Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Lawmakers, demonstrat­ors want families reunited

Congressma­n worries ‘there’s no coherent system to fix’ separation

- Will Weissert, Elliot Spagat and Manuel Valdes

MCALLEN, Texas – Democratic lawmakers on Saturday said they aren’t convinced the Trump administra­tion had any real plan to reunite immigrant families caught along the southwest border, while demonstrat­ors gathered to protest the separation of parents from their children by U.S. border authoritie­s.

After 25 Democratic members of Congress toured a U.S. Customs and Border Protection processing facility in the U.S.-Mexico border city of McAllen, Texas, they described seeing children sleeping behind bars, on concrete floors and under emergency “mylar” heat-resistant blankets.

Even when parents and children aren’t separated, they are often housed in adjacent cells that keep them apart, the lawmakers said.

They added they hadn’t seen a clear federal system for reuniting those who were split up, since everyone – even infants – is assigned “A” or alien numbers, only to be given different identifica­tion numbers by other federal agencies.

“There are still thousands of children who are out there right now untethered to their parents and no coherent system to fix that,” Rep. Joe Courtney, a Democrat from Connecticu­t, told reporters after the tour.

After the lawmakers left, dozens of immigrant rights demonstrat­ors temporaril­y blocked a bus carrying immigrants from leaving the facility, and shouted “Shame! Shame!” at border agents. Protests were also planned for Fort Worth, where the Texas Democratic Convention is being held, and Homestead, Florida.

The Trump administra­tion’s separation of immigrant families on the border has stoked an outcry from immigrant and children’s advocates and many lawmakers.

In recent weeks, more than 2,300 children were taken from their families under a “zero-tolerance” policy in which people entering the U.S. illegally face prosecutio­n.

After the public response, President Donald Trump on Wednesday ordered that they be brought back together. But confusion has ensued, with parents left searching for their children.

Evelyn Stauffer, a spokeswoma­n for the Department of Health and Human Services, said her agency is trying to help reunite families or place unaccompan­ied immigrant children with an appropriat­e sponsor.

At an immigratio­n detention facility in Port Isabel, Texas, attorney Jodi Goodwin has been trying to bring families together. Another lawyer identified parents separated from their children at criminal court hearings in McAllen, and Goodwin then followed up with them in custody to collect informatio­n about their cases and their children.

Goodwin said she has been inundated with requests from the parents, and the list is still growing.

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