Tell Albany: Protect our Families and Freedom
Call your legislator today to say Pass the New York For All, Protect Our Schools, and Safe Spaces bills to safeguard our rights and all New Yorkers.
To get started, click the "Make a Call" button. You'll receive a call from an 855 number. Pick up to get connected to your representative.
Use this quick script when calling:
“Hi, my name is [Your Name], and I’m a constituent from [Your City or ZIP Code]. I’m calling to urge [Assemblymember/Senator NAME] to support and pass:
S2235A / A3506 – New York for All
A5373 / S4735 – Protect Our Schools
A8139 / S4121 – Safe Spaces Act
These bills are critical to keeping our communities safe from unjust federal overreach and protecting New York’s most vulnerable residents. Please vote YES before the session ends. Thank you!”
With just one week left in the 2025 legislative session, New York lawmakers have a final opportunity to protect our communities by limiting state and city collaboration with federal overreach. This means ending harmful civil enforcement actions where families, students, and vulnerable individuals gather, and passing a package of vital public safety and immigrant justice bills.
We need your voice to make sure these critical protections become law.
Bills We’re Fighting For:
S2235A (Gounardes) / A3506 (Reyes)- The New York for All Act brings New York law into conformity with similar laws passed by California, Washington State, and Illinois. The bill codifies existing sanctuary immigrant protections into law. It expands them to apply to municipalities throughout the state, ensuring that our resources are used to help New Yorkers, not to rip families and communities apart. The New York for All Act has languished unpassed for too many sessions, considering how central it is to protecting our state’s sovereignty.
A5373 (Cruz) / S4735 (Sepulveda)- The Protect Our Schools Act, which bars civil arrests on or near school grounds without a judicial warrant and ensures parental notification.
A8139 (Lasher) / S4121 (Jackson)- Expands protections to health care centers, religious institutions, shelters, and other sensitive locations, requiring judicial approval for civil arrests and allowing individuals to seek legal relief.