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  1. Freke raises process questions the Council genuinely needs to hear — the follow-through problem is real, and the 287(g) analysis is useful grounding. I say this as someone who respects his thinking and is glad to call him a friend.

    Two things give me pause, though.

    The “lawless mob” passage is a response to a statement made by one sponsor at the GOL meeting. That person’s words aren’t the resolution. Whatever one thinks of that comment, the resolution itself is precise and measured — it cites Whitehead v. Senkowski to establish a standard that applies only to agents who acted without legal authority, who didn’t believe their actions were necessary, or whose actions weren’t objectively reasonable. It grounds every claim in specific documented incidents in Massachusetts — a Tufts student kidnapped in defiance of a court order, an 18-year-old detained without warrant in Worcester, assaults in Essex and Middlesex counties. One person’s remarks at a committee meeting, however strongly felt, don’t define what the resolution actually does.

    The second issue is more fundamental. Freke suggests two alternatives: that the Council request a Town Attorney evaluation of the Sanctuary Bylaw, and that it seek a comprehensive update from the Town Manager on preparations by the DEI and Police departments. But these aren’t things residents can ask for — they’re things only the Council or Town Manager can initiate. Under Amherst’s charter, residents have limited formal ways to influence town government. They can speak at public comment, they can vote, and they can bring resolutions. That’s it. Whether the Council then follows through is a legitimate and separate question — but it’s a question about the Council’s accountability, not the residents’. Freke is conflating two distinct things: the residents’ responsibility to engage, and the Council’s responsibility to act. Residents who bring a resolution are doing exactly what the charter asks of them. Holding them responsible for what the Council does or doesn’t do with it isn’t a reason to discourage civic engagement — it’s a reason to demand better from the Council.

    Freke is right that passing a resolution without follow-through is its own failure. But the answer to that is better follow-through, not abandoning the one tool residents actually have.

    One final thought: Freke’s process concerns are worth taking seriously — but they are not a reason to vote no tonight. If the argument is that residents should pursue more deliberate channels of engagement, then councilors who find that persuasive have an obligation to create those channels. You cannot hold residents to a standard of civic participation that the charter doesn’t actually provide. Residents brought a resolution because that is what the charter gives them. Tonight, the Council has the opportunity to show that the charter works — that when residents do their part, the Council does its.

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