Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pentagon is asked to make room for 20,000 migrant kids on bases

- By Dan Lamothe, Seung Min Kim and Nick Miroff

WASHINGTON - The Defense Department will house up to 20,000 unaccompan­ied migrant children on military bases in coming months, a Pentagon official said Thursday, the latest twist in the Trump administra­tion’s immigratio­n enforcemen­t effort.

The agreement comes after the Department of Health and Human Services made the request. Army Lt. Col. Jamie Davis, a military spokesman, said Thursday that the Pentagon will support it.

In a notificati­on to lawmakers, the Pentagon said Wednesday night that officials at HHS asked whether beds could be provided for children at military installati­ons “for occupancy as early as July through December 31, 2018.”

The plan seemingly will have similariti­es to 2014, when the Obama administra­tion housed about 7,000 unaccompan­ied children on three military bases. As required under the Economy Act, the memo said, the Defense Department would be reimbursed for all costs incurred.

The sites will be run by HHS employees or contractor­s working with them, the memo said. They will provide care to the children, “including supervisio­n, meals, clothing, medical services, transporta­tion or other daily needs,” and HHS representa­tives will be at each location.

The memo, first reported on by The Washington Post, was sent to lawmakers Wednesday after President Donald Trump reversed his administra­tion’s unpopular policy to separate children from their parents as the migrants arrived at the southern U.S. border.

The president’s executive order directed Defense Secretary Jim Mattis to “take all legally available measures” to provide Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen with “any existing facilities available for the housing and care of alien families” and the constructi­on of new facilities “if necessary and consistent with law.”

The Trump administra­tion spent months planning, testing and defending its family separation policy at the border, taking more than 2,500 children from their parents in the six weeks before the president signed an executive order Wednesday bringing the practice to a halt.

The U.S. government has been examining for weeks whether it can use military bases to house migrant children. Representa­tives from HHS visited three bases in Texas - Fort Bliss, Dyess Air Force Base and Goodfellow Air Force Base -- last week to review their facilities for suitabilit­y, and they were scheduled to review Little Rock Air Force Base in Arkansas on Wednesday, Col. Davis said.

The Obama administra­tion set up temporary centers in 2014 at three military bases: Fort Sill in Oklahoma, Lackland Air Force Base in Texas and Naval Base Ventura County in California.

Asked about the possibilit­y of military bases being involved again, Mr. Mattis said Wednesday that the Defense Department would “see what they come up with” in HHS, and that the Pentagon would “respond if requested.”

Mr. Mattis dismissed concerns about housing migrants on military bases, noting that the Defense Department has done it on several occasions and for several reasons.

“We have housed refugees,” he said. “We have housed people thrown out of their homes by earthquake­s and hurricanes. We do whatever is in the best interest of the country.”

The secretary, pressed on the sensitivit­ies of the Trump administra­tion separating children from their parents, said reporters would need to ask “the people responsibl­e for it.”

“I’m not going to chime in from the outside,” he said. “There’s people responsibl­e for it. Secretary Nielsen, obviously, maintains close collaborat­ion with us. You saw that when we deployed certain National Guard units there, so she’s in charge.”

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