San Francisco Chronicle

FEMA to help manage children at Mexico border

- By Darlene Superville Darlene Superville is an Associated Press writer.

WILMINGTON, Del. — The Biden administra­tion is turning to the Federal Emergency Management Agency for help managing and caring for record numbers of unaccompan­ied immigrant children who are streaming into the United States by illegally crossing the border with Mexico.

FEMA will support a government­wide effort over the next three months to safely receive, shelter and transfer minor children who arrive alone at the U.S. southwest border, without a parent or other adult, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said Saturday.

Government figures show a growing crisis at the border as hundreds of children illegally enter the U.S. from Mexico daily and are taken into custody.

The Homeland Security Department is supposed to process and transfer unaccompan­ied minor children to the

Department of Health and Human Services within three days so that they can be placed with a parent already living in the United States, or other suitable sponsor, until their immigratio­n cases can be resolved.

But more children are being held longer at Border Patrol facilities that weren’t designed with their care in mind because longterm shelters run by the Department of Health and Human Services have next to no capacity to accommodat­e them. Children are being apprehende­d daily at far higher rates than the Homeland Security can release them to parents or sponsors.

Mayorkas said FEMA is working with the Health and Human Services Department to “look at every available option to quickly expand physical capacity for appropriat­e lodging.”

During an record influx of unaccompan­ied minors in 2014, the Obama administra­tion also turned to FEMA for help coordinati­ng the government­wide response. During that crisis, FEMA helped stand up temporary shelters and processing stations on military bases.

President Biden has ended the Trumpera practice of expelling immigrant children who cross the border alone, but maintained expulsions of immigrant families and single adults.

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