The Arizona Republic

Sinema program would fast-track removal of migrant families

- Rafael Carranza

TUCSON — Sen. Kyrsten Sinema is pushing for the implementa­tion of a pilot program along the U.S.-Mexico border that aims to more quickly screen and remove migrant families without valid legal claims for asylum in the United States.

Sinema, D-Ariz., joined a bipartisan group with eight other senators who sent a letter Wednesday to acting Homeland Security Secretary Kevin McAleenan describing their proposed program, dubbed “Operation Safe Return.”

They’ll have the chance to make their case during a meeting with McAleenan in the coming weeks.

The program would allow the Department of Homeland Security to deport certain migrants within 15 days, according to the letter, and would help alleviate overcrowdi­ng at border facilities, Sinema said.

“This pilot program would apply to families who aren’t claiming ‘credible fear,’ which of course is the first threshold in seeking asylum,” Sinema told The Arizona Republic. “If someone says ‘I left my country because I can’t make a living,’ (or) ‘it’s hard to take care of my family’ — that’s what we call an economic migrant.”

Sinema is one of the main architects behind the proposed program, along with Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., the chairman of the Senate Homeland Security Committee.

Sinema said she came up with the idea for the pilot program in response to a meeting with White House and Trump administra­tion officials who she said were focused on changing asylum laws and challengin­g court rulings like the Flores Settlement Agreement, dictating how the government treats certain migrants.

“I just felt those weren’t the right answers,” Sinema added. “We wanted to solve the problem. We wanted to protect the asylum process for valid applicants ... and we want to respect the Flores decision.”

But the idea for the pilot program has raised concerns from migrant advocates who worry that speeding up the process could lead to cases of valid claims being wrongfully denied and migrant families returned to dangerous situations.

Ruben Reyes, a board member with the American Immigratio­n Lawyers Associatio­n, said he worried about a botched implementa­tion similar to last year’s family separation­s, which sparked a national furor.

“We still have children who are missing in the system,” Reyes said. “So we can’t take this letter outside of the context of what’s happened for the year and a half.”

The letter to McAleenan provides additional details about Operation Safe Return.

Besides Sinema and Johnson, the letter was signed by Sens. Rob Portman, ROhio; Joe Manchin D-W.Va.; James Lankford, R-Okla.; Doug Jones, D-Ala.; Michael Enzi, R-Wyo.; John Barrasso, RWyo.; and John Cornyn, R-Texas.

“We have worked with your agencies to develop a streamline­d process to rapidly, accurately, and fairly determine those family units that do not have a valid legal claim and safely return those individual­s to their home countries,” the senators’ letter says. “The process would use existing authoritie­s, but surge necessary resources to a limited, particular location on the southern border.”

The pilot program establishe­s a timeline to screen migrant families that U.S. Border Patrol agents apprehende­d in between the ports of entry “within a limited area” of the U.S.-Mexico border. It doesn’t change the policies in place to administer credible-fear interviews.

So far this year, agents have apprehende­d more than 390,000 migrants traveling as families along the southweste­rn U.S. border, according to Customs and Border Protection.

Family apprehensi­ons dropped in June compared to May, but the numbers are still at some of the highest levels since the U.S. government began to track that data.

Under “Safe Return,” Border Patrol agents would have one to three days to conduct “detailed, fair and accurate interviews” with migrant families to determine if families express a fear of return. If they don’t, they would be immediatel­y deported to their home countries.

For families who claim fear, asylum officers working for U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Officers would have nine days after their apprehensi­on to conduct a credible-fear interview. During the next six days, Homeland Security and the Department of Justice, which runs immigratio­n and asylum courts, would make a determinat­ion about the case.

Families who pass the credible-fear screening would have the chance to claim asylum and be released under alternativ­e-to-detention programs.

“Within approximat­ely 15 days after being encountere­d, the Department of Homeland Security should remove family units whose negative credible fear determinat­ions are affirmed by the immigratio­n judge,” the letter says.

Homeland Security and Customs and Border Protection officials declined to comment on Operation Safe Return, but Sinema said she and Johnson will meet with McAleenan and Homeland Security officials as early as next week to discuss the details of possible implementa­tion of the program.

“They’ve indicated a strong interest in this program for several reasons,” she said.

Those include alleviatin­g overcrowdi­ng at border facilities, providing greater attention to valid asylum claims, and the prompt removal for everyone else, Sinema added.

The pilot program also would require greater congressio­nal oversight. McAleenan would have to report every week to the Senate Homeland Security Committee about the program’s progress and metrics to measure its success.

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