Lopez November 19tn
2024.
Mayor Amezcua•
"Mr City manager I would hope that you're going to bring it back at some point so
we can look at placing regulations and generating some revenue for our city..."
Councilmember Bacerra:
"I had advocated for kind of a more nuanced approach to have um short-term rentals
with some sort of limited scope of where they could exist um I think after quite a bit
of interesting deliberation we ended up going with a outright band so um I would at
some point like staff to come back with some potential alternatives.."
Councilmember Lopez:
" [w]e discussed I think uh when we first talked about this having staff meet with
stakeholders to take their input to figure out the possibility in the future especially
for those living at home..."
Mayor Valerie Amezcua
Mayor Pro Tem Benjamin Vazquez
Councilmember Thai Viet Pham
Councilmember Jessie Lopez
Councilmember Phil Bacerra
Councilmember Johnathan Ryan Hernandez
Councilmember David Penaloza
City Council Chamber
20 Civic Center Plaza M-30
Santa Ana, California 92701
Dear Councilmember Pham,
I am writing as a resident of [City Name] to express my strong support for
implementing a fair and regulated short-term rental (STR) program, particularly
for both owner-occupied rentals where homeowners rent out a room in their
primary residence and responsible STR homeowners. Rather than continuing with a
full ban on STRs, I urge the Council to adopt a balanced approach that benefits
residents and our city as a whole.
Short-term rentals provide vital financial support to many local homeowners. In
today's economy, this income helps people afford rising housing costs, pay property
taxes, and manage household expenses. For many residents, especially those who
are supporting elderly parents, fixed incomes or dealing with long-term financial
responsibilities, renting a spare room is one of the few flexible and practical ways to
stay afloat. This is not about commercial enterprise it's about staying in our
homes, caring for our families, and contributing to our community.
Importantly, in November 19', 2024, when the city implemented the current STR
ban, the mayor along with Councilmember Bacerra and Lopez, requested that city
staff develop a short-term rental program for consideration. This direction included
developing a regulatory framework and conducting outreach to stakeholders.
However, to date,no visible progress has been made, and STR homeowners continue
to face financial uncertainty and lack of legal, regulated options. This has also
deprived the city of potential revenue from registration fees and transient occupancy
taxes.
Cities across the state have adopted thoughtful fair STR regulations and policies that
distinguish between commercial STR operators and responsible short term rental
homeowners. These frameworks can protect neighborhood integrity, minimize
nuisance concerns, and bring short-term rentals out of the shadows and into
compliance.
I respectfully urge you to act on the statements made on November 19th 2024 and
prioritize development of a short-term rental program. Doing so will provide relief
to residents, and enable the city to benefit from an equitable, regulated system.
Thank you for your time, your service, and your attention to this important matter.
Sincerely,
Ana Gomez
Santa Ana Resident
Ward 3
Statements made by Mayor, Councilmembers Bacerra and Lopez November 19tn
2024.
Mayor Amezcua•
"Mr City manager I would hope that you're going to bring it back at some point so
we can look at placing regulations and generating some revenue for our city..."
Councilmember Bacerra:
"I had advocated for kind of a more nuanced approach to have um short-term rentals
with some sort of limited scope of where they could exist um I think after quite a bit
of interesting deliberation we ended up going with a outright band so um I would at
some point like staff to come back with some potential alternatives.."
Councilmember Lopez:
" [w]e discussed I think uh when we first talked about this having staff meet with
stakeholders to take their input to figure out the possibility in the future especially
for those living at home..."
Zuniga, Diana
From: Maria Ceja <
Sent: Tuesday, July 01, 2025 11:38 AM
To: eComment
Subject: Agenda item #28
Attention: This email originated from outside of City of Santa Ana.Use caution when opening attachments or links.
Mayor and City Council,
I want to express my support for the establishment of a financial assistance program for families impacted by the recent
kidnappings authorized by the federal government. It is most important that the City provides financial support as
families navigate life after their loved one has been illegally taken without warning. We are seeing that many of our
neighbors that have been kidnapped are the primary breadwinners of their family.This completely destabilizes their
households, especially given the current state of our economy as we continue to see prices raise while wages stagnate. I
ask that this program have the most minimal amount of barriers for families— they are already stressed and mentally
impacted by what they are experiencing,the city should not add more stress with support that will aid them to survive
what they are going through. Please let this be a dignified, accessible process for all seeking financial support and
ensure that the city sets up an area for people to be able to come and apply in person in case any one needs support
during the application process (if there is one pertaining to this process).
Sincerely,
Maria Ceja
Santa Ana resident(born & raised)
i
Zuniga, Diana
From: Mai Do <mai@harborinstituteoc.org>
Sent: Tuesday, July 01, 2025 2:57 PM
To: eComment
Subject: Support for Agenda Items #27 and #32; Comments on Agenda Item #28
Attachments: 7.1.25_SACC_Letter.pdf
Attention: This email originated from outside of City of Santa Ana.Use caution when opening attachments or links.
Dear Mayor Amezcua and City Councilmembers,
Please find attached a letter signed by local immigrant rights organizations in support of Agenda Items#27 and#32 and
with regards to Agenda Item#28 on the agenda for the upcoming July 1, 2025 City Council meeting.
Best,
Mai Nguyen Do
„p,vRFom,„ Mai Nguyen Do
They/Them
Research& Policy Manager
Harbor Institute for Immigrant&Economic Justice
R,mai(a)harborinstituteoc.org
Rlwww.harbori nstituteoc.o rq
R1837 N Ross St,Santa Ana,CA 92701
❑x ❑x ❑x
0 Join our newsletter: Get the latest on immigration and economic policy in OC!
1
July 1, 2025
Santa Ana City Council
20 Civic Center Plaza
Santa Ana, CA 92701
Re: Agenda Item#27, #28, and #32
Dear Mayor Valerie Amezcua and Santa Ana City Council Members,
We write in support of Agenda Items #27 and #32. As always, we support efforts to advocate for
community safety and to make transparent immigration enforcement presence in our neighborhoods.
We also write to encourage the City Council to carefully consider its approach to direct aid for residents
during this time, as to be discussed under Agenda Item #28:
1. Existing programming. The City of Santa Ana already has an existing program to support
residents impacted by immigration enforcement-the immigration legal defense fund. Legal
support is often a heavy financial strain on impacted families, so allocating additional funds to
increase legal support capacity is one avenue through which to offer financial relief to residents.
Agenda Item #28 includes expansion of funding for the immigration legal defense fund. Such an
expansion does not need to be routed through or otherwise made more complicated by the
creation of an additional program. Moreover, we continue to emphasize the importance of
ensuring that City-funded legal services are accessible to and reach impacted community
members, including Southeast Asian refugees who are disproportionately targeted for
deportation and face unique challenges to securing adequate legal representation.
2. Funding sources for emergency cash assistance. While some other cities in the region are utilizing
cancelled event funds to support immigrant and refugee residents, their programs involve
significantly smaller allocations.' We strongly encourage the Council to consider
intergovernmental partnerships, public-private partnerships with philanthropic funders, and
amendments to the municipal budget as primary options for funding the emergency assistance
program instead of reallocating community event funds for reasons described below. All three
options are also funding avenues pursued by other Southern California municipalities seeking to
create aid programs for families impacted by immigration enforcement.
3. Honoring the agency of impacted residents and upholding community pride. There are
legitimate safety concerns that many families are grappling with when deciding whether to step
outside their homes, and direct cash assistance is one important way to support families
negatively impacted by immigration enforcement. However, should the City Council pursue the
creation of this emergency cash assistance fund, we encourage the Council to consider
additional or alternative funding sources and allow families the choice of whether to participate
in community events. Families deserve the opportunity to make informed decisions for
themselves rather than having the Council make that decision for them wholesale through mass
cancellation of events-important events that celebrate the rich heritage of local immigrant
and refugee communities.
Similar programs in the cities of El Monte and Montebello have involved municipal fund allocations of approximately$100,000.
Even considering the larger population size and demographics of the City of Santa Ana,a proportionate program would likely be
about$300,000-400,000.The City of Anaheim's program is a partnership and is only partially funded by the municipal government.
Sincerely,
Harbor Institute for Immigrant & Economic Justice
Orange County Justice Fund
El Centro Cultural de Mexico
VietRISE
Zuniga, Diana
From: Escamilla, Manny <manuel.escamilla@ocgov.com>
Sent: Tuesday, July 01, 2025 4:22 PM
To: eComment
Cc: Nunez, Alvaro; Vazquez, Sylvia
Subject: Letter of Support - Items 26, 27, 28, & 32
Attachments: Letter of Support - COSA - 07.01.25 - Immigration Defense Items.pdf
-Attention: This email originated from outside of City of Santa Ana.Use caution when opening attachments or links.
Hello Mayor and Council,
On behalf of Supervisor Sarmiento, please see the attached letter of support for items 26, 27, 28, and 32.
All the best,
Manny
Manuel J. Escamilla
manuel.escamiIla@ocgov.com
Senior Policy Advisor
Office of Supervisor Vicente Sarmiento
County Administration North
400 W. Civic Center Drive, Sixth Floor
Santa Ana, CA 92701
Office: 714-834-3220
Cell: 657-401-5554
1
' VICENTE SARMIENTO
ORANGE COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS
SUPERVISOR,SECOND DISTRICT
COUNTY ADMINISTRATION NORTH BUILDING
400 W.CIVIC CENTER DRIVE.SANTA ANA,CALIFORNIA 92701
PHONE(714)834-3220
Mayor and City Council
City of Santa Ana
20 Civic Center Plaza,
Santa Ana, CA 92701
Dear Mayor and City Council,
I am writing to support the City's efforts to respond to the unprecedented and constitutionally
dubious mass immigration raids occurring throughout Orange County. Your four items are a
necessary step to respond to the urgency of the situation:
• Item 26 - Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request to U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE) to add additional transparency and public documentation of
immigration enforcement activity within the City of Santa Ana.
• Item 27 - Resolution calling on all federal representatives to advocate for the removal of
ICE, military, and federal enforcement personnel; support residents impacted by
immigration raids; and a reaffirmation of the City's Sanctuary City policies.
• Item 28 — Considering a temporary program of financial assistance for families impacted
by federal immigration enforcement actions funded by up to $1 million of the FY25-26
budget in accordance with the direction of the Council.
• Item 32 -Discussing and Directing the City Staff to Prepare an ordinance requiring all law
enforcement officers operating in Santa Ana to wear clearly visible identification,
prohibiting face coverings that obscure identity during public interactions, and resolutions
supporting SB 627 and SB 805.
Thank you for taking a comprehensive approach to address the needs of our community in light of
unaccountable masked and unidentified individuals operating in Orange County. The City of
Huntington Park already identified ICE impersonators within their jurisdiction. Troublingly, we
are witnessing an increasing number of reports of individuals impersonating federal agents in other
parts of the Country.
If there is anything that I or my office can do to assist with these items, please do not hesitate to
reach out, 714-834-3220 or Vicente.Sarmientogocgov.com.
Sincerely,
Vicente Sarmiento
Supervisor, Second District