California City Declares Itself Sanctuary City From Federal Overreach

A California city is declaring itself a sanctuary city from government overreach.

The city of Oroville in northern California, about 70 miles north of Sacramento, this month declared itself a “Constitutional Republic City” in order to shield residents from federal and state overreach.

The Oroville city council voted 6-1 for a resolution making the declaration on Nov. 2. Councilmember Krysi Riggs was the only “no” vote on the measure.

“What we are doing is protecting our citizens’ rights as much as we can on the local level,” said Oroville Vice Mayor Scott Thomson, who requested the measure,

“In a way, we are acting as a sanctuary city for our citizens and their rights and freedoms protected by the U.S. and state constitutions,” Thomson said. “Gavin Newsom modeled this type of declaration for us when he declared San Francisco a sanctuary city for what he believed to be overreach by the federal government against his citizens.”

“It’s just basically drawing the line,” Thompson said. “It’s not necessarily against one specific mandate, we’re not talking about one mandate that’s been pushing on us recently it’s a barrage of mandates.”

The resolution says the city will not enforce “any executive orders issued by the state of California or by the United States federal government that are overreaching or clearly violate our constitutionally protected rights.”

The move comes as both Governor Gavin Newsom and President Joe Biden attempt to enforce pandemic measures such as vaccine and mask mandates. Last month, Newsom announced a vaccine mandate for schools, meaning all students in California will be required to be vaccinated to attend school in person once the vaccines have been approved for their age groups.

“The state already requires that students are vaccinated against viruses that cause measles, mumps, and rubella – there’s no reason why we wouldn’t do the same for COVID-19,” Newsom said when he announced the requirement.

In September, Biden announced that companies with 100 or more employees, which covers about 84 million workers, must require their workers to be fully vaccinated by Jan. 4 or test negative for the virus once a week.

One council member worried that the city could lose federal funding over its defiance of federal mandates.

‘Will Oroville be able to stand alone and sustain itself?” Councilmember Janet Goodson asked, noting that the city has received about $4.8 million in COVID relief funds over the last two years.

However, city attorney Scott Huber assuaged those concerns, saying the “Constitutional Republic City”


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