明尼阿波利斯和圣保罗居民在“地铁突击行动”期间缺勤、失学并对执法部门失去信任,调查显示


更新于:2026年3月25日 / 美国东部时间下午6:31 / CBS新闻

圣地亚哥大学本周发布的一项调查显示,当白宫向明尼阿波利斯和圣保罗部署数千名联邦移民执法人员时,两地居民遭遇了日常生活的广泛中断,从错过医生预约到损失工资,无一幸免。

调查受访者表示,在被称为“地铁突击行动”的移民打击行动期间(12月至2月中旬,超过4000名联邦特工被部署到双城地区),他们中有许多人旷工、跳过预约的医疗服务,一些人还让孩子待在家中不上学。

调查发现,部分受访者称遭到美国移民和海关执法局(ICE)特工的人身攻击,而大多数受访者表示,他们现在对总体执法部门的信任度有所下降。

旷工、失学与错过预约

在明尼阿波利斯,超过35%的受访者表示在行动期间旷工,圣保罗约20%的受访者也有类似经历,最常见的原因是工作场所关闭或担心自身安全。

报告旷工的人群包括服务行业工作者、医生和护士。研究估计,“地铁突击行动”期间明尼阿波利斯和圣保罗两地的工资损失总额达2.438亿美元。

明尼阿波利斯接受调查的K-12学校学生家长中,超过53%的人表示曾让孩子中途辍学,圣保罗约45%的家长也有此情况。

在行动期间有预约医疗服务的受访者中,明尼阿波利斯29%的受访者称至少错过了一次预约,圣保罗这一比例为20%。一些本可前往急诊或医院接受突发医疗状况治疗的人,转而选择留在家中。

“我们开始了解特朗普式大规模移民执法对社区的影响,”该研究作者、圣地亚哥大学美国移民政策中心主任汤姆·黄(Tom Wong)表示。

黄于2月17日至3月6日期间对明尼阿波利斯728名居民和圣保罗662名居民进行了调查。根据最新的美国社区调查,这两座城市总人口约73.6万。调查结果经过加权处理,以确保能代表更广泛的人口群体。

对执法部门信任度降低

除了报告对执法部门的信任度下降外,两地近半数受访者表示,此次行动后他们未来向执法部门寻求帮助的意愿降低。明尼阿波利斯约三分之一的受访者和圣保罗超过四分之一的受访者称,现在更不愿服从执法部门的指令。

调查显示,明尼阿波利斯约28%的受访者和圣保罗19%的受访者表示,在行动期间直接与ICE或边境巡逻队特工有过接触。许多人报告称,他们被询问了种族、民族、国籍或是否会说英语等问题。

在明尼阿波利斯,约46%与联邦移民执法部门有过至少一次接触的受访者表示,即便出示了身份证明,特工仍不相信他们是合法居民;圣保罗这一比例约为20%。

两地与ICE特工有过接触的受访者中,略多于一半的人表示此类接触发生在学校、医疗机构、儿童保育机构、法院或宗教场所——这些地方在往届政府时期一直受移民执法部门保护。

明尼阿波利斯约23%与ICE有过接触的受访者称遭到人身攻击,约25%的人表示特工使用了胡椒喷雾、催泪瓦斯或其他化学制剂;圣保罗受访者中,约14%称遭受人身攻击,17%称被使用化学制剂。

“地铁突击行动”以及1月在明尼阿波利斯南部发生的联邦特工枪杀Renee Good和Alex Pretti事件,在双城引发了广泛抗议。联邦特工在驱散抗议人群时经常使用化学制剂。

黄向CBS新闻表示,有色人种被ICE特工询问或袭击的可能性约为白人的两倍。他指出,现有调查结果未按族裔细分,但将在后续研究中详细分析。

“很多其他州和城市都在观望自己是否会成为下一个目标,”他表示,“我认为如果再次发生明尼苏达州类似的情况,许多社区将不得不为大量变化做好准备。”

Twin Cities residents missed work, school and lost trust in law enforcement during Operation Metro Surge, survey finds

Updated on: March 25, 2026 / 6:31 PM EDT / CBS News

From missed doctor’s appointments to lost wages, Minneapolis and St. Paul residents faced widespread disruptions to their daily lives when the White House deployed thousands of federal immigration agents to their cities, a University of San Diego survey released this week found.

Survey respondents reported missing work and skipping scheduled medical appointments during the immigration crackdown, also known as Operation Metro Surge, in which more than 4,000 federal agents were deployed to the Twin Cities between December and mid-February. Some also said they kept children home from school.

Some reported they were physically assaulted by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, and the majority said they now have less trust in law enforcement in general, the survey found.

Missing work, school and appointments

More than 35% of those surveyed in Minneapolis and about 20% of those surveyed in St. Paul reported missing work during the operation, most often because their workplace closed or they were concerned for their safety.

Those who reported missing work included service workers, physicians and nurses. The study estimated that there was a combined $243.8 million in lost wages in Minneapolis and St. Paul during Metro Surge.

More than 53% of parents with children in K-12 schools surveyed in Minneapolis said they kept their children home from school at some point during the operation, along with approximately 45% of parents in St. Paul.

Among those who had scheduled medical appointments during the crackdown, 29% of Minneapolis respondents said they missed at least one appointment, compared to 20% of St. Paul residents. Some who otherwise would have gone to urgent care or the hospital for an unexpected medical condition instead opted to stay home.

“We are beginning to learn more about how Trump-style, large-scale immigration enforcement is impacting communities,” said Tom Wong, the study’s author and director of the university’s U.S. Immigration Policy Center.

Wong surveyed 728 Minneapolis residents and 662 St. Paul residents between Feb. 17 and March 6. The two cities have a combined population of about 736,000, according to the latest American Community Survey. He weighted the responses to ensure they represented the broader population.

Less trust in law enforcement

In addition to reporting decreased trust in law enforcement, nearly half of survey respondents in both cities said they were less likely to seek help from law enforcement in the future as a result of the operation. Nearly a third in Minneapolis and more than a quarter in St. Paul said they were less likely to obey commands from law enforcement now.

About 28% of Minneapolis residents and 19% of St. Paul residents surveyed said they interacted directly with ICE or Border Patrol agents during the operation, the survey found. Many of those individuals reported being questioned about their race, ethnicity, national origin or whether they spoke English.

In Minneapolis, about 46% of respondents who had at least one interaction with federal immigration enforcement said agents did not believe they were lawful residents even after they showed identification, compared to about 20% of respondents in St. Paul.

A little more than half of the survey respondents who interacted with ICE agents in both cities said those encounters happened at or near a school, health care facility, child care facility, courthouse or place of worship – places that have been protected from immigration enforcement under previous administrations.

In Minneapolis, about 23% of survey respondents who interacted with ICE reported being physically assaulted, and about 25% said that agents used pepper spray, tear gas or another chemical agent against them. For St. Paul respondents, approximately 14% said they were physically assaulted and 17% said agents used chemical agents against them.

Operation Metro Surge, and the January shooting deaths of Renee Good and Alex Pretti in south Minneapolis by federal agents, sparked widespread protests in the Twin Cities, which federal agents often used chemical agents to disperse.

People of color were roughly twice as likely to be questioned or assaulted by ICE agents, Wong told CBS News of the survey’s findings. The available survey results don’t break down by ethnicity, but will be detailed in a forthcoming study, he said.

“A lot of other states and cities are kind of just waiting to see if they’re going to be the next target,” he said. “I think that if this happens again in the way that it happened in Minnesota, a lot of communities are going to have to brace for a lot of change.”

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