Antelope Valley Press

Long Beach Convention Center to be used as migrant shelter for children

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LONG BEACH (AP) — Officials in Long Beach voted Tuesday to temporaril­y house as many as 1,000 unaccompan­ied migrant children at the city’s convention center.

The City Council unanimousl­y approved a plan to work with the federal government to establish a shelter at the sprawling facility.

The contract with the federal government would start within days and end Aug. 2 at the latest. Mayor Robert Garcia said children — who wouldn’t necessaril­y be housed all at once — could begin arriving within a week or two.

The children will receive three meals a day, medical and health evaluation­s, recreation­al opportunit­ies and educationa­l services.

Convention centers in Dallas and San Diego have already been converted to emergency shelters for unaccompan­ied minors who had been housed in overcrowde­d US Border Patrol facilities.

Border authoritie­s encountere­d more than 9,000 children without a parent in February, the highest single month since May 2019, when more than 11,000 unaccompan­ied minors came to the border.

After being processed by the Border Patrol, they are transferre­d to Health and Human Services. Eventually they will be released to a sponsor, usually a parent or close relative.

“It’s important for us that this is focused on family reunificat­ion,” Garcia said.

Also Tuesday, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s voted to ask federal authoritie­s for permission to have its child services department find local relatives or foster families for unaccompan­ied minors housed in federal immigratio­n facilities, the Long Beach Press-Telegram reported.

“With Long Beach moving forward,” Supervisor Kathryn Barger said, “time is of the essence for us to provide all the support we can.”

Unlike adults in many situations, all unaccompan­ied minors are allowed to stay in the US. That dynamic has prompted many parents to either send kids on the journey to America alone, or get to the border and let them go the rest of the way.

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