Las Vegas Review-Journal

White House, ACLU differ on reunion plan

- By Elliot Spagat The Associated Press

SAN DIEGO — The Trump administra­tion and the American Civil Liberties Union on Thursday revealed widely divergent plans on how to reunite hundreds of immigrant children with parents who have been deported since the families were separated at the U.s.-mexico border.

President Donald Trump’s administra­tion puts the onus on the ACLU, asking that the organizati­on use its “considerab­le resources” to find parents in their home countries, predominan­tly Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras.

The U.S. Justice Department said in a court filing that the State Department has begun talks with foreign government­s on how the administra­tion may be able to aid the effort.

The ACLU, which sued on behalf of separated parents, called for the government to take “significan­t and prompt steps” to find the parents on its own.

“Plaintiffs have made clear that they will do whatever they can to help locate the deported parents, but emphasize that the government must bear the ultimate burden of finding the parents,” the ACLU said in a filing.

A decision on how to bridge the difference­s falls to U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw, who has ordered that more than 2,500 children be reunited with their families. He was scheduled to speak with both sides in a conference call Friday.

As of July 26, 431 children whose parents were outside the country were in the custody of the U.S. Health and Human Services Department.

The ACLU said it takes “a degree of detective work” to track down contact informatio­n for deported parents, some of whom may be hiding from persecutor­s.

The group said the government provided home-country addresses in U.S. immigratio­n databases with no useful informatio­n for about 120 parents. Other addresses had limited use — for example, some had “calle sin nombre” (“street without a name”) or six addresses connected to one Honduran child, all in the Mexican city of San Luis Potosi.

The proposals from both sides come a week after a court-imposed deadline to reunite more than 2,500 children who were separated from their families at the border.

The administra­tion also asks that the ACLU consult every deported parent to determine if they wish to waive their right to be reunified with their child, a scenario that may occur if the parent wants the child to remain in the U.S. The U.S. would work with foreign government­s “to determine how best to complete reunificat­ions.”

The ACLU proposes that parents who want their children sent back home be reunited within a week and that those who want to return to the U.S. to pick up their kids be permitted under humanitari­an parole, with round-trip transporta­tion paid for by the government.

 ??  ?? Dana Sabraw
Dana Sabraw

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States