The Arizona Republic

More minors flock to US-Mexico border

- Rick Jervis

The number of unaccompan­ied immigrant minors arriving at the U.S. border with Mexico is on a steep rise, posing an early challenge to ambitious plans by President Joe Biden to loosen immigratio­n rules.

The number of unaccompan­ied minors referred to the U.S. Office of Refugee Resettleme­nt, the agency tasked with caring for them once they cross the border, climbed from 1,530 in October to 3,364 in December – a 120% jump, according to agency statistics released last week. January’s numbers were not yet available.

The agency usually has 13,764 beds for the minors but only 7,971 are currently available because of COVID-19 social distancing restrictio­ns. Of those, about 5,200 are occupied, leaving 2,700 open beds, according to the resettleme­nt agency.

“It’s really critical that the Biden administra­tion live up to their commitment of fair and humane treatment of immigrants at the border,” said Lisa Koop, associate director of legal services at the National Immigrant Justice Center, a legal advocacy group that represents immigrant youth.

“We’re more than capable of surging resources to the border to humanely and fairly process these children without sending them to influx facilities or allow them to languish in (border patrol) facilities,” she said.

In a slew of executive orders and memoranda, Biden has begun to reverse many of the hard-line immigratio­n policies of former President Donald Trump, including forming a task force to try to reunify families separated at the border under the previous administra­tion and vowing to halt the quick deportatio­ns of minors.

But as more immigrants are allowed to stay, where to temporaril­y house them – especially children who show up at the border alone – is becoming a looming question.

Last week, the Biden administra­tion announced the reopening of a controvers­ial overflow facility – known as a temporary Influx Care Facility – to house unaccompan­ied migrant teenagers. The facility in Carrizo Springs, Texas, will house up to 700 migrant children within the next two weeks, according to the Office of Refugee Resettleme­nt. The facility will be used for children ages 13 and older who have been medically cleared of COVID-19.

Its opening raised concerns among some immigratio­n lawyers and advocates, who point out that the facility doesn’t have the same state licensing requiremen­ts or oversight as other ORR facilities for minors and are often located in desolate locations far from legal advocates who can assist them.

“To legal providers like us, those places are like black holes,” Koop said.

Koop said she hopes the Biden administra­tion comes up with creative ways to keep children in licensed facilities instead of turning to influx centers. One thing the resettleme­nt agency could do is use more long-term foster beds to house the youth, something they have previously done, she said.

Under a 2008 anti-traffickin­g law, border agents are supposed to turn minors over to the resettleme­nt agency within 72 hours, where they’re held temporaril­y and released to relatives or guardians in the United States. There is no time limit on how long the children can stay in the resettleme­nt agency’s shelters.

 ?? BRYNN ANDERSON/AP FILE ?? Immigrant boys play soccer at a shelter in Florida in 2018. The number of minors arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border is rising.
BRYNN ANDERSON/AP FILE Immigrant boys play soccer at a shelter in Florida in 2018. The number of minors arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border is rising.

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