A Trump Stronghold Grapples With Health Risks of ICE Detention Sites
SOCIAL CIRCLE, Ga. 鈥 Until recently, this rural city about 45 minutes east of Atlanta was best known for its Blue Willow Inn cookbooks featuring recipes for Southern dishes such as baked pineapple casserole and kudzu blossom jelly.
Lately, however, the community has been trying to stave off a new identity of 鈥減rison town鈥 as it fights the opening of what could become the nation鈥檚 largest immigration detention center, holding up to 10,000 people.
Walton County, home to this city of about 5,500, voted overwhelmingly for President Donald Trump in 2024. But, as the administration鈥檚 mass deportation strategy hits closer to home 鈥 with plans moving forward to transform a more than 1 million-square-foot warehouse into a holding pen 鈥 locals say the city鈥檚 infrastructure just can鈥檛 handle such an influx of people.
This month, Social Circle in federal court against U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The city鈥檚 complaint argues that the operation of a detention facility, what it calls a 鈥渕ega center,鈥 would harm public health, strain the local fresh water and sewage treatment systems, and overburden emergency medical services 鈥渄ue to Social Circle鈥檚 modest EMS capacity and DHS鈥 nebulous plan for emergency transport,鈥 referring to the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees ICE.
鈥淭he community is very unified,鈥 City Manager Eric Taylor said. 鈥淲e want them to go away.鈥
Social Circle is one of several communities across the country thrust into a charged national debate about the administration鈥檚 mass immigrant deportation strategy. On the campaign trail, Trump said migrants were . But local leaders, , advocacy groups, and others in , , , , and claim the administration is doing the same thing by plopping detention centers into communities without the capacity to handle a surge of people.
Last year, Todd Lyons, who is serving as acting director of ICE , described a goal to have the mass deportation operate with the . Deportations would move 鈥渓ike Prime, but with human beings,鈥 he said at a border security expo in Phoenix.
ICE is now putting every person they seek to deport in detention, including those with no criminal records, without the possibility of release on bond. In January, the agency held almost twice as many people as it had that same month in 2024 under President Joe Biden.
However, while many supporters remain aligned with Trump鈥檚 immigration stance, some locals fear their city鈥檚 stability will be jeopardized. 鈥淪ocial Circle is not exactly flourishing, but it鈥檚 making it,鈥 said Gareth Fenley, a retired social worker who ran for state Senate in 2024 as a Democrat and was not among the locals who voted for Trump.
鈥淚f Social Circle becomes a prison town,鈥 she said, 鈥渨e鈥檙e gonna lose what we have.鈥
鈥業 Thought It Was a Joke鈥
In February, DHS purchased the 235-acre site in Social Circle for nearly five times its assessed value. It plans to house more people there than at the Rikers Island Correctional Facility in New York City, and nearly triple the number of people now housed at the country鈥檚 biggest immigration detention facility, which is in El Paso, Texas.
鈥淚 thought it was a joke,鈥 said John Miller, when he first read about the plans last year. He and his wife, Kathlene, have lived in Social Circle for 21 years. When they bump into neighbors, Kathlene knows their children鈥檚 names, and John can cite the kids鈥 baseball stats. Their 50-acre horse farm is less than a mile from the elementary school, and right across the street from the detention center site.
The Millers support Trump鈥檚 stance on immigration but feel that turning the vacant warehouse into a detention center would re-create the very problems his administration is trying to solve. Whether people are concentrated in a detention center or out in the public, 鈥渢hey鈥檙e still there,鈥 John Miller said.
DHS estimates that the facility would require about 1 million gallons of water daily, according to the city鈥檚 suit, which alleges that volume would bleed residents鈥 taps dry and contaminate local streams with sewage. Emergency medical calls from the detention center, the lawsuit claims, would overwhelm the city鈥檚 first responders, which Taylor said clock in at 14 firefighters, 15 police officers, and two school resource officers. The city relies on Walton County for ambulance services.
Additionally, Social Circle would live under an ever-present threat of a major disease outbreak, the lawsuit said, adding that the federal government didn鈥檛 conduct the needed environmental reviews or solicit community input beforehand.
Taylor said federal officials had only one meeting with local leaders and brushed off concerns about water, sewage, and emergency care, which administration officials said the site wouldn鈥檛 need to use. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 buy that,鈥 Taylor said. 鈥淎nd that鈥檚 the problem.鈥
Supercharging Health Concerns
Current DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin has said he is reviewing , Kristi Noem, to transform warehouses like this one into detention facilities. And the department鈥檚 whether the federal government overpaid for some of the buildings. Mullin also said officials are reviewing agency policies and working with community leaders. 鈥淲e want to be good partners,鈥 said Lauren Bis, a DHS spokesperson.
Still, the administration鈥檚 swift escalation of immigrant detention has exacerbated long-standing allegations of medical neglect for those in custody across the country and led to the in at least two decades.
Three detention facilities in Folkston, Georgia, about an hour north of Jacksonville, Florida, issued 130 emergency calls from Feb. 4, 2025, to Feb. 3, 2026, according to dispatch reports obtained by 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News through a public records request. The calls from the facilities, which hold about 2,000 people, were for wide-ranging reasons, including anaphylaxis, assaults, suicide attempts, overdoses, seizures, strokes, head injuries from falls, and other health issues.
GEO Group, ICE鈥檚 largest contractor, which runs the Folkston facility, provides 鈥渁round-the-clock access to medical care鈥 and relies on emergency medical services as needed, said Christopher Ferreira, director of corporate relations.
ERO El Paso Camp East Montana, built on a Texas military base, is currently the nation鈥檚 largest detention center and holds about 2,500 people. In the five months from Aug. 17, 2025, to Jan. 20, 2026, about 130 emergency medical calls were made from the site, according to city records. Several detainees have died at the facility; several others have for tuberculosis, measles, or covid-19.
Amentum Services, which recently took over management of the facility, did not respond to questions about emergency calls.
Even bigger detention facilities, such as the 鈥渕ega center鈥 planned in Social Circle, would only supercharge those health issues and bring them to new communities, said , who was immigration ombudsman at the Department of Homeland Security under Biden. Existing facilities already suffer from staffing shortages, poor ventilation and hygiene, and insufficient medical care, she said.
The proposed facilities are enormous and generally built for boxes, not people, she said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no way, without extreme cost, both to the community and just in dollars, to make these safe for humans,鈥 she said.
In the meantime, people such as Kathlene Miller said they feel that Social Circle has become 鈥渃ollateral damage鈥 in the larger debate over immigration. 鈥淲e鈥檙e like the children in a divorce,鈥 she said.
But Social Circle may face an uphill battle. Taylor said Walton County leaders and the state of Georgia have been silent on the center.
鈥淭hey say it鈥檚 federal issues, that they have no jurisdiction,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey don鈥檛 have any interest in helping us.鈥