Albuquerque Journal

Border aid bill includes funding for NM cities

Communitie­s have been overwhelme­d by migrant influx

- BY SCOTT TURNER

Communitie­s in New Mexico can now seek reimbursem­ent for costs incurred while caring for migrants after President Donald Trump signed a $4.6 billion border aid package Monday.

U.S. Sen. Tom Udall, D-N.M., said the package included $30 million in grant funding for communitie­s that have been overwhelme­d by the number of migrants crossing the Mexican border seeking asylum over the past several months.

“They’re going to have to apply for a grant in order to get this money,” he said. “The $30 million is in an existing grant program. The city of Las Cruces or the county of Doña Ana, if they’ve expended money, they just have to show they’ve spent the money, then they can receive the grant. We’ve expanded the pot for that, and they know that’s what the money’s there for.”

Udall said the New Mexico delegation fought to have the funding included to assist the communitie­s in the southern part of the state.

“It’s been a shame that we’ve seen the Border Patrol with only an hour notice or a little bit more drop hundreds of immigrants in southern New Mexico communitie­s, expecting the communitie­s to put up resources to take care of them, to have them have a place to sleep, to get them on a bus

to unite them with their sponsors,” Udall said. “It’s cost a lot of money for these communitie­s, whether it’s Deming, Las Cruces or Albuquerqu­e. Many people have stepped up to the plate. Religious institutio­ns and others do very good humanitari­an work.”

CEO Jim Gannon of the Catholic Charities of Central New Mexico said any resources available to assist asylum-seekers would be welcome, but he added that he didn’t have enough details “to see how it’s going to be allocated.”

Mariela Ruiz-Angel, coordinato­r of Albuquerqu­e’s Office of Immigrant and Refugee Affairs, offered similar sentiments. She said the city was still trying to find out how the money would be distribute­d and who would be eligible for the funding.

She said that the city contribute­d $250,000 to hosting groups that provided assistance to asylum-seekers but that she wasn’t sure of the city’s total cost in offering assistance to migrants.

Gannon said his organizati­on would be interested in assistance that would allow migrants to be helped in a dignified way.

“With any government assistance, there’s always strings attached,” Gannon said. “We still need to learn what those strings attached are.”

In recent months, the U.S. Border Patrol has been dropping off thousands of Central American families released from custody into Las Cruces and Deming. Both cities have declared states of emergency to cope with the influx and have received $250,000 in emergency grants from the state.

The Border Patrol does not have enough holding cell space for all the families, as more than 104,000 migrant parents with children seeking asylum have crossed the border since October in the El Paso Sector, which includes all of New Mexico.

“Because federal agencies have not provided for sufficient shelter and humanitari­an needs for these asylum-seekers, local, state and nongovernm­ental organizati­ons in New Mexico are facing new and unbudgeted costs,” U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich said after the legislatio­n passed the Senate.

Gannon said his organizati­on has assisted 1,200 individual­s at all of its sites but couldn’t say how many have been helped in Albuquerqu­e.

Ruiz-Angel said about 4,000 asylum-seekers passed through Albuquerqu­e, but she said buses stopped bringing migrants about three weeks ago.

Carla Lanting Shibuya of Albuquerqu­e Interfaith attributed the decrease in part to the deployment of Mexico’s National Guard to try to stop migrants from crossing the border illegally.

She said her organizati­on probably wouldn’t seek reimbursem­ent because assistance through the organizati­on was funded entirely through donations. But she said future assistance might be welcome if asylum-seekers return to the city.

Expo New Mexico — site of the state fairground­s in Albuquerqu­e — had set aside facilities to house asylum-seekers, but as of Tuesday, none had taken shelter there.

“But we are still ready to accept them,” Expo New Mexico official Wyndham Kemsley said. He said the facility would be available for housing until the end of the month. Expo New Mexico would not be able to house migrants after that because of preparatio­ns for the New Mexico State Fair, he said.

Not all of the state’s delegation supported the package in its final form.

U.S. Rep. Xochitl Torres Small — whose district is on the border — supported the legislatio­n, but fellow Democratic colleagues Ben Ray Luján and Deb Haaland voted against the measure in the House.

“I’ve heard from organizati­ons on the ground who have stepped up to fill the void created by the federal government’s insufficie­nt response that they are running out of funds to bear this federal responsibi­lity,” Torres Small said. “This supplement­al funding could not be made available a moment too soon.”

Haaland opposed it in the House because of concerns about funding for U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t and other border security efforts.

“I couldn’t, in good conscience, vote for a bill that allows this administra­tion to continue wasting resources on the harmful policies that refuse to provide proper care for children, forces local communitie­s to foot the bill, and creates a crisis out of a challenge,” she said.

Luján could not be reached for comment.

Udall labeled the package “a good bill,” but not a perfect one.

“We’re dealing with a very contentiou­s issue,” the senator said. “Many sides disagree about what should go on at the border. Many disagree about the funding levels and what the activities should be.”

He said the aid package included $2.9 billion for the Department of Health and Human Services to handle immigrant children arriving at the border by themselves.

“We all know about the kids that are in very bad facilities,” he said. “One of the reasons they are having to stay there is there isn’t enough assistance by HHS to take care of them. This is a humanitari­an crisis, and we’re delivering the money to take care of those migrant kids.”

Udall said $1.3 billion is being provided “to improve the squalid conditions for immigrants detained by the Department of Homeland Security.”

Udall said the bill contains specific language preventing the president from moving the money over to pay for a border wall. He said it also prevents the president from funding ICE detention beds.

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