Stephen Golub: Here’s to the future and to the Benicia High students who embody it

Crowd of 400 Benicia HS students protest ICE at City Park

By Stephen Golub, February 8, 2026

This past Wednesday, February 4, 400 Benicia High students walked out of class to protest the Trump Administration’s immigration policies and the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency enforcing those edicts.

At a time when hope and inspiration get crushed on a daily basis, these teenagers brought plenty of both to their demonstration at City Park.

Over the years, I’ve taught and worked with many hundreds of fine college, law and graduate students from across the country and the globe. I’ve never been so proud of any as I am of the kids in my hometown. It’s just one demonstration. But  it demonstrates that these students care deeply about the immigrants in their midst and those around the country.

This admittedly out-of-touch old fogey previously hadn’t had a clue regarding what the students were thinking about Trump’s immigration crackdown crisis. Frankly, with the exception of a couple of great kids on my block, my previous awareness of them flowed partly from the “La Migra” (slang for ICE) game played by some Benicia High students until very recent years. That exercise involved older students chasing younger ones around town and “capturing” them in imitation of immigration raids. I knew that most of the kids weren’t racist, but the game certainly was.

I now have a clearer, promising sense of where many of them stand. And it’s not just for the future, as vital as that is. They stand with the better angels in America’s past: the central, essential fact that America is a nation of immigrants, built by immigrants.

More than anything, immigration is what distinguishes this country from all others. If Trump had been in power when our parents, grandparents and ancestors came here, they likely would not have made it and we wouldn’t be here today.

Yes, there have been prior periods in our history when we’ve locked immigrants out and locked them up. Yes, we can’t afford to simply open our borders to everyone; our jobs, housing and social fabric can get seriously strained by an endless flood of foreigners. No, I’m by no means defending the flaws in Biden’s approach.

But there are practical, humane ways to handle this, and there’s Trump’s way: It bizarrely features falsely accusing Haitians of stealing and eating people’s pets – during a nationally televised presidential debate, no less – and more broadly portrays immigrants as massively fueling violent crime here.

In reality for at least 150 years, immigrants have committed crime at lower rates than people born here. Undocumented immigrants have lower felony arrest rates than legal ones or native-born Americans. Only five percent of people detained by ICE have violent criminal convictions; 73 percent have no convictions (not even traffic violations) at all.

Sadly, though, Trump’s violent anti-immigrant stances reflect broader agendas aimed at building up a domestic paramilitary force and attacking minorities. White nationalist, pro-Nazi and antisemitic messaging is emanating from various branches of the Administration, not least the White House, partly to appeal to disgruntled young men who are potential ICE agents. Trump himself recently posted a blatantly racist video depicting the Obamas as apes; it’s now been deleted after an outcry that the White House initially resisted.

But back to the positive, for other valuable lessons flow from the City Park demonstration. As reported in an excellent Vallejo Sun article, a Benicia High junior’s Instagram post prompted the event; classmates helped spread the word.

In a related vein, we should recall that another local hero, Sheri Leigh, played an instrumental  role in illuminating and halting the racist La Migra game. And of course, Minneapolis community resistance to brutal ICE raids has been facilitated by online communications.

One point, then, is that individuals and small groups can still make a big difference in Benicia and America, by taking steps to battle the nation’s worst impulses and to bring out the best in us. Another is that as much as social media can be a cesspool, it also can serve productive purposes.

We similarly  saw the positive power of social media, individuals’ initiatives and collective action on display last Sunday, when a couple of Benicians organized a post-Minneapolis Walk for Peace and Unity down First Street. People quietly came together to share the life-affirming features of our community and our country.

So, thanks to Benicia High students, our local heroes, for educating this uneducated fellow Benician about where you stand and for reminding our city about what’s at stake. There are still dark days ahead. But with people like you lighting the way, I’m looking toward the future with hope.


Benicia resident and author Stephen Golub, A Promised Land

Stephen Golub writes about democracy and politics, both in America and abroad, at A Promised Land: America as a Developing Country.

…and… here’s more Golub on the Benicia Independent

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Inclusivity Includes Everyone – A Benicia Story of Endeavor

Presenting the Tyler Street Collective!

Tyler Street Collective – Quinn Bert, Elia Zuniga, Joe Farrell, and Oliver Vazquez

By Sheri Leigh, January 30, 2026

“No one chooses which life they are born into, and that’s the commonality of the human experience.”
Thomas Farrell

I want to share with you the dream of a local teacher of special education and eleven year Benicia resident, Joe Farrell.  He and several of his former students are working hard to help make Benicia a place where everyone with the desire to build community is encouraged, supported and successful.  As a teacher in special education, his students are neurologically atypical.  Some are developmentally delayed through Down’s Syndrome, others are on the spectrum, and some live with a debilitating disease, such as cerebral palsy.  Together, they are putting together a food service business that combines nutrition, creativity, entertainment, industry, and a welcome mat for everyone who wants to take part.  Presenting the Tyler Street Collective!

As Joe laid out his plans for this restaurant with me, I found his enthusiasm to be contagious.  It became clear to me that Joe’s endeavor was more than an idea, it was a calling.  And he is supported by his family.  His wife Natalie works in behavioral science, and shares his passion for encouraging those who are non-neuro typical to be a contributing part of the community.  The couple have two daughters, both of whom show compassion and concern for those with special needs.  The elder, now in middle school, is a peer leader.  

I also learned that Joe comes from a family of advocates for people with special needs.  His grandfather, Thomas Farrell, was an early modern advocate for people with disabilities and is quoted in the article opening.  After having cared for and eventually having to institutionalize his own daughter (Joe’s aunt), a woman with severe autism, Joe’s grandfather went on to fight for the rights and dignity of the handicapped.  He worked at the State and National levels under the Reagan administration, helping designate National Barrier Awareness Day, an important precursor to the American Disabilities Act.   

Tyler Street Collective – Quinn Berg, Chef Matt Beard, and Elias Zuniga

Joe is able to develop his plan because of his family and work experience, a creative mind, an enthusiastic attitude and a flexible work schedule.  After several years of working as a special education teacher in the Benicia Unified School District, Joe shifted to working with the North Bay Regional Center as an Independent Living Specialist and Supported Employment Program Provider for young adults with disabilities.  Last summer, Joe came up with an exciting idea and reached out to one of his recently graduated students, 19-year old Quinn.  Quinn was completely on board with Joe’s idea, and came up with the “The Tyler Street Collective” business title, named after the Benicia street where he lives and as a nod to his supportive family.  

The Applesauce! (See below for how to buy your jar!)

They began their endeavor with applesauce.  Joe got in contact with Kozlowski Farms in Sebastopol, where his father used to pick apples as a teenager.   Joe’s grandmother, Evelyn, prepared a decadent Gravenstein applesauce from these same apples.   Joe, Quinn, and a few other of Joe’s former students picked, and peeled, cored, crushed, and boiled the apples, and then, using Evelyn’s recipe, made over 600 hand labelled jars of organic applesauce.  They did this with help and support from a friend and colleague of Joe’s, Chef Matt Beard of Enchanted Hill Camp for the Blind in Napa, and through Joe’s supported employment services program. The young applesauce makers obtained their Food Safety Certifications and were able to use the industrial kitchen at Enchanted Hill Camp.  

The applesauce has been a hit!  It was promoted and sold at holiday events at Drift, where the owners have championed an inclusive work setting.  Additionally, Quinn and the other young talents sold many jars through Pacific Markets in Sebastopol, where the Gravensteins are grown – a true testament to the quality of the applesauce.  And this is only the beginning.  Joe and his young partners are in the process of obtaining their legal non-profit status and are looking for a permanent restaurant site in Benicia, which they hope to have up and running by 2027.  The restaurant will not only feature the applesauce, but also will be a space where customers can relax, order good, healthy, and locally grown food, listen to live music, and be served and entertained by this exceptional group of young people. 

Joe recognizes that his life has been gifted, and that he has had every opportunity to thrive.  Now he feels it is time to offer the same empowering opportunity to those who live with disabilities and have historically been shut down, rather than elevated.  Benicia is home to an abundant population of people who live their lives with physical and cognitive challenges.  Let’s support Joe and his team and help him build this inclusive endeavor that will benefit these young people and their special talents AND the community.  

You can buy a jar of the applesauce – March 28!

>>Applesauce tastings and jars for sale will be available at Fiestas Primavera this year on Saturday, March 28th at the Benicia Main Street (Gazebo) Park on the corner of 1st and Military between noon and 5pm.

And if you have ideas for the Tyler Street Collective gang or want to help financially or logistically, you are invited to reach out to Joe tylerstreetcollective@gmail.com.

Benicia High School students hold anti-ICE walkout

The protest followed a week of school walkouts all across the nation.

Benicia High School students protest at City Park. Photo: Gretchen Smail

The Vallejo Sun, by Gretchen Smail Feb 05, 2026

BENICIA – An estimated 400 students from Benicia High School walked out of class on Wednesday afternoon to protest the Trump Administration and the actions of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Last Friday, students walked out in VallejoAmerican CanyonBerkeleyOaklandSan Francisco, and across the country after students at the University of Minnesota called for a nationwide strike to protest ICE’s actions, particularly in the wake of the killings of Alex Pretti and Renee Nicole Good.

The Benicia High walkout was organized by junior Maddie Vlnar. She had never attended a protest before, much less organized one. But she had friends from the East Bay who had organized a walkout, and a handful of Benicia High students said they were interested in helping plan one, too. So she created an anonymous Instagram account last Thursday and began to spread the word.

“I really wasn’t expecting this many people to come out,” said Vlnar. “It was very makeshift and DIY even, but it ended up really working out, and I’m really happy that people came.” For Vlnar, seeing ICE’s actions on social media motivated her to organize.

Students from Benicia High School covered the hill at City Park. Photo: Gretchen Smail

For Vlnar, seeing ICE’s actions on social media motivated her to organize.

“Every time I open Instagram or TikTok, I’m constantly seeing all these things happen to people who are protesting and to people who are immigrants, whether they’re undocumented or not,” said Vlnar. “Even American citizens are being detained and treated unlawfully and even killed. I figured it’s time to finally end this. Let’s put our voices out there. We have the people.”

According to the Marshall Project, ICE has been holding an average of 170 children in custody a day since President Donald Trump’s second inauguration. Per The Guardian, 32 people died in ICE custody in 2025; since the start of 2026, eight people have died in ICE custody or been killed by ICE agents. ICE is currently holding the largest number of detainees in its history, according to CBS.

Students wave signs as cars honk in support. Photo: Gretchen Smail

 

The walkout began at 2 p.m. Vlnar and some friends went from classroom to classroom rallying students and explaining to teachers why they were doing the walkout. The protesters gathered in the quad and then marched to the City Park gazebo on First Street. So many students walked out that those at the back of the march couldn’t see where the front began.As the students walked, they waved signs that said phrases like “no one is illegal on stolen land” and “I’ll take my horchata warm because ICE sucks!” They also chanted “no ICE, no KKK, no fascist USA” as cars drove by honking in support.

Several teachers walked with the students to monitor the protest, as did Benicia police.

“We’re here to protect students, make sure they’re safe,” schools Superintendent Chris Calabrese said. “They have the right to protest.”

He added that his preference is that students are in the classroom learning, “but we have constitutional law and state law and educational code that we have to follow, and sometimes those things contradict,” Calabrese said. “So we’re just out here making sure that students aren’t causing any damage, and they’re not getting hurt either.”

Students walk down Military West to join the protest at City Park. Photo: Gretchen Smail

For many students, this was their first protest.

Sophomore Talaya Wilson said she loved seeing all her classmates participate in the walkout and voice their frustrations with the current administration.

“I don’t agree with anything that’s happening in the world right now. None of this should have happened in the first place,” Wilson said. “I’m really happy that everybody is protesting against ICE and Trump because we should have never voted for him. I’m very disappointed in my country, and in adults. Now my generation has to fix your guys’ problems.”

Senior Gabriel Gomez echoed this sentiment. “Immigrants built this country,” said Gomez. “We pick your food, we build your houses, and you want to kick us out? Nah, man.” Gomez said the administration should focus on going after real criminals rather than the “immigrants who are just trying to make a living.”

Students spread out in front of the gazebo at City Park to protest. Photo: Gretchen Smail

A 2026 UCLA study found that immigrants without a criminal record make up the largest group in ICE detention. Trump initially claimed he would only go after the “worst of the worst.”

Senior Isaiah Figueroa helped Vlnar organize the walkout. For him, the motivation to walk out was personal. “I’m a first generation Mexican-American, so seeing all this here hits really close to home for me,” said Figueroa. “We live in a world we had no say in.”

Figueroa said he’s glad that he’s now of voting age so he’ll be able to “have more of a voice” in the country.

For senior Camryn Wittry, the protest was important because it was a way to speak up for “people whose voices can’t be heard.”

She pointed out how many people brought their own signs and encouraged others to chant. “It’s amazing to see young people voice their opinions,” said Wittry. “Even though so many people here can’t vote, they’re using their First Amendment right.”

Benicia High School students protesting at City Park. Photo: Gretchen Smail

During the protest, some Benicia residents walked out from the nearby Safeway and library to cheer on the students.

“We’re really happy to see all these young people here,” said Benicia resident Wayne Eisenhart, who stood on the hill with the students to watch the protest with his wife.  “It warms my heart.”

The protest ended around 3:30 p.m., with parents picking up their kids or students walking down First Street to grab food.

“It’s such a surreal feeling. So many people came out,” Vlnar said, after thanking the students for attending. She said she was proud that the protest remained under control, and that they were able to have a long moment of silence for those who have been brutalized or killed by ICE. “There were parents, and people off the street, and so many cars driving by who were honking and cheering us on. It was so, so amazing.”

BREAKING! Hundreds of Benicia High Schoolers protesting ICE at Gazebo Park!

I happened to drive by around 2:40 this afternoon and witnessed hundreds of Benicia HS students lifting signs and noisily protesting the Trump immigration poilicies and actions of ICE. I honked, waved a peace sign and took a quick photo…

Benicia HS students protesting ICE, 2026-02-04
  1. The country is massing! It’s not just us old-timers! Go young ‘uns!

Roger Straw
The Benicia Independent