Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Texas town epicenter of crossings

Encounters averaging around 5,000 per day

- By Elliot Spagat

ROMA, Texas — As darkness sets on the Rio Grande, U.S. Border Patrol agents hear pumps inflating rafts across the river in Mexico. It is about to get busy.

Within an hour, about 100 people have been dropped off in the United States, including many families with toddlers and children as young as 7 traveling alone. All of them wear numbered yellow plastic wristbands that look like they could be used to get into a concert or amusement park, and everyone rips them off and tosses them on the ground after setting foot in the U.S. Large black letters on the wristbands read, “Entregas,” or “Deliveries,” a mechanism for smugglers to keep track of migrants they are ferrying across the river that separates Texas and Mexico.

Roma, a town of 10,000 people with historic buildings and boarded-up storefront­s in Texas’ Rio Grande Valley, is the latest epicenter of illegal crossings, where growing numbers of families and children are entering the United States to seek asylum.

U.S. authoritie­s reported more than 100,000 encounters on the southern border in February, the highest since a four-month streak in 2019. Encounters have averaged about 5,000 people per day throughout March, which would be about a 50 percent increase over February if those figures hold for the entire month, according to a Border Patrol official, who spoke to reporters Friday on condition of anonymity to discuss preliminar­y figures.

More than 16,000 unaccompan­ied children were in government custody as of Thursday, including about 5,000 in substandar­d Customs and Border Protection facilities.

President Joe Biden, whom many migrants see as more welcoming than his predecesso­r, pushed back on suggestion­s that his administra­tion’s immigratio­n policies are responsibl­e for the rising numbers.

At his first news conference since taking office, Biden said Thursday that the government will take steps to more quickly move hundreds of migrant children and teenagers out of cramped detention facilities.

On the Rio Grande, a smuggler balked when a U.S. agent asks him to land downriver on a rare patch of sand, complainin­g that another agent punctured his raft days earlier. The agent reassured him and negotiated a landing away from gnarly branches.

“Children aboard,” another smuggler shouted to authoritie­s.

As the rafts approached shore Wednesday night, smugglers jumped into the shallow water, lifted children and took the hands of adults lined up single file to get off the rafts. The migrants walked — or were carried — a few steps, and the smuggler turned around for the next passenger without touching dry land.

U.S. agents escorted groups of migrants about a half-mile over dirt roads to a dead-end street on the edge of Roma, where other agents at a white folding table examined identifica­tion documents, took names and destinatio­ns, and answered questions. Children traveling alone were separated from families, and people put their valuables in plastic bags.

From there, they headed to a nearby parking lot and got into buses, vans and SUVs. Unaccompan­ied children are supposed to be held by CBP no more than 72 hours, but they are often held longer because U.S. Health and Human Services lacks space. The agency is housing children at the Dallas Convention Center and said it will open emergency facilities at venues or military bases in San Antonio, El Paso, San Diego and elsewhere.

The Biden administra­tion expels nearly all single adults without an opportunit­y to seek asylum under a public health order issued at the start of the pandemic. They make up about 2,200 of the roughly 5,000 people encountere­d per day in March, the Border Patrol official said.

Of that total, about 450 to 500 are unaccompan­ied minors, and the rest are families who are being allowed to stay, at least temporaril­y, if the children are under 7 and if they can’t immediatel­y be returned to Mexico, which has reduced the number of families it will accept into shelters in the state of Tamaulipas, south of the Rio Grande Valley, the official said.

 ?? Dario Lopez-Mills The Associated Press ?? Migrant families, mostly from Central American countries, wade through shallow waters Wednesday after being delivered by smugglers on rafts on U.S. soil in Roma, Texas.
Dario Lopez-Mills The Associated Press Migrant families, mostly from Central American countries, wade through shallow waters Wednesday after being delivered by smugglers on rafts on U.S. soil in Roma, Texas.

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