Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

U.S. considers flying migrants out of Texas to handle processing

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A new spike in the number of families and children crossing the Rio Grande into South Texas over the past several hours is forcing U.S. Customs and Border Protection to request airplanes that will allow the Biden administra­tion to transport migrants to states near the Canadian border for processing, according to two Department of Homeland Security officials and an email reviewed by The Washington Post.

Border officials requested the air support from U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t because 1,000 members of families and unaccompan­ied minors crossed the Rio Grande on Friday morning, and border agents have another 1,000 migrants they have been unable to process since last night, the communicat­ions

show.

The air transport plan is the latest measure in the Biden administra­tion’s scramble to contend with a widening emergency that officials say they do not

view as a “crisis” but a “stressful challenge.”

The extraordin­ary volume of unauthoriz­ed border crossings in recent days has left the families and minors waiting hours outdoors, many under a bridge next to the river where CBP is operating a large outdoor processing station. The backups have been exacerbate­d by the more than 4,500 unaccompan­ied teenagers and children held in detention cells and border tent sites, a record number.

During the 2019 border surge peak, when unpreceden­ted numbers of migrant families crossed, the Trump administra­tion also used ICE Air flights to send families to different border sectors that had capacity to hold them.

That crisis occurred during warmer months, however, and CBP officials did not immediatel­y respond about whether the government would furnish winter clothing to parents with children if they are sent to states such as Montana, South Dakota and Michigan.

The email indicates CBP has not yet determined which states could receive the flights.

DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas traveled to El Paso on Friday with Republican and Democratic senators to visit facilities housing unaccompan­ied minors, the department said.

CBP has used ICE aircraft in recent days to transport migrant families from the Rio Grande Valley, where facilities are far overcapaci­ty, to the El Paso area. Many of those families are then being returned to Mexico under a Trump-era emergency public health order.

On Thursday, the DHS said the Federal Emergency Management Agency would provide $110 million in funding to nonprofit groups and government agencies to help care for these families and children.

 ?? Julio Cortez/Associated Press ?? Migrants walk from an intake tent to a respite center after being released from U.S. Customs and Border Protection custody on Friday in McAllen, Texas.
Julio Cortez/Associated Press Migrants walk from an intake tent to a respite center after being released from U.S. Customs and Border Protection custody on Friday in McAllen, Texas.

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