About 100 protesters in Pittsburgh attended a rally and march Sunday as part of a national weekend of action targeting federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement activity at Home Depot stores.

The Pittsburgh “ICE Out of Home Depot” demonstration took place at the East Liberty outpost of the construction-supplies retail chain. Home Depot stores and parking lots around the country have recently been the site of ICE actions under the Trump administration, in which day laborers and others have been detained and deported.

“We’re out here today because it’s absolutely despicable that businesses like Home Depot and others will allow ICE to take our neighbors and co-workers, our community members,” said Hannah Fitzgerald, an organizer of the event created by a coalition of locally based groups.

Organizers said they were unaware of any ICE actions at this particular Home Depot, and that it was chosen for its central location in the region.

Home Depot has repeatedly denied that it cooperates with ICE. In response to a message seeking comment on Sunday’s demonstrations, a company spokesperson issued the following statement: “We aren’t notified that immigration enforcement activities are going to happen, and we aren’t involved in the operations. We’re required to follow all federal and local rules and regulations in every market where we operate.

The East Liberty rally was part of the national Disappeared in America campaign, which planned similar events this weekend in other U.S. cities.

The Pittsburgh demonstration began at the corner of North Highland Avenue and Station Street, with passing motorists frequently honking in support.

It concluded with protesters marching to the doors of the Home Depot, where organizers said they planned to present the store’s manager with a list of demands for the company. These included that Home Depot condemn ICE raids; close its stores and parking lots to ICE agents; and protect customers and workers from ICE actions.

Marchers were denied entry to the store, however, by two uniformed and armed state constables. Instead, marchers chanted, “No hate, no fear, immigrants are welcome here” for a few minutes and left the parking lot when Pittsburgh police arrived.

There were no arrests.

The rally fell at the end of a week during which the Department of Homeland Security announced it was on pace to deport a record 600,000 people in one year by the end of January.

Speakers at the rally included Guillermo Perez, secretary-treasurer of the Pittsburgh chapter of the Labor Council for Latin American Advancement.

Perez was among the speakers who cited the death of Carlos Roberto Montoya, a native of Guatemala who in August was struck by a vehicle and died while fleeing an ICE raid at a Home Depot in Monrovia, Calif. (The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees ICE, told CNN that it was not pursuing Montoya.)

Perez noted the critical role immigrants, including undocumented workers, play in the economy, especially in construction.

“Home Depot’s in a really strong position to make a statement about the value of immigrant workers, particularly in the construction industry,” he said. “So we’re here today to say, ‘Ya basta!’ No more, Home Depot. Stop allowing ICE to operate in your stores and your parking lots, and stop terrorizing your own customer base.”

Perez and other speakers maintained that Home Depot, like any property owner, is free to deny access to its stores and parking lots to law-enforcement agents who do not have warrants.

Along with LCLAA, organizers of the protest included the Pittsburgh Asian Pacific American Labor Alliance, Casa San Jose, Pittsburgh Socialist Alternative, Never Again Action, and the Anti-Trump Action Committee.

Other speakers included Pastor Ross Carmichael, of St. Andrew Lutheran Church; Christie Kliewer, of ATAC; and Symone Saul of Never Again Action, whose website calls it “a Jewish-led mobilization against the persecution, detention, and deportation of immigrants in the United States.”