Santa Fe New Mexican

White House faces surge of migrants at the border

- By Zolan Kanno-Youngs and Michael D. Shear

WASHINGTON — Thousands of migrant children are backed up in U.S. detention facilities along the border with Mexico, part of a surge of immigratio­n from Central Americans fleeing poverty and violence that could overwhelm President Joe Biden’s attempt to create a more humane approach to those seeking entry into the country.

The number of migrant children in custody along the border has tripled in the past two weeks to more than 3,250, according to federal immigratio­n agency documents obtained by the New

York Times, and many of them are being held in jail-like facilities for longer than the three days allowed by law. The problem for the administra­tion is both the number of children crossing the border and what to do with them once they are in custody. Under the law, the children are supposed to be moved to shelters run by the Health and Human Services Department, but because of the pandemic the shelters until last week were limiting how many children they could accommodat­e.

The growing number of unaccompan­ied children is just one element of an escalating problem at the border. Border agents encountere­d a migrant at the border about 78,000 times in January — more than double the rate at the same time a year ago and higher than in any January in a decade. Immigratio­n authoritie­s are expected to announce this week that there were close to 100,000 apprehensi­ons, including encounters at port entries, in February, according to people familiar with the agency’s latest data. An additional 19,000 migrants, including adults and families, have been caught by border agents since March 1.

“We’re at an inflection point,” said Theresa Cardinal Brown, the director of immigratio­n and cross-border policy at the Bipartisan Policy Center, an independen­t research group. “How quickly can the government process people safely and humanely?”

The situation resembles the huge wave of migrant children that filled detention centers in 2014 that preceded the harsh crackdown imposed by former President Donald Trump. Seven years ago, Biden, the vice president at the time, traveled to Guatemala and declared that “the current situation is untenable and unsustaina­ble.”

Now, Biden is facing a migration challenge of his own — one that his administra­tion has refused to call a “crisis” but could neverthele­ss become a potent political weapon for his Republican adversarie­s and upend his efforts to legalize millions of immigrants who entered the U.S. illegally.

The president has proposed overhaulin­g the nation’s decades-old immigratio­n system by making it easier for asylum-seekers and refugees, expanding legal pathways for foreign workers, increasing opportunit­ies for family-based immigratio­n and vastly reducing threats of mass deportatio­ns.

But his approach — to broadly reopen the nation’s borders to vulnerable children with what he hopes will be a welcoming contrast to Trump’s erection of legal and physical barriers — is already at risk from the grim realities of migration patterns that have roiled the globe for years. Sensing a change in tone after Trump’s defeat, migrants are once again fleeing poverty, violence and the devastatio­n left by hurricanes, and heading toward the United States.

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