VOICES: In Springfield, we welcome Haitians — not deportations

Photos from a 3-day training the Springfield G92 Coalition held last week at Central Christian Church with the organization Undivided. CONTRIBUTED

Photos from a 3-day training the Springfield G92 Coalition held last week at Central Christian Church with the organization Undivided. CONTRIBUTED

Springfield has always been a city that rolls up its sleeves. We’ve weathered economic downturns, rebuilt after storms, and come together across divides. But today, our community faces a different kind of crisis—one fueled not by facts, but by fear.

Over the past few months, Haitian refugees in Springfield have been falsely accused of stealing pets and threatening public safety. These claims—repeated by national political figures—have been thoroughly debunked by our mayor, police chief, and Governor Mike DeWine. Yet the damage is real: bomb threats, harassment, and rising tensions.

Truth matters. Most Haitian migrants in Springfield are here legally, under Temporary Protected Status or humanitarian parole. They fled a nation in collapse—where gangs rule the streets and families go hungry. They didn’t come to cause harm. They came to survive.

Photos from a 3-day training the Springfield G92 Coalition held last week at Central Christian Church with the organization Undivided. CONTRIBUTED

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And they’ve contributed more than many realize. Haitian workers have filled critical jobs in warehouses, auto suppliers, and healthcare. They’ve helped stabilize our economy and support local businesses. They don’t take jobs away from able bodied Americans, rather they fill empty positions that allow area businesses to grow. Deporting them would hurt Springfield far more than it would help.

As a pastor, I’ve seen their faith, their work ethic, and their love for this community. I’ve baptized their children, prayed with their families, and watched them become part of the fabric of our city. They are not strangers. They are neighbors.

This isn’t about politics — it’s about people. It’s about whether we choose truth over rumor, compassion over cruelty, and growth over further decline.

Springfield doesn’t need deportation squads. It needs leadership. It needs truth. And it needs leaders with the courage to say: “You are welcome here.”

Pastor Carl Ruby is a pastor and community leader in Springfield, Ohio. He leads the Springfield G92 Coalition, a network of churches committed to protecting Haitian refugees and promoting justice through faith-driven action.

Pastor Carl Ruby is a pastor and community leader in Springfield, Ohio. He leads the Springfield G92 Coalition, a network of churches committed to protecting Haitian refugees and promoting justice through faith-driven action. CONTRIBUTED

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