Albuquerque Journal

Over 4,000 migrants, many kids, are crowded into border facility

About 500 children housed in each ‘pod’

- BY ELLIOT SPAGAT AND NOMAAN MERCHANT

DONNA, Texas — More than 500 migrant children were packed into plastic-walled rooms built for 32 people, sitting inches apart on mats with foil blankets Tuesday at the largest U.S. Customs and Border Protection holding facility for unaccompan­ied children.

Overall, CBP’s main child processing center, a compound of white tents in Texas’ Rio Grande Valley, held over 4,100 migrants, more than 3,400 of them children who traveled to the U.S.-Mexico border alone. The rest of the migrants being housed were families.

The facility, designed for 250 people under guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention during the coronaviru­s pandemic, has had to adapt amid a spike in families and unaccompan­ied children crossing the border.

The Biden administra­tion allowed journalist­s to see conditions for the first time since the facility opened Feb. 9. It was a grim picture. A 3,200-square-foot (297-square-meter) space had been divided into several rooms for 32 children each under CDC guidelines, each separated by thick plastic walls instead of the chain-link fence used by previous administra­tions. Despite the health recommenda­tions, one of the “pods” held nearly 700 kids, another had nearly 600 and others had just above 500. Everyone wore masks, but COVID-19 tests aren’t done unless they show symptoms.

Doors to the rooms were open for free movement but there was little room to roam and no one to play games. Most children just sat on the ground close together, chatting quietly. Some were wrapped in foil blankets. Lights are dimmed at night.

Children, most of them between 13 and 17, are separated by age. Families occupied a separate pod that was less crowded than the jam-packed rooms for older children.

A room for “tender age” children from 3 to 9 years old consisted of a walled playpen with mats on the floor and far more space than the eight pods for older children. An 11-year-old boy cared for his 3-year-old sister, and a 17-year-old cared for her newborn.

“I’m a Border Patrol agent. I didn’t sign up for this,” Oscar Escamilla, acting executive officer of the Border Patrol’s Rio Grande Valley sector, said while looking at the younger kids.

Children are processed in the tent facility in the town of Donna before being taken to longer-term care facilities run by U.S. Health and Human Services and then placed with a family member, relative or sponsor.

About two dozen of some 270 children being transferre­d to HHS midday tested positive for COVID-19 — the only time they are tested unless they exhibit symptoms earlier. Escamilla said the overall positivity rate at the Donna facility was about 14%.

As they prepared to leave, children who tested negative for COVID-19 played soccer in the outdoor recreation area, where they can go three times a day when their pods are being cleaned.

 ?? DARIO LOPEZ-MILLS/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Young minors lie inside a pod at the main detention center for unaccompan­ied children in the Rio Grande Valley, which is run by U.S. Customs and Border Protection.
DARIO LOPEZ-MILLS/ASSOCIATED PRESS Young minors lie inside a pod at the main detention center for unaccompan­ied children in the Rio Grande Valley, which is run by U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

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