Lodi News-Sentinel

ICE chief defends proposed cut in detention beds

- Suzanne Monyak

The acting director of U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t told a House committee Tuesday that the agency needs fewer detention beds for immigrants who face deportatio­n and more funding for surveillan­ce programs to allow them to stay at home instead.

Tae Johnson defended the Biden administra­tion’s request for so-called alternativ­es to detention programs as a “much more humane” and “an effective and significan­tly less costly option” for immigrants who don’t pose a threat to the public.

Johnson, before the House Appropriat­ions Subcommitt­ee on Homeland Security, was defending the Biden administra­tion’s fiscal 2023 budget proposal to Congress for $8 billion for ICE, which would keep funds relatively consistent with this fiscal year.

The administra­tion asked Congress to provide funding for just 25,000 detention beds — down from the current level of 34,000 — and requested an $87 million increase in funding for programs allowing for alternativ­es to detention.

These proposed funding levels are “just reflective of the administra­tion’s position that alternativ­es to detention is the more appropriat­e and humane way of dealing with segments of the population that don’t pose a public safety or national security threat,” Johnson told the committee. Committee Republican­s criticized the proposed cut to detention bed capacity and questioned why the Biden administra­tion would propose that ahead of an anticipate­d rise in migration to the southwest border.

Homeland Security officials have projected that border agents could see as many as 18,000 migrants daily once the administra­tion lifts pandemic-related asylum restrictio­ns known as Title 42 as early as next week.

“Once Title 42 goes away, we’re going to have an increased number of these people coming across, and instead of detaining them with those extra beds that you have, you’re cutting that and then going to be releasing those people into our country,” Iowa Republican Rep. Ashley Hinson said. “That’s what Americans are concerned about right now.”

Rep. John Rutherford, R-Fla., also criticized the administra­tion for failing to fill up the detention beds that Congress already funded this fiscal year. He blamed the empty beds on the administra­tion’s decision to narrow its enforcemen­t priorities to migrants who committed serious crimes or recently crossed the border.

“Prosecutor­ial discretion does not mean you get to pick and choose what laws you will enforce. You get to pick and choose what order you will enforce them,” Rutherford said.

Still, Johnson maintained that more capacity in immigratio­n detention centers is not the answer to rising migration levels.

“There’s not enough beds, you know, out in the private sector to detain our way out of this situation,” Johnson said.

Johnson also fielded concerns from Democrats over conditions and oversight efforts at the agency’s sprawling network of detention centers across the country. Subcommitt­ee Chair Rep. Lucille Roybal-Allard, D-Calif., raised concerns about access to counsel for immigrants in detention, citing instances in which phones are not located in confidenti­al areas or have limited minutes.

Johnson said this issue is “certainly something that we’re aware of ” but that it “is not all that prevalent in most of our facilities.”

 ?? ROBERTO SCHMIDT/AFP/GETTY IMAGES/TNS ?? Acting Director of the U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, Tae Johnson, speaks during a news conference at the Department of Justice in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 26, 2021.
ROBERTO SCHMIDT/AFP/GETTY IMAGES/TNS Acting Director of the U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, Tae Johnson, speaks during a news conference at the Department of Justice in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 26, 2021.

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