La Semana

Homeland Security Is Moving FEMA Funds to Pay for Border Programs

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The Department of Homeland Security is moving $271 million from other agencies such as FEMA and the U.S. Coast Guard to increase the number of beds for detained immigrants and support its policy forcing asylum seekers to wait in Mexico while their cases play out.

The news comes as hurricane season is ramping up and Tropical Storm Dorian is heading toward Puerto Rico. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi called the move “stunningly reckless.”

The sprawling 240,000-person Homeland Security Department includes the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the Coast Guard and the new Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency in addition to immigratio­n agencies.

It is not uncommon for unassigned funds to be transferre­d between agencies under the same department as the fiscal year ends. Last year around the same time, about $200 million was transferre­d, including $10 million from FEMA that prompted major criticism from Democrats.

Homeland Security officials said in a statement Tuesday they would transfer $155 million to create temporary facilities along the U.s.-mexico border for holding hearings with the aim of moving asylum

cases through the system faster.

The government has sent more than 30,000 people back to Mexico to wait out their immigratio­n cases in an effort to deter migrants from making a dangerous journey to the U.S. and ease the crush of families from Central America that has vastly strained the system.

Asylum seekers generally had been released into the U.S. and allowed to work, but many Trump administra­tion officials believe migrants take advantage of the laws and stop showing up to court. Lawyers for migrants waiting in Mexico have reported major problems reaching clients and getting them to the U.S. for their hearings. And some of the locations in Mexico where migrants are sent are violent and unsafe.

The money will come out of unobligate­d money from the base disaster relief fund at FEMA, lawmakers said.

Democratic House members strongly disagreed and accused DHS of going around their specific appropriat­ions.

Pelosi said, “Stealing from appropriat­ed funds is always unacceptab­le, but to pick the pockets of disaster relief funding in order to fund an appalling, inhumane family incarcerat­ion plan is staggering — and to do so on the eve of hurricane season is stunningly reckless.”

The chairwoman of the House Appropriat­ions homeland security subcommitt­ee, Lucille Roybal-allard of California, said the reprogramm­ing would support “inhumane” programs and take away necessary funding for other agencies.

“I am greatly concerned that during the course of this administra­tion, there has been a growing disconnect between the will of Congress … and the implementa­tion of the Department’s immigratio­n enforcemen­t operations,” she said in a statement.

Homeland Security officials will also transfer $116 million to fund detention bed space for U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t. Congress allocated 45,000 beds for detention, but as of Aug. 24, ICE was detaining 54,344 people. Congress specifical­ly did not authorize additional ICE funding for detention beds when it approved an emergency supplement­al funding request of about $1.3 billion from Homeland Security to manage the huge increase in migrants.

“Given the rise of single adults crossing the border, ICE has already had to increase the number of detention beds above what Congress funded,” according to the DHS statement. Without the funding increase ICE can’t keep up with apprehensi­ons by Border Patrol.

“This realignmen­t of resources allows DHS to address ongoing border emergency crisis … while minimizing the risk to overall DHS mission performanc­e,” according to the statement.

More than 860,000 people have been encountere­d at the Southern border this budget year, a decade-long high. Of that, 432,838 were in families — last year for the whole fiscal year there were only 107,212 in families. The increase has caused vast overcrowdi­ng in border facilities and reports of fetid, filthy conditions and children held for weeks in temporary facilities not meant to hold anyone for longer than a few days.

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