Know your rights and make a plan in case you encounter immigration agents in Maine.
Strong due process protections are essential to ensuring every resident can live safely in their community and access local services, regardless of immigration status. This page outlines the process behind Rockland’s adoption of a first-in-Maine ordinance and order, designed to limit local participation in federal immigration enforcement, safeguard constitutional rights, and ensure that local resources are allocated for local priorities.
LD 1971 is set to become law ninety days after the legislature adjourns. Between now and then, localities have no framework governing their officials’ role in immigration enforcement. An order and ordinance like the ones Rockland passed in December 2025 are an important stopgap measure. Once LD 1971 goes into effect, it will set a baseline for due process protections, not a ceiling. Municipalities retain the authority to enact local laws that provide even stronger safeguards for residents, particularly when state law may change in the future or fail to fully protect due process rights.
One way that Rockland’s ordinance does this is by restricting not just police, but all city employees from engaging in certain forms of immigration enforcement. We encourage municipalities hoping to ensure their taxpayer dollars are not used to fund federal immigration enforcement to use the Rockland ordinance and order templates in their towns, cities, and counties to protect their communities while waiting for LD 1971 to become Maine law.