Oroville Mercury-Register

COVID-19 rates on the decline as decision nears on US asylum limits

- By Elliot Spagat and Caroline Ghisolfi

SOMERTON, ARIZ. » One by one, a voice called out the names of 169 people just released by U.S. Border Patrol. Migrants rose from folding chairs in a clinic warehouse and walked to a table of blue-robed workers, who swabbed their mouths.

All but two Cuban women tested negative for COVID-19 that February morning. They were quarantine­d to motel rooms, while other migrants boarded chartered buses to Phoenix’s Sky Harbor Internatio­nal Airport for flights across the U.S.

Theirs were among just seven of 5,301 tests the Regional Center for Border Health near Yuma, Arizona, did last month for released migrants that were positive — a rate of 0.1%

Questions raised

COVID-19 rates are plunging among migrants crossing the border from Mexico as the Biden administra­tion faces a Wednesday deadline to end or extend sweeping restrictio­ns on asylum that are aimed at limiting the virus’ spread. Lower rates raise more questions about scientific grounds for a public health order that has caused migrants to be expelled from the United States more than 1.7 million times since March 2020 without a chance to request asylum.

While there is no aggregate rate for migrants, test results from several major corridors for illegal border crossings suggest it is well below levels that have triggered concerns among U.S. officials.

In California, 54 of 2,877 migrants tested positive the first two weeks of March, according to the state Department of Social Services. That’s a rate of just 1.9%, down from a peak of 28.2% on Jan. 8.

In Pima County, Arizona, which includes Tucson, the seven-day positivity rate among migrants didn’t exceed 1.3% in early March and dropped to 0.9% on March 10. The seven-day rate topped 5% on only two days during the final three months of last year. Then, as the omicron variant spread, it surged to doubledigi­ts for most of January, peaking at 19.2% on Jan. 12 and falling below 5% on Feb. 12.

McAllen, Texas, the largest city in the busiest corridor for illegal crossings, has a higher rate among migrants — 9.2% on March 2 — but it is also falling and is consistent­ly lower than the general population. Only two of 24 border counties have had high rates in the general population: Hidalgo, which includes McAllen, and Yuma in Arizona.

The rate among migrants in McAllen peaked at 20.8% the last week of January, when it was double that in the general population. It bottomed at 1.4% the last week of November, when the general population was at 6.2%.

Under pressure

As mask mandates have lifted, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is under mounting pressure to fully restore asylum by ending Title 42, named for a 1944 public health law. Critics say it has been an excuse to wriggle out of asylum obligation­s under U.S. law and internatio­nal treaty.

Justin Walker, a federal appeals court judge in Washington, wrote this month that it was “far from clear that the CDC order serves any purpose” for public health. Walker, who was appointed by President Donald Trump, noted that the Biden administra­tion hasn’t provided detailed evidence to support the restrictio­ns.

“The CDC’s order looks in certain respects like a relic from an era with no vaccines, scarce testing, few therapeuti­cs, and little certainty,” Walker wrote for a three-judge panel.

CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky noted falling rates when she ended asylum limits on unaccompan­ied child migrants on March 11, while keeping them for adults and families with kids. In August, U.S. border authoritie­s began testing children traveling alone in their busiest areas: positives fell to 6% in the first week of March from a high of nearly 20% in early February.

The White House and Homeland Security Department have said decisions on Title 42 rest with the CDC. Walensky told reporters Wednesday that the CDC was reviewing data ahead of next week’s deadline, noting that its twomonth renewal in late January came near the peak of the omicron variant.

 ?? ELLIOT SPAGAT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A worker at the Regional Center for Binational Health in Somerton, Ariz., tests a migrant for COVID-19.
ELLIOT SPAGAT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A worker at the Regional Center for Binational Health in Somerton, Ariz., tests a migrant for COVID-19.

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