Winooski schools face death threats, hold line

Winooski sanctuary – In Winooski, Vermont, students and staff say their sense of safety depends on one policy: strict limits on how immigration agents can access campus. After a Somali-flag moment went viral and triggered death threats, the district kept standing—while federal inv
WINOOSKI, Vt. — The day’s class started with a writing prompt: Do you feel safe in school? Why or why not?
In the multilingual learner classroom at Winooski High School, students wrote their answers before reading them aloud. “I feel safe in school because I saw the school doors are locked every time. ” one student said. adding. “and I heard ICE is not here.” Another wrote. “If ICE comes to school. they are not allowed to go in.” A third teen put it more simply: “ICE can’t come in.”.
That feeling of safety is not an abstract belief here. Over the past year, the district’s stance has collided with federal immigration enforcement and with backlash that followed Winooski’s public support for immigrant students.
Since the start of the second Trump administration. the federal government has investigated schools for diversity. equity and inclusion efforts. rescinded a policy protecting students on school grounds from Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrests. and threatened school districts with the loss of federal funding. Administration officials have also encouraged states to challenge a decades-old Supreme Court decision guaranteeing undocumented students’ right to public schooling. which conservative activists say takes resources from American children.
Many districts have chosen silence or self-censorship. Winooski has done the opposite.
Last year. this small district of about 800 students became the first in Vermont to pass a sanctuary policy aimed at protecting students from immigration enforcement while at school. Then. months later. Superintendent Wilmer Chavarria refused to sign a document from the Trump administration stating it is complying with the federal ban on DEI efforts in schools.
The district’s defiance has come with a personal cost for Chavarria and direct fear for families.
In June of last year. Chavarria. a naturalized citizen. was detained for several hours by immigration officials at the Houston airport while he was traveling back from visiting family in Nicaragua. Over Thanksgiving break in November, a second grader was detained with his mother by federal agents conducting immigration enforcement. After weeks in a detention center, they left the country.
And in early December, the district became the target of racist messages and phone calls after a video of a student raising the Somali flag on a pole outside the high school went viral on social media.
There have been no direct threats by the Trump administration to pull Winooski’s federal funding. That funding makes up 6 percent of the district’s annual budget. Still, Chavarria said he is preparing for the possibility.
“When somebody wants us to lose funding, we’re going to lose it anyways. The difference is, did we lose it while bending the knee, or did we lose it while standing up for our values?” Chavarria said. “Either way, the outcome will be the same.”
Winooski sits along the Winooski River on the outskirts of Burlington. It is the smallest school district by land area in Vermont. a state where. according to the report. the community is among the whitest in the nation. Nearly 60 percent of students in Winooski are people of color. more than a third are learning to speak English. and about 71 percent of students live in poverty.
For more than three decades, the town and neighboring region have functioned as a federal refugee resettlement community, accepting hundreds of immigrants annually fleeing conflict from places including Bhutan, Somalia, Bosnia and Syria.
Last year, the Trump administration decreased the admissions cap for refugees into the U.S. from 125,000 in 2025 to 7,500 in 2026, the lowest limit for refugee placement since the program’s inception. Since then, the number of refugees resettling in the state has dropped sharply. So far, about 50 refugees, all from South Africa, have relocated to Vermont this year.
Chavarria, 37, joined Winooski schools in 2023 after serving as director of equity and education support systems in another Vermont district. Born in Nicaragua, he did not learn English until high school, a background he shares with many of the students he serves.
In the community, that history has become part of how his leadership lands.
“Wilmer has been a brave voice in a time in our country where that’s being punished,” said Robin Merritt, a parent of three children in the district, as she dropped them off on a Tuesday morning in April. “I can’t speak for everybody, but most of the public is pretty proud of his leadership.”
The sanctuary schools policy is central to that support.
The guidance formally outlined Winooski’s policy reaffirming that staff will not share student data with immigration officials. It also restricts agents’ access to campus without a signed judicial warrant, among other steps. In May. after advocacy from Chavarria and others. the Vermont Legislature passed a law modeled after Winooski’s policy requiring all schools in the state to have immigration enforcement protocols.
The policy itself was debated in a moment that district residents still describe as emotional. In a district meeting last February, more than three dozen teachers, students and Winooski residents spoke in support of it.
“I want to know the district has my back,” one staff member said. “We are scared. Passing this will help us feel safe and at ease while at school,” a high school student told board members.
Most school board members supported the policy from the outset. But Nicole Mace, the board president, said she worried it would make Winooski a target of federal officials, who have at times singled out sanctuary communities for policies that impede immigration enforcement.
She wasn’t at the meeting where the policy was approved, in a 4-0 vote. But in the year since, she said she has seen how much it has meant to families in the district.
“The risk is around us no matter what, and for the district to take a very clear and unwavering position of support for our families and students couldn’t be done with little tweaks in the policy or putting our heads down and hoping that we could just ride this out,” Mace said.
Ignacia Rodriguez Kmec. policy counsel at the National Immigration Law Center. said clear policies protect students and staff alike. especially those who may not know what immigration agents can do on school grounds. Her group advocates for school districts to have policies in the same way schools plan for earthquakes and tornadoes and other emergency situations.
“You want to be able to show that you support all families, including immigrant families, that they ideally should participate and not be afraid of coming to school,” Kmec said.
A 2022 study found that children from families with mixed citizenship status were more likely to earn A’s and less likely to report problems with their teachers and peers if they attended a school that had a “safe zone” policy restricting immigration enforcement on campus.
In Winooski, staff say the impact is visible in classrooms.
“I really see the impact in the classroom,” said Caitlin MacLeod-Bluver, who teaches English and history at Winooski High and was Vermont’s teacher of the year in 2025. “When kids feel seen and heard and valued in our district and community, it shows up in the work they’re doing.”
MacLeod-Bluver is part of a group of teachers in the district who have volunteered to drive or walk students to and from school when they worry about immigration enforcement in town.
The district’s sanctuary stance was also tied to a moment meant to reassure families. On Dec. 5. three days after President Donald Trump referred to Somalians as “garbage” in a Cabinet meeting. Chavarria helped raise the Somali flag on school grounds. When the video of the flag went viral on right-wing social media. staff had to temporarily take down the district’s website and social media accounts and unplug school phones because of death threats. hundreds of which were turned over to Vermont State Police and the FBI.
White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson said at the time that the threats came from individuals who had nothing to do with the Trump administration. “Aliens who come to our country. complain about how much they hate America. fail to contribute to our economy. and refuse to assimilate into our society should not be here. ” she told The Associated Press. “And American schools should fly American flags.”.
Despite the onslaught, staff kept the Somali flag up, beside the U.S. and Vermont flags, through the following week to show support for Somali students, who make up about 9 percent of the school system’s student population.
Chavarria said he believes the district’s public pushback matters. If more school leaders pushed back on Trump administration policies, Winooski wouldn’t become as large a target for people’s hate.
“It does feel like we are alone in an ocean,” Chavarria said. “It is very, very scary. It is draining. It is demoralizing. It’s like a nightmare that you wish one day ends, because you feel like nobody else understands it because nobody else is being attacked the way we are.”
The pressure didn’t end with the Somali-flag controversy.
Last spring, the superintendent’s brother and sister-in-law had to leave the U.S. after the Trump administration ended a Biden-era program that allowed eligible Nicaraguans to stay in the country for a two-year period with a sponsor. The family had lived with Chavarria as their sponsor. and still had time left on their visas when the program was abruptly canceled.
When Chavarria was stopped at the Houston airport while he was on his way back from visiting family in Nicaragua, immigration officials searched his devices and interrogated him for nearly five hours, about his marriage and work and citizenship, before releasing him.
“When I get asked, I advise people that your status doesn’t matter if you’re brown,” Chavarria said. He has filed a lawsuit against the Department of Homeland Security over agents searching his personal and school devices while he was questioned.
Inside Winooski’s school building this spring, students and staff still live with visible reminders of last year’s escalation. Since the deluge of death threats in December. doors separating hallways are locked. and a staff member must let students through sections of the building throughout the day.
Along the entryway’s walls, dozens of posters and cards from families, students and supporters near and far carry messages such as “You belong here,” “You make our community a better place” and “Somali students we stand with you.”
A table with “Know your rights” and “Conoce tus derechos” sits off to the side. with documents translated into more than half a dozen languages telling families how to organize their documents and talk to children about ICE. The table also includes papers families can hand immigration agents explaining their Fourth and Fifth Amendment rights.
Still, safety inside school walls hasn’t prevented every crisis outside them.
In the weeks following the second grader’s detention in November. teachers wrote letters of support appealing to immigration officials and organized a fundraiser for emergency resources and legal fees. Erin Hurley. a multilingual teacher who taught the boy. said detention center officials denied her request to send his school work to him.
During phone calls. the boy’s mother told Winooski staff that her son wasn’t doing well at the detention center in Dilley. Texas. due to lack of edible food. clean water and medical care. After seven weeks in Dilley, and despite having a lawyer fighting for their release, the family decided to self-deport.
In the last year, Hurley and other staff members at the school district have volunteered to be temporary guardians for several students whose parents worry about being detained.
“I feel so disgusted that our country has come to this. These families make our community so much brighter. They contribute to Vermont so much,” Hurley said.
Protests have also rippled through the region. In March, protests erupted in nearby South Burlington when immigration agents detained three people at a house; none of whom were the man agents had a warrant for.
A high school student in Winooski. whose family members are Nepali immigrants and whose name is being withheld to protect her privacy. said she watched videos of the arrests and protest online. She said she appreciated that the Winooski School District sent out a message alerting families about the incident. The sanctuary schools policy has made her and her mother feel safe while she is at school, the student said. She also hopes other districts in Vermont pass similar policies because of the requirement under the new state law. starting next year.
“Right now, it’s only Winooski. Even if they don’t have a lot of students or staff of color, I think it’s really good to make it a sanctuary school, still. Because there might be one or two students that it would be really helpful,” she said.
Back inside Winooski High School’s multilingual learners class, the day moved on after the writing prompt. Their teacher, Becky Savage, turned to a new topic: Astronauts aboard Artemis II had just released photos from the far side of the moon, the farthest any human has ever traveled from Earth.
The questions came fast. Is that photo artificial intelligence? How do the astronauts have access to the internet? Why didn’t they land on the moon?
For a few minutes, their thoughts stretched 250,000 miles away. Then, it was time to practice reading and writing in English again.
Winooski Vermont sanctuary schools immigration enforcement ICE DEI Wilmer Chavarria Somali flag death threats multilingual learners student safety Vermont Legislature education policy
If ICE “can’t come in” then why are there still threats?
This is wild… like the schools are trying to protect kids but people still wanna act like ICE is the only thing that matters. Also the article says the doors are locked, so what do the threats even mean?
Not gonna lie I don’t get it. If they already stopped immigration agents from entering campus then maybe the threats were just some social media thing that got exaggerated. I mean it said “Somali-flag moment went viral” so now everybody’s mad over a flag? Seems like a distraction.
I hate that kids have to write about feeling safe like it’s normal. One part I don’t understand is they say ICE can’t come in but then the federal government is investigating—so like who’s investigating what, the school or the students? Also death threats are never okay, but somehow it always becomes a political circus. Wish adults would get it together.