[Salon] In Florida, an ICE detention facility in the middle of the Everglades




In Florida, an ICE detention facility in the middle of the Everglades

“Alligator Alcatraz” expected to house up to 1,000 immigrants

June 24, 2025
This sign along the Tamiami Trail warns visitors to the Everglades to steer clear of wildlife, in this case, alligators. (Thomas Bender/Herald-Tribune/USA Today Network)

“People get out, there’s not much waiting for them other than alligators and pythons. Nowhere to go, nowhere to hide,” Uthmeier said in the video.

The Everglades detention center is one of several new sites in Florida that will house up to 5,000 detainees, according to the Department of Homeland Security. The state can be reimbursed for the estimated $450 million cost of detention centers by Federal Emergency Management Agency, according to the agency.

“Under President Trump’s leadership, we are working at turbo speed on cost-effective and innovative ways to deliver on the American people’s mandate for mass deportations of criminal illegal aliens,” DHS Secretary Kristi L. Noem said in a statement. “We will expand facilities and bed space in just days, thanks to our partnership with Florida.”

Environmentalists immediately objected to the plan to set up what Uthmeier has described as “heavy-duty” tents to house undocumented immigrants in one of the country’s most prized natural areas. More than 300 people traveled to the site Sunday afternoon to protest the facility, according to organizers.

“If you get a thousand-bed prison in there, whether it’s supposedly temporary or not, you’re going to have impacts related to human waste, sewage needs, water supply needs, ancillary development,” said Eve Samples, executive director of Friends of the Everglades.

The facility will be built at the Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport, midway between Miami and Naples, and north of the Tamiami Trail, a two-lane highway that cuts through the Everglades.

The state and federal government have spent 35 years and more than $10 billion to restore the natural flow of water to the Everglades, which is the largest remaining subtropical wilderness in the United States. The vast wetlands is home to dozens of threatened or endangered species, including the American flamingo, manatees, American crocodiles, and wood storks.

It’s also critical to the water supply for more than 8 million people in South Florida.

The state offered Miami-Dade County, which owns the land, $20 million to buy the property. But Mayor Daniella Levine Cava (D) responded that the land is worth at least $190 million, citing a recent appraisal.

“The impacts to the Everglades ecosystem could be devastating,” Levine Cava said in a letter to Florida Division of Emergency Management Director Kevin Guthrie on Monday.

Among other locations being considered for detention centers is Camp Blanding Joint Training Center in northern Florida, according to a state operations plan.

“Governor DeSantis has insisted that the state of Florida, under his leadership, will facilitate the federal government in enforcing immigration law,” Bryan Griffin, communications director for DeSantis, wrote in an email. “Utilizing this space and/or others around the state, Florida will continue to lead in immigration enforcement.”

The governor is eager to assist President Donald Trump’s immigration plans. Earlier this year, he signed a law making it a crime for people in the country illegally to enter Florida. The law is currently being challenged in court. In April, state law enforcement officials assisted federal agents in arresting more than 1,100 migrants within a week during a sweeping immigration operation. More than 590,00 unauthorized people are in Florida, according to DHS.

Construction of the Everglades site has already begun, Uthmeier said in a podcast interview with “The Benny Show” Monday.

“We’ll have some light infrastructure, a lot of heavy-duty tent facilities, trailer facilities. We don’t need to build a lot of brick and mortar,” Uthmeier told Johnson.

The site of the facility in the Everglades was the subject of one Florida’s most significant environmental battles. In the 1960s, business and political leaders wanted to build the largest airport in the world, hoping to increase tourism to South Florida.

The Everglades, pictured on June 14, 2024, three days after heavy rains saturated South Florida. (Andrew West/News-Press/USA Today Network)
A boater heads out into Everglades National Park from Chokoloskee Island in South Florida. (Andrew West/News-Press/USA Today Network)

The plan for the Everglades Jetport was met with fierce opposition from many residents and environmentalists. The plan failed in 1970, when President Richard M. Nixon signed an agreement with the state that halted construction. Nixon called the agreement “an outstanding victory for conservation.”

A 10,000-foot long runway had already been built, but the strip of asphalt, owned by Miami-Dade County, is currently used only for commercial and military flight training.

All the reasons that it was a bad idea back then still exist today,” said Samples, of Friends of the Everglades.

Betty Osceola, who lives about three miles from the site, said she remembers attending meetings in the 1960s about the plan to build a large airport in the Everglades. “There was never a thought in my mind that we would have to fight this battle again,” said Osceola, a member of the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians of Florida and an environmental activist.

She said she doesn’t see many planes using the area but hikers and fishermen often use the property. “This is a beautiful landscape full of cypress trees, cabbage palm trees, with wading birds and deer, bobcats, coyotes, even the occasional bear,” Osceola said.

When the Big Cypress National Preserve was created out of historical Indigenous territory, native tribes, including the Miccosukee and Seminoles, were given the right to continue to use it. Tribe members are permitted to live in the protected areas, and fish and hunt without a license.

“We’re supposed to have a voice, but no tribal consultation has occurred,” Osceola said about the detention center.

What readers are saying

The comments express strong opposition to the construction of a detention facility in the Everglades, highlighting environmental and humanitarian concerns. Many commenters criticize the potential damage to the Everglades ecosystem and the cruelty of housing people in tents in a... Show more
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