What the Senate Did and What Comes Next
On Thursday, May 1, 2026, Senate President Karen Spilka and Senate Democratic leaders unveiled S 3072, the Senate version of the PROTECT Act. The Senate Ways and Means Committee endorsed the bill on a 15 to 1 vote. Amendments were due to the Senate Clerk by 3 p.m. on Monday, May 4. The bill is now in the Senate Orders of the Day, and a floor vote is scheduled for Thursday, May 7, 2026.
The Massachusetts House of Representatives already passed its version of the PROTECT Act (H 5305) by a vote of 134 to 21 on March 25, 2026. We covered that vote in detail in our earlier post on the House passage. The Senate version takes the House framework and significantly expands it.
If the Senate passes S 3072 this week, a six-member conference committee will reconcile the differences between the House and Senate bills and send a final compromise to Governor Maura Healey for her signature. Governor Healey has already signaled support for many of the protections in the Senate bill through her own legislative proposal earlier this year.
Key takeaway for Massachusetts immigrant families this week: The Senate bill is broader than the House bill. It would protect more locations, give residents new tools to hold federal officers accountable in state court, and let parents prepare a guardianship plan for their children before any crisis. The bill is not law yet. Current federal enforcement rules still apply at schools, hospitals, courthouses, and police stations until the Legislature passes a final version and the Governor signs it.
Why the Senate Bill Goes Beyond the House Version
The House bill focused mainly on courthouses. It would bar warrantless civil immigration arrests in and around state courthouses and place narrower limits on local police cooperation with ICE. The Senate bill keeps everything in the House version and then adds substantial new protections that respond directly to the way enforcement has played out in Massachusetts over the past sixteen months.
Expanded Sensitive Locations
The Senate bill would prohibit civil immigration arrests at a broader list of sensitive locations. According to the Boston Globe and State House News Service coverage of the bill rollout, those locations include public schools, child care programs, daycare centers, hospitals and other health care facilities, places of worship, and the courthouses already covered by the House bill. The Senate framework hews closely to the executive order Governor Healey issued in January 2026 and to her own bill filed earlier this year.
A Civil Right to Sue Federal Immigration Officers
The Senate bill includes language drawn from a separate proposal by Senator William Brownsberger of Belmont. That language would create a state cause of action allowing Massachusetts residents to sue federal immigration officers for damages and injunctive relief when those officers violate residents' constitutional rights. This is a significant new tool. It does not change federal law, and it does not block federal officers from doing federally authorized work. It does open a courthouse door in state court for people who believe their rights were violated during an arrest, search, or detention.
Limits on Out-of-State National Guard Deployments
The Senate bill would prohibit another state from sending its National Guard into Massachusetts without the consent of Governor Healey. The provision is a direct response to events in Chicago, Los Angeles, and Minneapolis, where the federal government deployed National Guard units from other states to support immigration enforcement.
Pre-Arranged Guardianship for Children
One of the most family-centered provisions in the Senate bill, also reflected in the House bill and in Governor Healey's proposal, allows a parent to designate another adult to take temporary guardianship of the parent's child if the parent is detained or removed by ICE. The designation does not terminate the parent's legal or parental rights. It provides a clean and immediate handoff so children are not left in school, in daycare, or with strangers if a parent is taken into custody.
A Ban on New 287(g) Agreements
The Senate bill would prohibit Massachusetts state and local government entities from entering into new 287(g) agreements with ICE. A 287(g) agreement deputizes state or local officers to carry out certain federal immigration functions. Today, the Massachusetts Department of Correction holds the only 287(g) contract in the state. The Senate bill would freeze that footprint and prevent its expansion to county sheriffs, municipal police departments, or other agencies.
Limits on Local Police Cooperation
The Senate bill would also limit when local police can collaborate with ICE in civil immigration enforcement. It would bar local police from asking people about their immigration status. These changes build on the legal framework Massachusetts already has under Lunn v. Commonwealth, the 2017 Supreme Judicial Court decision that held Massachusetts law enforcement officers cannot hold a person solely on a federal civil immigration detainer.
Why This Bill Matters for the Brazilian and Haitian Communities
Brazilians make up the largest immigrant community in Massachusetts, with about 140,000 residents according to a 2024 report by the Latino Equity Fund and The Boston Foundation. Haitians make up another large and longstanding community, with deep roots in Brockton, Mattapan, Randolph, Everett, Malden, and Stoughton. ICE arrest data reviewed by Boston Indicators and other Massachusetts research groups show that Brazilians and Haitians are consistently among the most-targeted nationalities in ICE enforcement actions in the Commonwealth.
According to coverage by GBH and a Citizens for Juvenile Justice report we covered on April 27, more than 200 immigrants in Massachusetts were taken into ICE custody directly from local police stations in 2025, and Massachusetts trial courts recorded 614 ICE arrests at or near courthouses in the same year. WBUR has reported that ICE has carried out more than 7,000 arrests in Massachusetts since the second Trump administration took office. The Senate bill is designed to slow or stop several of the channels that produce those numbers.
What This Means for Your Family Today
The bill is not law yet. Until the Legislature passes a final version and the Governor signs it, current federal enforcement rules remain in effect. ICE can still make civil arrests at courthouses, in hospital lobbies, and at school drop-off areas under federal practice. Local police agencies that have policies allowing or requiring cooperation with ICE can continue to follow those policies. The protections in the Senate bill take effect only when the bill becomes law, and even then most provisions are forward-looking.
What you should do this week does not depend on whether the bill passes:
1. Make a Family Plan
Whether or not the Legislature acts this month, every Massachusetts immigrant family should have a written family plan. Identify a trusted U.S. citizen or LPR adult who can take care of your children if you are detained. Sign a power of attorney for school decisions and medical decisions. Keep copies of birth certificates, passports, and important documents in a safe and accessible place. Write down phone numbers your children should call if you are not home when expected.
2. Know Your Rights at the Door, in the Car, and in Public
You have the right to remain silent. You have the right to refuse to open the door without a judicial warrant signed by a federal judge or magistrate. You have the right to ask whether you are free to leave. You have the right to talk to an attorney before answering questions. These rights apply now and will continue to apply whether or not the PROTECT Act becomes law.
3. Consult an Attorney About Your Path Forward
Many people ask about the PROTECT Act because they are worried about a specific situation. A custody case in family court. A divorce. A pending criminal matter. A domestic violence claim. A school issue with a child. A traffic stop that might escalate. The Senate bill, even if signed into law in May, will not by itself solve any of those individual problems. The right answer for most families is to consult with an immigration attorney about every form of relief that might apply, and to file what you can file now while the law is favorable.
4. Watch the May 7 Vote
The Senate vote is scheduled for Thursday, May 7. If the bill passes, the conference committee phase will begin. If the bill fails or is significantly amended, we will update this post and our other coverage. We will also publish a follow-up post when a final bill reaches Governor Healey's desk so you can see exactly what the law says and how it will work in practice.
Frequently Asked Questions
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A short checklist of documents to gather, a guardianship designation template, and a know-your-rights summary for ICE encounters at home, at work, and at school
Massachusetts Family Plan Checklist
Documents to gather, a guardianship designation template, and a short know-your-rights summary.
Worried about ICE encounters in Massachusetts?
If you live in Massachusetts and you have questions about how the PROTECT Act, court appearances, school pickup, or police interactions affect your family, please reach out for a confidential consultation. Planning ahead is easier than reacting in a crisis.
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