Law officials move through an apartment complex during a raid Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2025, in east Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

THIS STORY FIRST APPEARED ON CPR.COM

DENVER | As news spread over the last two weeks about the potential for immigration enforcement actions across the Denver metro area, anxious parents and students stayed home from school in greater numbers than usual.

Both Aurora Public Schools and Denver Public Schools saw slight dips in attendance on days when immigration officials were rumored to begin raids. 

In Aurora, about 79 percent of students showed up for school on Thursday, Jan. 30, when reports that Immigration and Customs Enforcement were planning a mass deportation effort first surfaced. Earlier in the week, attendance had hovered around 90 percent.

This week, when those actions actually happened on Wednesday, Feb. 5, attendance at Aurora Public Schools had rebounded again to around 90 percent.

Denver saw a lower decline in attendance figures with a little over 84 percent attendance on Thursday, Jan. 30 — closer to its average attendance for the week than Aurora — and 87 percent on Feb. 5.

The last couple weeks have brought uncertainty and fear for many students, families and staff in the Aurora and Denver school districts.

The Trump administration has said it will focus on detaining and deporting immigrants in the country illegally who commit violent acts, but the Wednesday raids saw agents knocking on random apartment doors asking residents if they knew where any “undocumented” immigrants were.

ICE didn’t show up at any schools in Aurora or Denver, according to both school districts. Still, schools have been on pins and needles after guidelines were rescinded that prevented Immigration and Customs Enforcement from carrying out immigration enforcement in “sensitive locations” such as schools, hospitals, and churches.

Some reports put the number of school-aged children in the country illegally at between 733,000 and 850,000. But all students, regardless of immigration status, have a constitutionally protected right to access free public education. The arrests trigger fear in children about their parents being deported.

Hinkley High School social studies teacher Bryan Lindstrom, who saw one of the raids on his way to the school, said his attendance was slightly below average Wednesday but it was much worse Thursday, Jan. 30 when there was warning about a raid, which was eventually called off.

“I had students on Wednesday in tears worried about what to do,” he said.

That Thursday, about a third of his students showed up to the Aurora school. Lindstrom said he’s educated himself on his rights as a teacher, and educators at his school keep “Know Your Rights” cards in their rooms if a student feels they need one.

“Our principal has been very clear on our willingness to make sure that students in our building are safe,” he said.

Some students know warrants are needed for agents to enter school and home but “most people in the community realize if they are undocumented, the most dangerous point of it is the transition from home to school.”

Early Wednesday, social media amplified the fear and spread false rumors such as a family being apprehended at a bus stop. What actually happened was the ICE raid at the Cedar Run Apartments complex forced buses to reroute, missing a stop.

DPS Superintendent Alex Marrero was on his way to a school Wednesday in the area of the action and stopped by when he heard that a DPS bus had to be rerouted due to a bus stop that was blocked by a law enforcement barricade. 

“He was there to ensure DPS students had the opportunity to get to school,” the district said in a statement.

Some students are fighting back. On Wednesday, students from high schools across Denver joined a large protest around the Capitol. 

District policies

The rescinding of the “sensitive locations” order hasn’t changed how most districts handle interactions with government officials, say district officials.

DPS staff members have received training over the past few weeks in existing district policy. Under policy, nobody should be admitted to the building without having legitimate business to enter. Federal immigration law enforcement activities aren’t permitted at DPS schools, on bus routes or on DPS property or during school activities “without a valid search warrant or exigent circumstances.”

Districts don’t collect the immigrant status of families and federal law limits who gets access to student documents.

A toolkit with immigration resources for Denver Public Schools families is available in English and Spanish. A letter from Marrero to parents in mid-January urged them to look over the resources and to update the students’ emergency contacts.

“Our schools are safe, and we want our students here,” Marrero wrote. “While our function is to provide education for all students, our responsibility is to provide safe and welcoming environments. That has not changed.”

Officials from the Denver Classroom Teachers Association talked with district officials Wednesday about making sure mental health professionals were deployed to schools in the area to ensure students and staff were supported.

“Our parents and students and also our educators, there’s a lot of fear out there and we know they’re going to be traumatized from these raids and also from the potential unconfirmed raids,” said Rob Gould, president of the Denver Classroom Teachers Association. “We’ve got a long road ahead of us.”

Aurora Public Schools, which has students from more than 130 different countries who speak more than 160 languages, issued a memo on Dec. 5 instructing staff to tell immigration agents that they can’t enter the building or speak with any student without first contacting the district’s legal office. Agents need a judicial warrant to enter a school building.

On Tuesday night, the school board adopted a resolution emphasizing its commitment to safe and inclusive schools. It referenced the 1982 Supreme Court decision granting public school to all children regardless of their legal status, and the equal protection rights of the Fourteenth Amendment: “We recognize our legal and moral obligation to serve and support all students.

Other districts

Many other districts around the state have communicated to families and staff members state and federal laws that protect students regardless of immigration status and that their focus is on providing a welcoming environment where students can thrive.

“We are also committed to maintaining the privacy and dignity of all students and families. While we cooperate with government and law enforcement agencies as required by law, our primary responsibility is to our students’ safety, education, and success,” Superintendent Michael Gaal of District 11 in Colorado Springs wrote in a January email to families.

Greeley-Evans 6 has a crisis response team that has been planning since November in case of a mass deportation event. Building leaders, office staff and parent advocates have been trained. Eagle County has shared a document with staff on what to do if an immigration officer shows up at a school, which is to send them to the district office.

Some districts like Cherry Creek are also working with community groups, state and city officials and local law enforcement “to plan and prepare for a variety of scenarios that could impact our students and our community.”

Other districts have posted specific protocols and laws on their websites such as Jefferson County School District and the Roaring Fork School District.

8 replies on “Denver and Aurora schools see dip in attendance amid ICE raids”

  1. Lindstrom is a commie who winds his students up about how evil the US is, so it’s not a surprise his students would have so much anxiety.

    1. Left-leaning teachers regularly work their students up so they can be used as pawns to advance their agenda.

  2. I am more than fine with my tax dollars for schools going into resources devoted to American kids and no others.

  3. Buried in the 8th paragraph: “ICE didn’t show up at any schools in Aurora or Denver, according to both school districts.” Rags like the Sentinel promote hate and fear with their sensationalistic writing. This does a huge disservice to readers and the community in general. The Sentinel’s Lefitist agenda should be curtailed to some degree by a competent editor but those are not employed there.
    It was stated very openly by Tom Homan that the sanctuary city polices enacted to elevate illegals over citizens would result in collateral arrests. We are now seeing the results of those sanctuary policies. Leftists, with their “welcoming cities” have only put illegals in jeopardy simply to satisfy an ideological agenda.

  4. There is no reason to stoke fear! If Trump wanted to fix the problem, he would work with legislators to find a new method of immigration. Case in point: Congressman Langford of Oklahoma authored a bill that had bipartisan support that Trump signaled the GOP to kill. He stated that he didn’t want it solved on Biden’s watch. Well, where is the long-term solution now? He’s not working on it, he’s using fear and criminalization to discourage immigration. No sane person thinks our system isn’t broken, but neither party wants to solve it when they have the means. The GOP has the House, Senate, and the Presidency. We could rebuild our system sensibly, so we allow workers to immigrate and asylum seekers a welcoming process, while screening for criminals. There is no need to vilify immigrants who have a lower rate of committing crimes than our regular citizenry.

    1. We hear the word ” broken” a lot. It has become a favorite word of the “left” when they are unhappy with something. “Government is broken, Congress is broken, the healthcare system is broken, the Supreme Court is broken and of course, our immigration system is broken. But they never say how it is broken. So I challenge you – tell us how our legal immigration system is broken. It has served us well for over 100 years and has brought us some of our finest American citizens. They are loyal to and proud to call themselves Americans. So again, how is it “broken.”

    2. “Case in point: Congressman Langford of Oklahoma authored a bill that had bipartisan support that Trump signaled the GOP to kill. He stated that he didn’t want it solved on Biden’s watch. ”

      Man, you lie as naturally as you breathe, don’t you?

      Besides, we all know when you use these fake BOAF SYDEZ appeals, what you really mean is, “Let the Democrats have their way, no matter what, or we’re going to scream fascism.”

  5. Mr. Lindstrom: This seems like an excellent teachable moment for you to fully educate your classes about the Supremacy clause in the US Constitution. As you know, immigration and national security are both squarely federal domain. Period.

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