Walz proposes $10 million in emergency relief for Minnesota businesses affected by ICE surge

Henry Garnica, the owner of CentroMex Supermercado in East St. Paul, spoke to reporters at the Capitol Thursday Feb. 12, 2026. (Photo by Alyssa Chen/Minnesota Reformer)
Gov. Tim Walz proposed $10 million in forgivable loans for Minnesota businesses affected by the surge in federal immigration activity starting in December.
The incursion of around 3,000 federal immigration agents in Minnesota in what the Trump administration called βOperation Metro Surgeβ led to revenue losses for businesses, especially those in major immigrant corridors, as employees and customers stayed home out of fear of being detained by federal immigration agents.
The one-time forgivable loan proposal was announced Thursday at a Capitol press briefing, moments after U.S. border czar Tom Homan announced the end of the surge and claimed success in making the Twin Cities and Minnesota βsafer.β The unprecedented federal incursion ignited massive resistance and resulted in two killings of American citizens, among other high-profile incidents.
The damage from Operation Metro Surge is still being assessed, Walz said. Minneapolis businesses are estimated to have lost $10 to $20 million a week in sales, the Star Tribune previously reported.
The relief package would apply to businesses that can demonstrate substantial revenue loss tied to the surge with revenues between $200,000 and $4 million annually. The loans would be between $2,500 to $25,000, with an opportunity to apply for 50% forgiveness after a year.
Walz acknowledged that the $10 million relief proposal is βa very small piece ofβ the recovery. He said that the upcoming legislative session, which starts Feb. 17, βneeds to be about recovery of the damage thatβs been done to us.β The prospects at the Legislature arenβt great, however: Republican House Speaker Lisa Demuth, who is also a frontrunner for the GOP nomination for governor, is likely disinclined to support anything that could even implicitly be viewed as a criticism of the Trump administrationβs immigration agenda.
Henry Garnica, the owner of CentroMex Supermercado in St. Paulβs East Side, a grocery store that caters to the Hispanic community, spoke at the briefing. Federal agents visited CentroMex without a judicial warrant in December, where they faced off with residents who quickly arrived at the scene and formed a chain outside the entrance. The incident ended in the federal agents leaving.
Garnica, who immigrated from Colombia over 20 years ago and is a U.S. citizen, said that his sales have been down 30 to 40% during the federal immigration enforcement surge. He spoke wearing a whistle and showed reporters his passport that heβs been carrying: βHopefully we donβt have to do this anymore.β
Garnica said he expects that recovering from the loss in sales will take at least three to six months.
This story was originally produced by Minnesota Reformer, which is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network which includes Wisconsin Examiner, and is supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity.