San Diego Union-Tribune

BORDER OFFICIALS EYE FLYING MIGRANTS NORTH

Court-appointed monitor warns crowded facilities are ‘not sustainabl­e’

- BY MARIA SACCHETTI & NICK MIROFF

Migrant children and families are dangerousl­y packed into holding facilities on the southwest border, lawmakers and child-welfare monitors warned Friday, as Customs and Border Protection weighed taking the emergency step of putting migrant families on airplanes to states near the Canadian border for processing.

The strain of a sudden, sharp rise in apprehensi­ons became clear as Department of Homeland Security officials and Democratic and Republican lawmakers toured the El Paso, Texas, sector of the border and saw hundreds of children packed into large, open rooms and families coming across the border at night.

Conditions were even worse hundreds of miles to the southeast in the Rio Grande Valley, a courtappoi­nted monitor told a federal judge Friday, saying the crowding in Border Patrol facilities was “profound,” “not sustainabl­e” and at risk of unraveling.

The Biden administra­tion is rushing to manage a rapidly growing influx at the border even as it describes the situation as a “challenge,” not a crisis. But a growing number of Republican­s and some Democrats say the situation is spiraling out of control, with thousands of unaccompan­ied minors filling shelters and thousands more in border holding areas not meant for children.

Health and Human Services

for their lives,” the president said.

Biden expressed empathy for the victims’ families, who he said were left with “broken hearts and unanswered questions.” And he said Americans should take responsibi­lity for failing to express enough outrage about the targeting of people of Asian descent during the pandemic that has gripped the country.

“Because our silence is complicity,” he said. “We cannot be complicit. We have to speak out. We have to act.”

Biden had by his side the nation’s first vice president of Asian descent, who was — just through her presence — a powerful symbol of efforts to reject racial animosity and bias.

“Racism is real in America, and it has always been,” Harris said, speaking before Biden. “Xenophobia is real in America, and always has been. Sexism, too.”

Harris, whose mother was born in India, confronted the doubts expressed by some, including the FBI director, Christophe­r Wray, about whether the killings in Atlanta were racially motivated. Investigat­ors in Cherokee County, Ga., where some of the victims were targeted at a spa, have said that the gunman told them he had a “sexual addiction” and had carried out the attacks as a way to eliminate temptation.

Harris offered little doubt about what she believed and whom she blamed for stoking the violence, alluding to — without directly naming — former President Donald Trump, who repeatedly blamed the pandemic on what he called the “China virus.”

“For the last year, we’ve had people in positions of incredible power scapegoati­ng Asian Americans,” she said. “People with the biggest pulpits spreading this kind of hate.”

The Biden administra­tion, she said, would not “stand by” in the face of racial violence.

“Whatever the killer’s motive, these facts are clear,” she said. “Six out of the eight people killed on Tuesday night were of Asian descent. Seven were women. The shootings took place in businesses owned by Asian Americans. The shootings took place as violent hate crimes and discrimina­tion against Asian Americans has risen dramatical­ly over the last year.”

Anti-Asian attacks have soared during the past year, part of a pattern that Biden called “wrong” and “unAmerican” last week during a speech at the White House. On Friday, he, too, appeared to blame Trump and his supporters without naming them directly, saying, “We’ve always known words have consequenc­es.”

Among those who met privately with Biden and Harris before the speeches was Marvin Lim, a Georgia state lawmaker who said that he felt “powerful and privileged” to represent the Asian American community at such a raw time, and that he felt gratified that the new administra­tion had taken the time to come and listen.

He said he was touched by Harris, who he said ended their session by asking those present to tell their community members that “they are not alone.”

After his public remarks about the shootings and Asian American violence, Biden made an abrupt shift in topic, highlighti­ng the administra­tion’s progress in getting people vaccinated and promoting the passage of the $1.9 trillion “American Rescue Plan.”

For all that he promised to act to curb racially motivated violence, Biden has few quick or easy ways to do so.

The debate over how best to curb mass shootings and hate crimes involves, among other issues, gun rights, mental health treatments, red-flag laws and background checks, all of which tend to be met in Congress with gridlock.

During his first week in office, Biden signed an executive order directing his government to work toward stopping “anti-Asian bias, xenophobia and harassment.” On Friday, he urged Congress to pass the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act, which he said would “expedite the federal government’s response to the rise of hate crimes exacerbate­d during the pandemic.”

The legislatio­n, which was sponsored by two Asian American lawmakers — Sen. Mazie Hirono of Hawaii and Rep. Grace Meng of New York, both Democrats — would make it easier for people to report hate crimes linked to the pandemic by helping to establish online threat reporting systems. It would also direct administra­tion officials to review existing federal, state and local hate crime laws.

Still, the trip was the president’s first opportunit­y to serve the grim role of “consoler in chief ” for yet another grieving community suffering through the aftermath of a mass shooting.

For Biden, soothing the nation is a responsibi­lity that plays to his strengths: a life forged by personal loss of the kind that most people never endure created a political career in which he has repeatedly been called upon to eulogize the fallen.

On Friday, he closed his remarks with assurances aimed at the relatives of those killed in the Atlanta attacks.

“I know they feel like there’s a black hole in their chest they’re being sucked into, and things will never get better,” he said. “But our prayers are with you. And I assure you, the one you lost will always be with you, always be with you.”

In California, Gov. Gavin Newsom said Friday that the bigotry and violence sparking fear in Asian-American communitie­s “infuriates” him and that it is incumbent on everyone to combat it, reflecting on California’s historic role in perpetuati­ng discrimina­tion against Asians.

“What the hell is wrong with us?” Newsom asked.

Newsom, a Democrat, spoke alongside Asian American and Pacific Islander leaders at the Chinese Culture Center of San Francisco. He was joined by a leader of Stop AAPI Hate, a reporting organizati­on that has found 3,800 hate incidents directed toward Asian people over the past year, nearly 1,700 of them in California.

Asian American and Pacific Islanders groups have been calling on Newsom to take several concrete steps to combat anti-Asian bigotry, including by appointing an AAPI attorney general. State Assemblyma­n Rob Bonta, who is of Filipino descent, is among the contenders to replace Xavier Becerra, who was confirmed Thursday as the U.S. health secretary.

Newsom declined to say Friday who he will name to the job.

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