Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Biden to deploy FEMA

Migrant children flood detention centers at border

- By Nick Miroff

The Biden administra­tion is mobilizing the Federal Emergency Management Agency to help care for the overwhelmi­ng number of unaccompan­ied migrant teens and children filling detention cells and tent shelters along the Mexico border, the Department of Homeland Security said Saturday evening.

The FEMA deployment will support what DHS called a 90-day government-wide effort at the border, where the Biden administra­tion is struggling to care for a record number of teenagers and children arriving without their parents. The minors are arriving at a rate that far exceeds authoritie­s’ ability to house them.

“The federal government is responding to the arrival of record numbers of individual­s, including unaccompan­ied children, at the southwest border,” DHS said in a statement.

Conditions inside U.S. border stations have deteriorat­ed in recent days, according to lawyers who represent migrant children, becoming dangerousl­y overcrowde­d with nearly 4,000 minors who are jam-packed in holding facilities and jail cells designed for adults.

Another 8,500 teens and children are in Health and Human Services custody awaiting placement with parents or other relatives already living in the United States.

HHS has been unable

to add capacity fast enough to get the minors out of Border Patrol sites, which are essentiall­y police stations.

Soon after taking office, President Joe Biden said his administra­tion would no longer turn back unaccompan­ied minors who cross the border without their parents, a policy that the Trump administra­tion implemente­d using an emergency health order.

Immigrant activists and child advocates denounced the practice for denying minors the opportunit­y to apply for asylum in the United States while exposing them to potential risks in Mexico.

Biden officials have not said why they did not anticipate or better prepare for the unpreceden­ted surge that has occurred since then in the Rio Grande Valley of South Texas, where as many as 700 teens and children have crossed without parents in recent days.

During the first major influx of migrant teens

and children in 2014, the Obama administra­tion also deployed FEMA, which helped set up temporary shelters and processing stations on military bases.

The DHS statement did not indicate where FEMA might find shelter space for the teens and children, but officials have used hotels along the border since the start of the pandemic to house minors.

The government will “look at every available option to quickly expand physical capacity for appropriat­e lodging,” DHS said.

“A Border Patrol facility is no place for a child,” DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said in the agency’s statement.

“We are working in partnershi­p with HHS to address the needs of unaccompan­ied children, which is made only more difficult given the protocols and restrictio­ns required to protect the public health and the health of the children themselves.”

 ?? Kevin Sieff / Washington Post News Service ?? Migrant children detained at the U.s.-mexico border sit in the dormitory of the Center for Attention to Border Minors in Reynosa, Mexico. Carlos, 15, left, fled cartels in Mexico. Joshua, 13, left El Salvador to join his mother in Maryland.
Kevin Sieff / Washington Post News Service Migrant children detained at the U.s.-mexico border sit in the dormitory of the Center for Attention to Border Minors in Reynosa, Mexico. Carlos, 15, left, fled cartels in Mexico. Joshua, 13, left El Salvador to join his mother in Maryland.

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