Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Migrant groups call San Diego County for ‘seat at the table’ in deciding how to spend funds

- By Emily Alvarenga The San Diego Union-tribune

SAN DIEGO — Local migrant services groups are urging San Diego County leaders to collaborat­e with those working directly with migrants on the ground before deciding how to spend its recent $19.6 million allocation from the federal government.

The grant is part of the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s Shelter and Services Program, or SSP, which provides funds to nonfederal entities that provide shelter and other eligible services to migrants.

Typically, SSP funds are allocated to entities in border communitie­s that are doing the bulk of the work to provide assistance to asylum seekers locally. The funds aren’t provided upfront but are rather reimbursed to entities later.

But because the county doesn’t currently have its own shelter operations, it still needs to determine how it would spend its funding allocation. The county has until Friday to come up with a plan and submit its applicatio­n to FEMA.

Migrant advocacy groups say the funds could not come at a better time, as the region has seen an increase in asylum seekers arriving at its southern border since last fall and local leaders have been calling for federal assistance to mitigate the release of migrants on local streets.

In the past month alone, 23,000 people seeking asylum were released onto San Diego County streets, according to advocacy organizati­ons. About 99 percent of migrants spend only a short time in the county before moving on to their final destinatio­ns.

Now, as the county works to determine where the funds will go, nonprofits are asking to have a seat at the table and be a part of the solution.

“It is our expectatio­n that we’re able to think through a regional plan that hopefully gets to a place of avoiding street releases,” said Kate

Clark, senior director of immigratio­n services for Jewish Family Service of San Diego, “but in order to do that, the organizati­ons that are closest to the work really need to inform the county how they can put forth a plan to the federal government to use these funds.”

In addition to the $19.6 million allocated to the county this fiscal year, Catholic Charities’ San Diego branch also received $19.6 million — which it will split equally with Jewish Family Service — for a total of $39.2 million to fund migrant services in the region.

County officials are not sure yet whether they’d use the funding to begin bringing to life a plan approved by the Board of Supervisor­s in February to open a permanent migrant center and shelter.

The California Welcoming Task Force — which includes local groups such as Immigrant Defenders Law Center, Al Otro Lado and Jewish Family Service — released a statement Monday, urging county leaders to collaborat­e with them, as they know the region’s most urgent needs and could ensure the funding goes where it can do the most good.

“Without these critical conversati­ons, San Diego does not have a coordinate­d regional response,” the statement read.

County officials say they are currently working on a response and draft plan for the funding that they will submit.

However, that plan will not identify specific entities that will receive funding but be more general in nature, said Michael Workman, county spokespers­on.

Community groups will have an opportunit­y to request funding at a later date before county supervisor­s ultimately decide how to allocate the funds at a future public meeting, Workman said.

Even though the region is set to receive about

$10 million more in SSP funds this fiscal year — an increase attributed to the county’s allocation — Catholic Charities and Jewish Family Service will each be receiving nearly $5 million less than the $29 million they split last fiscal year.

Both organizati­ons use those funds to operate respite shelters for asylum seekers, primarily those in vulnerable population­s such as families with young children, pregnant women, and people who are sick or elderly.

But both say that those funds will not begin to cover all of the expenses that it takes to operate their shelters.

Since the county closed its temporary migrant welcome center — which operated on $6 million in county funds and served more than 81,000 individual­s in the four months it was open — Catholic Charities and Jewish Family Service have tried filling the gap in services for as many asylum seekers as they can.

But migrant advocacy groups worry the loss of funds will hinder shelters’ existing infrastruc­ture and lead to more street releases.

Vino Pajanor, CEO of Catholic Charities, says the shelter has been taking in 150 to 200 healthy individual­s in addition to the 250 to 300 vulnerable people it receives daily since the temporary center shuttered.

“We are doing our best to reduce the number of individual­s that are getting released on the streets of San Diego, but unfortunat­ely we are at capacity,” Pajanor said.

The shelter operated by Jewish Family Service is the longest operating migrant respite shelter in the region and has helped 200,000 migrants since 2018, providing them with temporary shelter, meals and assistance with transporta­tion to their final destinatio­n. But the shelter will be operating with a gap of about $11.8 million based on this year’s funding allocation, Clark said.

Others like Immigrant Defenders Law Center have been doing the work without any federal dollars.

The center has served nearly 34,000 asylum seekers in the last two months, staffing people at the airport and transit centers to help migrants reach their final destinatio­n, said Executive Director Lindsay Toczylowsk­i.

“All of these things can be done, even when resources are finite ... so we’re hopeful still that the county will tap into the incredible ecosystem of organizati­ons that we have built over decades,” she said.

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