Lodi News-Sentinel

White House wants tent cities to house unaccompan­ied children

- By Franco Ordonez

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion is looking to build tent cities at military posts around Texas to shelter the increasing number of unaccompan­ied migrant children being held in detention.

The Department of Health and Human Services will visit Fort Bliss, a sprawling Army base near El Paso in the coming weeks to look at a parcel of land where the administra­tion is considerin­g building a tent city to hold between 1,000 and 5,000 children, according to U.S. officials and other sources familiar with the plans.

HHS officials confirmed that they're looking at the Fort Bliss site along with Dyess Air Force Base in Abilene and Goodfellow AFB in San Angelo for potential use as temporary shelters.

The aggressive plan comes at the same time child shelters are filling up with more children who have been separated from their parents. The number of migrant children held in U.S. government custody without their parents has increased more than 20 percent as Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen rolled out the administra­tion's new zero tolerance policy that separates children from their parents who now face prosecutio­n.

More than 10,000 migrant children are being held at HHS shelters, which are 95 percent full.

The Trump administra­tion has blamed Congress for allowing loopholes that require federal authoritie­s to release illegal immigrants to await hearings for which many don't show up.

Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein at a roundtable last month with Trump charged that those loopholes also prevent the administra­tion from quickly deporting unaccompan­ied children.

“It can take months and sometimes years to adjudicate those claims once they get into the federal immigratio­n court system, and they often fail to appear for immigratio­n proceeding­s,” Rosenstein said. “In fact, approximat­ely 6,000 unaccompan­ied children each year fail to appear when they've been summoned. They're released and they don't show up again.”

Tens of thousands of unaccompan­ied children and families have been apprehende­d since 2014, when a surge of Salvadoran, Honduran and Guatemalan mothers and children raced into the Rio Grande Valley in Texas, fleeing violence and poverty.

The unaccompan­ied children are generally turned over to family or held in an HHS shelter, like a detention center or tent city. Now those who arrive with their parents are being separated from them and also sent to HHS shelters or sponsor families.

Leon Fresco, a deputy assistant attorney general under President Barack Obama, who defended that administra­tion's use of family detention, said the Trump administra­tion is also likely going to need to return to Congress soon for more money if it wants to keep up this aggressive detention approach. He said it's much more expensive to separate the parent and children and hold them in two different facilities than keeping them together using a monitoring system.

“The point is separating families is not only controvers­ial, it's also inordinate­ly more expensive,” Fresco said.

Advocates accused the Trump administra­tion of using the children as pawns to score political points.

“Detaining children for immigratio­n purposes is never in their best interest and the prospect of detaining kids in tent cities is horrifying,” said Clara Long, U.S. researcher at Human Rights Watch. “U.S. authoritie­s should focus on keeping families together, ensuring due process in asylum adjudicati­ons and protecting the rights of children.”

 ?? CAROLYN COLE/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? A young boy is detained along with his family members in Texas.
CAROLYN COLE/LOS ANGELES TIMES A young boy is detained along with his family members in Texas.

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