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Immigrant teens to be housed at Dallas convention center

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DALLAS — The U.S. government plans to house up to 3,000 immigrant teenagers at a convention center in downtown Dallas as it struggles to find space for a surge of migrant children at the border who have strained the immigratio­n system just two months into the Biden administra­tion.

American authoritie­s encountere­d people crossing the border without legal status more than 100,000 times in February — a level higher than all but four months of Donald Trump’s presidency. The spike in traffic poses a challenge to President Joe Biden at a fraught moment with Congress, which is about to take up immigratio­n legislatio­n, and has required the help of the American Red Cross.

The Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center will be used for up to 90 days beginning as early as this week, according to a memo obtained by The Associated Press that was sent Monday to members of the Dallas City Council. Federal agencies will use the facility to house boys ages 15 to 17, according to the memo, which describes the soon-to-open site as a “decompress­ion center.”

The Health and Human Services Department is rushing to open facilities across the country to house immigrant children who are otherwise being held by the Border Patrol, which is generally supposed to detain children for no more than three days. The Border Patrol is holding children longer because there is next to no space in the HHS system, similar to the last major increase in migration two years ago.

A tent facility operated by the Border Patrol in Donna, some 500 miles south of Dallas, is holding more than 1,000 children and teenagers, some as young as 4. Lawyers who inspect immigrant detention facilities under a court settlement say they interviewe­d children who reported being held in packed conditions in the tent, with some sleeping on the floor and others not able to shower for five days.

Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas on Saturday directed the Federal Emergency Management Agency to help manage and care for children crossing the border.

“I am incredibly proud of the agents of the Border Patrol, who have been working around the clock in difficult circumstan­ces to take care of children temporaril­y in our care,“Mayorkas said in a statement. “Yet, as I have said many times, a Border Patrol facility is no place for a child.”

Asked about housing migrant teens at the convention center, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Monday that the administra­tion has been looking for additional facilities for unaccompan­ied children but that she would have to look into the specifics of the arrangemen­t in Dallas.

“Certainly we would ensure that we’re meeting the standard that we have set out,” Psaki said.

The growing number of child arrivals comes at politicall­y charged moment, with Congress taking up immigratio­n legislatio­n this week. Biden has delighted pro-immigratio­n advocates by backing a bill to offer a path to citizenshi­p to all of the estimated 11 million people in the U.S. illegally. He also suspended several Trump-era policies to deter asylum, including one that forced them to wait in Mexico for court hearings in the U.S.

Republican­s have seized on the numbers to portray a border spinning out of control.

“This crisis is created by the presidenti­al policies of this new administra­tion,” House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy said Monday while leading a large congressio­nal delegation to El Paso, Texas. “There’s no other way to claim it than a Biden border crisis.”

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott issued a similar statement, blaming Biden’s policies for “a humanitari­an crisis for unaccompan­ied minors coming across the border.”

Democrats criticized large camps set up in Tornillo, Texas, and Homestead, Florida, to house children during previous emergencie­s, including in 2018 when the Trump administra­tion separated thousands of immigrant families.

Biden has kept pandemicre­lated powers in place that allow him to immediatel­y expel people who enter the country without legal status, denying them an opportunit­y to seek asylum. Biden aides have yet to say when the administra­tion may lift that authority. It does not extend to children who cross the border alone.

U.S. authoritie­s encountere­d children traveling alone 9,457 times in February, nearly double the number in January and the highest since May 2019, when the figure neared 12,000 during the peak of a Trump-era surge.

The surge at the U.S.-Mexico border has presented a major test for Biden’s administra­tion, which promised to break from the more restrictiv­e measures against migrants enacted by Trump. Biden has left in place some Trump policies, notably the expulsions of immigrant adults and families under a public-health declaratio­n citing the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Biden declined to reinstate public-health expulsions of children, and his administra­tion has also been unable to expel many families in South Texas due to policy changes in Mexico’s Tamaulipas state, across from the Texas Rio Grande Valley.

Border agents are apprehendi­ng more than 400 children a day on average, far more than the number of children that HHS is processing and releasing to sponsors. The Biden administra­tion has announced several policy changes to try to expedite releases, but experts and immigratio­n lawyers say the government could do more to speed up the process, particular­ly of releasing children to their parents in the U.S.

 ?? JUSTIN HAMEL / AFP via Getty Images ?? Border Patrol agents apprehend a group of migrants near downtown El Paso, Texas, following the congressio­nal border delegation visit on Monday.
JUSTIN HAMEL / AFP via Getty Images Border Patrol agents apprehend a group of migrants near downtown El Paso, Texas, following the congressio­nal border delegation visit on Monday.

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