Santa Fe New Mexican

About 1,500 immigrant minors await sponsors in Texas tents

- By Arelis R. Hernández

TORNILLO, Texas — Workers compared it to a giant slumber party.

Flowers made of plastic bottles, chains of colorful constructi­on paper and pictures of Disney princesses stripped from coloring books adorned dozens of bunk beds inside a cavernous white tent where hundreds of Central American teenagers have spent the past several weeks.

On the other side of what looked like a military base, in smaller beige tents that housed up to 20 young men apiece, faux spider webs were strung across the bed frames for Halloween. Clusters of Spanish-speaking teens placed strips of blue tape across their chests to indicate their team affiliatio­n as a spirited soccer match took place on a makeshift pitch of dirt and synthetic grass.

The 123-tent complex 30 miles from El Paso is a holding facility for undocument­ed youths who crossed the U.S.-Mexico border and are waiting to be reunited with parents and relatives. About 1,500 minors are housed there.

Officials at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, which contracts with a nonprofit organizati­on to run the facility, took reporters on a tour Friday, providing a glimpse at one facet of the nation’s evolving migrant crisis.

The temporary overflow center opened in June, when a network of about 100 Health and Human Services-contracted shelters across the country was approachin­g capacity because of a steady flow of minors across the border and a growing wait for relatives and other potential sponsors to get through background checks.

At the time, the estimated 12,000 minors in Health and Human Services custody included more than 2,500 children separated from their parents or other adults at the border as a result of President Donald Trump’s crackdown. Most of those separated children have since been reunited with parents or released to a sponsor, according to the latest filings in a lawsuit challengin­g the separation­s.

But the amount of time it takes to vet potential sponsors for unaccompan­ied minors continues to grow. As a result, the government has more than tripled the number of beds at Tornillo to potentiall­y accommodat­e up to 3,800 young migrants.

About 3,200 minors have passed through Tornillo so far, staying 29 days on average. The highest number of occupants at any one time was 1,630 adolescent­s ages 13 to 17, most of them boys, officials said. All had previously spent time in other shelters and were close to being released.

“This is their last stop,” Health and Human Services spokesman Mark Weber said.

The department estimates that nearly 51,000 children will cross the border this year unaccompan­ied — the third-highest one-year total in history, officials said. As of August, they spent an average of 59 days in the department’s custody.

BCFS, the San Antonio-based nonprofit organizati­on that operates Tornillo, specialize­s in erecting emergency housing after natural disasters. Some of the tents at Tornillo were used to shelter people displaced by last year’s Hurricane Harvey. Health and Human Services said in a notice in the Federal Register last month that it will pay up to $367.9 million between midSeptemb­er and December to operate the shelter.

Department officials said they want to release children to sponsors as quickly and as safely as possible, but they are also wary of past mistakes in which minors were mistakenly handed off to human trafficker­s.

BCFS does not allow migrant children to keep cellphones at the camp because of fears they will be contacted by trafficker­s who helped bring some of them into the country. The youths can call relatives who are on an approved list on phones provided by the federal government. They have no access to the Internet.

Camp residents wear lanyards around their neck that hold photo ID cards listing their date of birth and date of arrival at Tornillo.

As part of its screening efforts, the Trump administra­tion is asking potential sponsors and members of their households to provide fingerprin­ts and undergo background screening before children can be released to them.

A new informatio­n-sharing agreement between Health and Human Services and the Department of Homeland Security has increased concerns that some potential sponsors, many of whom are in the country illegally, will be scared to come forward, knowing their informatio­n could be accessible to immigratio­n enforcemen­t agents.

But officials said that risk has not stopped thousands of parents and other relatives from applying as sponsors.

The tent facility’s incident commander, who spoke to reporters on the condition that his name be withheld, said more than half of the youngsters at the tent camp — 826 — can be released as soon as FBI background checks are completed.

When asked why there were still in Tornillo, several children said, “Huellas!” — Spanish for “fingerprin­ts.”

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