Las Vegas Review-Journal

Don’t house arrested migrants, hotels urged

ICE head: Alternativ­e might divide families

- By Dee-ann Durbin The Associated Press

DETROIT — There’s a new target in the clash over immigratio­n: hotels.

Advocacy groups and unions are pressuring Marriott, MGM and others not to house migrants who have been arrested by Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t officers.

For decades, the federal government has occasional­ly detained migrants in hotels, and acting ICE director Matthew Albence says it might have to split up families if hotels don’t help.

It’s the latest example of a private industry caught in the political fray of an overtaxed immigratio­n system.

American and United Airlines said last year they didn’t want to fly migrant children separated from their parents. Greyhound told authoritie­s to stop dropping off immigrants inside its bus stations. More recently, immigratio­n groups have criticized Enterprise for renting vans to federal agents and PNC Bank for funding private detention centers.

Hotels don’t like to wade into politics. However, they’re accustomed to working with the federal government, whether to host displaced flood victims, defense contractor­s or conference­s.

But when the Trump administra­tion announced immigratio­n arrests targeting families the weekend of July 13 and said it might use hotels, the big companies responded. Marriott, Hilton, Choice Hotels, Best Western, Wyndham, Hyatt, IHG and MGM Resorts all released statements saying they don’t want their hotels used to detain migrants.

Hotels felt pressure from their unions — which represent thousands of immigrants — as well as from customers angered by recent scenes of overcrowdi­ng and other squalid conditions at detention facilities.

“Hotels are meant to welcome people from all over the world, not jail them,” said D. Taylor, president of the hotel workers union Unite Here.

The companies also needed to reassure customers that their properties are safe and not overrun by armed guards watching migrants, said Daniel Mount, an associate professor of hospitalit­y management at Pennsylvan­ia State University.

Albence said ICE uses hotels “strategica­lly” to keep families together before transferri­ng them to detention centers or deporting them. As of July 16, the agency had 53,459 individual­s in custody, including 311 members of families.

“If hotels or other places do not want to allow us to utilize that, they’re almost forcing us into a situation where we’re going to have to take one of the parents and put them in custody and separate them from the rest of their families,” Albence told The Associated Press in a recent interview.

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