Texarkana Gazette

Working conditions for Border Patrol getting more attention

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WASHINGTON — A strained Border Patrol is getting increased attention from the Biden administra­tion after tense meetings between senior officials and the rank and file while the agency deals with one of the largest spikes in migration along the U.S.-Mexico border in decades.

Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, who oversees the Border Patrol, laid out 19 ways to address working conditions after frosty receptions by agents, said Chris Magnus, the new commission­er of Customs and Border Protection.

Mayorkas also pledged in a memo to push for more prosecutio­ns of people accused of assaulting CBP personnel in the course of their duties, an issue raised at a recent meeting in Laredo, Texas, and elsewhere, Magnus said Tuesday.

“That’s something that agents in the field want to hear because assaults are on the uptick,” Magnus told The Associated Press. “We are not just seeing folks who are fleeing to the U.S. to get away from conditions. We are seeing smugglers, members of cartels, and drug organizati­ons that are actively engaged in doing harm.”

Efforts to deal with working conditions for agents come as President Joe Biden has been criticized across the political spectrum over immigratio­n. He has sought to reverse many hardcore policies of his predecesso­r but has come under fire over the situation at the border that could cause trouble for Democrats in the midterm elections.

CBP encountere­d migrants from all over the world about 1.7 million times along the U.S.-Mexico border last year. The total, among the highest in decades, is inflated by repeated apprehensi­ons of people who were turned away, without being given a chance to seek asylum, under a public health order issued at the start of the pandemic. Immigratio­n advocates have condemned the administra­tion for not repealing the public health order, known as Title 42, while critics, including many Border Patrol agents, say a Biden policy of allowing children and families to stay in the country and pursue asylum has encouraged irregular migration.

Magnus said the agents, and the administra­tion, are just trying to manage a complicate­d situation.

“We’re seeing folks that are encounteri­ng political conditions and violence, unsafe conditions to live and work, at unpreceden­ted levels,” the former police chief of Tucson, Arizona, said in an interview, the first since he was sworn in Friday. “We’ve seen, for example, in places, earthquake­s or other environmen­tal conditions. We’re seeing unpreceden­ted levels of poverty. All of these are things that are in many ways, you know, pushing migrants again at high levels to this country.”

The administra­tion has sought to address the cause of migration, including by increasing aid to Central America and re-starting a visa program that was ended under President Donald Trump. It has also sought assistance from other countries, including Mexico, to do more to stop or take in migrants.

As the overall numbers have increased, and the administra­tion has decided to allow many families to stay and seek asylum in a process that can take years, some Border Patrol agents have grown disenchant­ed as they spend their shifts processing and transporti­ng people, not out in the field.

That frustratio­n boiled over in Laredo as agents met late last month with Mayorkas and Border Patrol Chief Raul Ortiz, who acknowledg­ed morale was at an “all-time low,” according to a leaked video published by the Washington Examiner. One agent complained about “doing nothing” except releasing people into the United States, referring to the practice of allowing migrants to remain free while their cases wind through immigratio­n court.

At another meeting, in Yuma, Arizona, Mayorkas told agents he understood that apprehendi­ng families and children “is not what you signed up to do” and that their jobs were becoming more challengin­g amid an influx of Cubans, Nicaraguan­s and Venezuelan­s, according to video published by the conservati­ve website Townhall. One of the agents turned his back on the secretary.

Magnus has heard similar concerns raised in meetings. “I think it has been difficult for many of them who spent most of their careers or anticipate­d that their careers would be largely working in the field, on the border,” he said.

The commission­er declined to specify the 19 areas where Mayorkas “wants to see improvemen­t,” because they have not been publicly released. But another official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss internal plans, said they include expanding the role of a new class of civilian employees to add tasks such as transporti­ng migrants to medical facilities so agents can return to other duties.

Another point calls for faster decisions on asylum cases at the border. Agents have expressed frustratio­n that asylum-seekers are freed in the U.S., often for years, while their claims make their way through a system backlogged with about 1.6 million cases.

Magnus said he hopes to expand mental health services for agents and provide additional resources to help them and their families cope with a stressful job that requires them to move often.

“There is never one simple solution to addressing morale at any organizati­on, but I absolutely appreciate the very challengin­g conditions that the men and women of the Border Patrol and CBP in general have been have been working under,” he said.

 ?? AP Photo/Patrick Semansky ?? ■ U.S. Customs and Border Protection Commission­er Chris Magnus speaks during an interview Tuesday in his office with The Associated Press in Washington. A strained Border Patrol is getting increased attention from the Biden administra­tion after tense meetings between senior officials and the rank-and-file while the agency deals with one of the largest spikes in migration along the U.S.-Mexico border in decades. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, who oversees the Border Patrol, laid out 19 ways to address working conditions after frosty receptions by agents, said Magnus.
AP Photo/Patrick Semansky ■ U.S. Customs and Border Protection Commission­er Chris Magnus speaks during an interview Tuesday in his office with The Associated Press in Washington. A strained Border Patrol is getting increased attention from the Biden administra­tion after tense meetings between senior officials and the rank-and-file while the agency deals with one of the largest spikes in migration along the U.S.-Mexico border in decades. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, who oversees the Border Patrol, laid out 19 ways to address working conditions after frosty receptions by agents, said Magnus.

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