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ICE is actively acquiring warehouses and eyeing shuttered prisons across the country to convert into immigrant detention centers. FCI Dublin, the closed federal prison 20 miles southeast of Oakland, is at risk of being converted. If ICE took it over, it would become the only ICE detention facility in the entire Bay Area, putting our neighbors, families, and community members at increased risk.
The Alameda County Board of Supervisors will vote on a resolution to oppose FCI Dublin being converted and reopened as an ICE detention center or any other kind of correctional facility. Co-sponsored by Supervisors David Haubert and Elisa Marquez, this resolution is a direct roadblock against ICE expansion in our community, and your presence can help it pass.
(In-person AND online. Both count)
Here’s how to take action:
1. SHOW UP. Attend in person or join online at 1pm on Tuesday, April 7. Your physical presence sends a powerful message to the Board.
2. SPEAK UP. Public comment is one of the most impactful things you can do. See our toolkit for step-by-step guidelines on how to comment in person or online.
3. CAN’T MAKE IT? Submit written comments by EMAIL by Monday, April 6 at 3:00 PM. Comments received by this deadline will be distributed directly to all Board members. Submit a comment here. Check the toolkit for the updated agenda item number and talking points.
4. SIGN UP HERE WITH THE ICE OUT OF DUBLIN COALITION to let us know you are participating. It takes 30 seconds and helps us coordinate a strong showing.
Email strike.debt.bay.area@gmail.com a few days beforehand for the online invite. All are welcome!
For our April, 2026 meeting we will be reading and discussing the first three chapters of The Pacific Circuit, by Alex Madrigal (Amazon) (MacMillan). For our May meeting we will finish the book.
Alexis Madrigal reveals how understanding Oakland explains the modern world.
In The Pacific Circuit, the award-winning journalist Alexis Madrigal sculpts an intricate tableau of the city of Oakland that is at once a groundbreaking big-idea book, a deeply researched work of social and political history, and a vivid rendering of the defining themes of the twenty-first century.
Oakland’s stories encompass everything from Silicon Valley’s prominence and the ramifications of a compulsively digital future to the underestimated costs of technological innovation on local communities―all personified in this changing landscape by the city’s lifelong inhabitants.
The Pacific Circuit holds a magnifying glass to the legacies etched by generations of systemic segregation and the ceaseless march of technological advancement. These are not just abstract concepts; they are embedded in the very fabric of Oakland and its people, from dockworkers and community organizers to real estate developers and businesspeople chasing the highest possible profits. Madrigal delves into city hall politics, traces the intertwining arcs of venture capital and hedge funds, and offers unprecedented insight into Silicon Valley’s genesis and growth, all against the backdrop of Oakland―a city vibrating with untold stories and unexplored connections that can, when read carefully, reveal exactly how our markets and our world really function.
Strike Debt Bay Area hosts this non-technical book group discussion monthly on new and radical economic thinking. Our first book was Doughnut Economics, and our most recent books were A Paradise Built in Hell, What’s Left – 3 Paths Through the Planetary Crisis, The Age of Insecurity and Elinor Ostrom’s Rules for Radicals. For the rest of our reading list see here.