Daily Camera (Boulder)

Border Patrol resumes migrant drop-offs at transit site

- By Alexandra Mendoza The San Diego Union-tribune

SAN DIEGO >> On his way to the U.s.-mexico border, Abdou Khan, an asylum seeker from Gambia, heard on the news about a center in San Diego County that provides assistance to recently arrived migrants. On Friday, after being processed and released by the U.S. Border Patrol, he thought he would be sent there.

Instead, he learned that the center was now closed.

“I thought we would go to the center and they would help us with a bus or plane ticket,” he said.

Khan was one of hundreds of migrants dropped off in buses at a public transit station by the federal agency. That practice resumed Friday morning after a county-funded migrant welcome center closed the night before for lack of funds.

SBCS, the nonprofit that operated the site, announced over the weekend that the center’s “finite resources have been stretched to the limit” amid a significan­t increase in migrant arrivals in recent weeks. Officials said that this week alone the center received around 700 to 900 people per day.

The center provided services to more than 81,000 migrants since October.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection said Friday that it would continue to “surge personnel, transporta­tion, processing, and humanitari­an resources to the most active and arduous areas throughout San Diego’s border region where migrants are callously placed by smuggling organizati­ons.”

“CBP coordinate­s to the fullest extent possible with state, local, and non-government­al partners to ensure the safe and orderly onward movement of migrants when they are released from our custody following screening and vetting as part of their immigratio­n proceeding­s. This situation is the latest example of the pressing need for Congress to provide additional resources and take legislativ­e action to fix our outdated immigratio­n laws,” the agency added in a statement.

On Friday, about two dozen volunteers from at least 10 local organizati­ons spread out between transit stations and the airport to assist migrants. They waited on the sidewalk of the Iris Avenue Transit Center to be ready to help migrants as soon as they got off buses.

“Those who speak Spanish, this way,” Ruth Méndez, a volunteer with Free Them All Coalition, said over a loudspeake­r. While most surrounded her, there were also other volunteers to assist those who spoke Portuguese or French, or used translatio­n apps for other languages.

“Bienvenido­s,” Méndez said in Spanish. “You are located in San Diego, California.”

Méndez said that migrants typically arrive disoriente­d and ask where they are to let their relatives know.

“What we are doing is just welcoming them, letting them know that they are free to go wherever they need to be, but that we want to make sure that they are doing it safely,” she explained.

Volunteers offered migrants the option of taking a rented bus for free to the Old Town Transit Center, where another group of volunteers was waiting to direct them to a free shuttle to the airport. They also told them that they could take the trolley, a bus or a taxi on their own.

It was common to see migrants eager to get Wi-fi access to let their loved ones know they were okay or to buy a plane ticket to their final destinatio­n. Men and women from Colombia, Bolivia, Peru, Dominican Republic and China, among others, were seen on their way to the airport.

Many of them are also grateful that there are volunteers who speak their language, as they have many questions.

“It makes all the difference,” said Jorge Jiménez, a migrant from Colombia, as he waited for a shuttle to the airport. “You come here not knowing the language, or where you are or where to go.” Jiménez reached out to family members, who bought him a plane ticket to Seattle.

At the airport migrants were seen charging cellphones and calling relatives to buy them a ticket. Those who were able to do so helped other migrants struggling to get a connection to buy their ticket on their own. On previous occasions, migrants have waited for hours or even slept at the airport.

San Diego County allocated $6 million to open the temporary center and assist migrants — many of them asylum seekers — who have been arriving at the border and been released by Border Patrol into the community. The center provided supportive services such as food, Wi-fi and travel assistance to their final destinatio­n. It was initially expected that the funds would run out next month. The monthly cost of operations, estimated initially at $1 million, is now $1.5 million amid a significan­t increase in the number of migrants, said Board of Supervisor­s Chair Nora Vargas this week.

Nonprofit organizati­ons that responded to the need to support migrants on Friday are now demanding answers about the handling of the funds.

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