GUHSD board rejects Fite’s resolution to protect students from ICE agents

by ECM | November 14, 2025 6:37 pm

By Alexander J. Schorr

Screenshot: Student Board Trustee Sage Larson and Board Trustee Chris Fite

November 14, 2025 (El Cajon) — The conservative board majority of the Grossmont Union High School District (GUHSD) last night rejected a resolution proposed by Trustee Chris Fite that would have offered protection to vulnerable students and their families facing the looming presence of Immigration Customs Enforcement (ICE) on school campuses.  The motion died without a second.

Fite’s Resolution

Fite, who represents Area 1, is a retired teacher who was reelected in November 2024. His proposed resolution, GUHSD as a welcoming district for all students[1], would have:

 

Fite is known for proposing resolutions[2] aimed at generating safe and welcoming environments for all students and staff— specifically rejecting discrimination and harassment. Fite’s proposed resolutions have specifically addressed support for students with varying immigration statuses, ensuring that the district adheres to California law AB 49,[3] which mandates that GUHSD will not cooperate with US immigration and Customs (ICE) without a legal warrant.

The proposed resolution and existing state law are intended to ensure that schools remain safer environments for all students, regardless of their families’ immigration status, and to curb fear of detainment or deportation.

News reports from related San Diego-area districts mention that there have been no confirmed reports of ICE presence on their campuses since proactive policies were put in place, suggesting a general environment of non-cooperation with ICE without legal mandates, at least at this time.

GUHSD encompasses 17 schools in East County and serves over 22,000 students, with 44.4%[4] of which are Latino or Hispanic.

Recently, the Department of Homeland Security has been awarded $170 billion in funds by the “big, beautiful, bill[5],” with US taxpayer dollars being funneled towards the harassment, terrorizing, and deportation of US citizens and immigrants.

While some schools[6] are doing what they may to offer protection to students, the GUHSD governing board failed to second Trustee Fite’s suggestion, ultimately terminating his proposed resolution.

Screenshot, right: Alexander Kraft, a local El Cajon community organizer and Union leader

Community members in the audience were not satisfied with the board’s decision to reject Fite’s resolution to protect children in school from ICE regardless of their immigration status.

David Dann, a father of three students at GUHSD, expressed his concerns. “Their mother is an immigrant,” he said. He stated that ICE is racially profiling people, and voiced concern that the district “has no plan” for when ICE comes to check on his family. He said the resolution was “something we could all get behind.”

Ilka Weston, a longtime homelessness activist[7], emphasized that “letting ICE agents onto campus or even near our schools is equivalent to a shooter. We’re supposed to respect law-enforcement, and right now what is going on with the ICE agents is causing fear and PTSD with students, as well as parents because of their children.”

While this a broader issue that has also embroiled the City of El Cajon in its controversial resolution on police cooperation with ICE, the controversy has connections to GUHSD governing board’s conservative majority. The lack of transparency with the ALPR data aligns with a pattern of behavior from the GUHSD board majority, which includes its board president, Gary Woods. The board has been criticized for secrecy, allegedly running ghost candidates[8], retaliations against employees[9], restrictions on speech[10], discrimination based[11] on race[12], creed,[13] and[14] orientation[15], as well as alleged violations of California’s Brown Act[16] for privately discussing district business.

On the governing board’s questionable commitment to transparency and public safety, “This board has just been acting with impunity,” said Alexander Kraft, a candidate[17] for the 2026 El Cajon Mayor. “There hasn’t been a whole lot of scrutiny on politics in East County, there’s been this assumption that it’s just this right-wing stronghold— the Democrats have essentially abandoned it, and people like this who have been here since the ‘90s, have been getting away with doing whatever they want to do for a very long time because nobody thought that there was any way of doing anything about it. The fact of the matter is, that is simply not true.”

The Changes with Immigration Policy

Recent federal immigration changes[18] have been extensive, and largely stem from new executive actions[19] in 2025 aimed at enforcing stricter enforcement, restricted legal pathways, and a comprehensive overhaul of existing policies:

 

GUHSD’s Role in Immigration

Several of these new policies are facing legal challenges: for example, a court has temporarily stayed the implementation of an annual asylum fee, with other lawsuits challenging the expansion of expedited removals and the end of birthright citizenship claims for children of noncitizens, even though the constitution[23] guarantees this[24].

Previously, a KPBS [25]investigation revealed that data from the El Cajon Police Department’s Automated License Plate Reader (ALPR) system has been included in the nationwide immigration-related searches more than 550 times in 2025. This data sharing has raised concerns because the GUHSD has not publicly discussed the use of these devices on school campuses. It is unclear if the district is among the many entities receiving the data from the police. However, there is currently no evidence that the GUHSD governing board is collaborating with ICE at this time.

Endnotes:
  1. GUHSD as a welcoming district for all students: https://go.boarddocs.com/ca/guhsd/Board.nsf/files/DN3U6H7A8755/$file/Resolution%20Welcoming%20District%20For%20All%20Students%20Draft%20(1).docx%202026-20.pdf
  2. proposing resolutions: https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/2024/10/06/qa-with-chris-fite-candidate-for-grossmont-union-high-school-board/
  3. California law AB 49,: https://calmatters.digitaldemocracy.org/bills/ca_202520260ab49
  4. 44.4%: https://www.ed-data.org/district/San-Diego/Grossmont-Union-High
  5. big, beautiful, bill: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/ice-funding-big-beautiful-bill-trump-deportations/
  6. some schools: https://www.sandiegounified.org/
  7. homelessness activist: https://www.facebook.com/100063699514491/posts/hello-hello-meet-ilka-weston-a-long-time-activist-and-homeless-advocate-in-east-/679315872736408/
  8. allegedly running ghost candidates: https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/2025/07/06/spoiler-candidates-pay-to-play-accusations-grossmont-school-board-critics-say-messages-suggest-wildly-unethical-campaign-efforts/
  9. retaliations against employees: https://www.cbs8.com/article/news/local/leaked-texts-spark-recall-campaign-against-four-grossmont-union-high-school-district-board-of-trustees/509-c4fe6086-c97d-4b75-bf0f-bf9af90348bb
  10. restrictions on speech: https://timesofsandiego.com/education/2025/10/10/first-amendment-takes-center-stage-at-grossmont-union-district-meeting/#:~:text=Decked%20in%20blinged%2Dout%20red,did%20the%20student%20board%20member.
  11. discrimination based: https://www.kpbs.org/news/education/2025/10/10/grossmont-union-high-school-board-toned-down-controversial-school-prayer-and-protest-policies
  12. on race: https://recallthetrustees.com/2025/05/14/guhsd-chief-of-staff-resigns-after-new-reports-of-misconduct-immoral-behavior-come-to-light/
  13. creed,: https://www.kpbs.org/news/education/2025/10/10/grossmont-union-high-school-board-toned-down-controversial-school-prayer-and-protest-policies
  14. and: https://www.10news.com/lawsuit-alleges-school-trustee-referred-to-lesbian-as-witch-part-of-lgbtq-coven
  15. orientation: https://www.them.us/story/rose-tagnesi-lesbian-educator-discrimination-lawsuit-witch-lgbtq-coven
  16. Brown Act: https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/2025/06/13/grossmont-school-trustees-regularly-discussed-board-business-in-private-texts-and-emails/
  17. candidate: https://www.instagram.com/kraft4elcajon/
  18. immigration changes: https://forumtogether.org/article/the-first-100-days-of-the-second-trump-administration-key-immigration-related-actions-and-developments/
  19. executive actions: https://www.congress.gov/crs-product/LSB11265#:~:text=On%20January%2020%2C%202025%2C%20President%20Trump%20issued%20an%20executive%20order,cases%20in%20formal%20removal%20proceedings.
  20. USCIS: https://www.uscis.gov/keepingfamiliestogether#:~:text=ALERT:%20On%20November%207%2C%202024,KFT%20parole%20process%20are%20cancelled.
  21. has ceased accepting: https://www.uscis.gov/newsroom/news-releases/uscis-unveils-first-changes-to-naturalization-test-in-multi-step-overhaul-of-american-citizenship#:~:text=These%20critical%20changes%20are%20the,%2C%20YouTube%20%2C%20Facebook%20and%20LinkedIn%20.
  22. new application: https://www.uscis.gov/newsroom/alerts
  23. the constitution: https://constitution.congress.gov/browse/essay/amdt14-S1-1-2/ALDE_00000812/
  24. guarantees this: https://www.brennancenter.org/our-work/research-reports/birthright-citizenship-under-us-constitution
  25. KPBS : https://www.kpbs.org/news/border-immigration/2025/10/08/records-el-cajon-license-plate-data-used-in-nationwide-immigration-searches

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