The Arizona Republic

Border controls may be extended

US weighs continuing COVID-19 restrictio­ns

- Ronald J. Hansen and Clara Migoya

The White House reportedly is considerin­g keeping in place at least temporaril­y COVID-19-related border restrictio­ns that are set to expire next month in a move that would impact the influx of immigrants.

Axios first reported that President Joe Biden’s advisers are weighing whether the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention should extend the use of Title 42, a longstandi­ng public health provision used beginning in March 2020 under then-President Donald Trump to rapidly expel migrants because of coronaviru­s concerns.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Wednesday that any delay in ending Title 42 would require congressio­nal approval.

“There are a range of ideas out there in Congress — Democrats, Republican­s, others — some who support a delay of Title 42 implementa­tion, some who strongly oppose it,” she said. “And there are a range of other ideas of reforming our immigratio­n system. This would all require congressio­nal action. We’re happy to have that conversati­on with them.”

The administra­tion announced earlier this month its plans to end Title 42.

It is a far-reaching policy decision that would affect public health, border and immigratio­n enforcemen­t and human services, and comes as the nation continues to dismantle COVID-19 restrictio­ns. The effect in Arizona, where border communitie­s have strained for months to manage rising numbers of immigrants, could be even more pronounced.

The government’s use of Title 42 has led to hundreds of thousands of people removed from the U.S., some

times without even having a chance to seek asylum. That has helped mitigate border crossing numbers under the Biden administra­tion that many congressio­nal Republican­s already view as overwhelmi­ng.

Ending the use of Title 42 likely would send immigratio­n numbers even higher. The order is set to expire May 23.

The timing of the policy shift also would figure to strain Arizona officials. Migrant flows typically spike in May to help meet labor demand in agricultur­e, constructi­on and other industries.

Title 42 is an issue that pits centrist Democrats who see it as political poison in an election year against the party’s left wing, which views Title 42 as cover for anti-immigratio­n policies.

Both of Arizona’s Democratic senators, Kyrsten Sinema and Mark Kelly, have sponsored with some Senate Republican support a bill that would require the extension of Title 42 until the administra­tion has a detailed plan to manage the immigratio­n fallout.

Reps. Tom O’Halleran, D-Ariz., and Greg Stanton, D-Ariz., have co-sponsored a similar measure in the House. Stanton on Wednesday also wrote a letter to Biden reiteratin­g that approach, which he said was necessary “because the Administra­tion’s approach to the border has been largely reactionar­y.”

Last week, Sinema said she had been calling on Biden to “delay the end of Title 42 until/unless they have a workable plan in place to address what will be a massive increase of migrant flow to the southern part of our border. And of course what that means in plain language is Arizona and Texas.”

Kelly said the Biden administra­tion should not end Title 42 without preparing for the immigrant swell that would ensue.

Title 42 “shouldn’t be around forever, but right now this administra­tion does not have a plan,” Kelly told reporters last week during a tour of the border. “I warned them about this months ago. … They do not have a plan to deal with the increased numbers, and, to be honest, it’s going to be a crisis on top of a crisis.”

Jason Johnson, a spokespers­on for Rep. Raúl Grijalva, D-Ariz., whose Tucson-based district is on the border, said the administra­tion still has time to formulate a responsibl­e process for managing the border and immigratio­n ahead of the end of Title 42.

“The fact remains that Title 42 is a health-care policy decision. It’s not a border policy,” Grijalva said, adding that under Trump the policy was used to “weaponize immigratio­n and health policy.”

Rep. Ann Kirkpatric­k, D-Ariz., whose district also includes the border, said in a written statement she recognizes the “complexity of this issue, and it is more nuanced than just polarizing political ads. When Title 42 is lifted, we must be fully prepared for the influx of migrants seeking asylum.”

That includes safe shelter, transporta­tion, staffing for asylum matters and Border Patrol officers, she said.

Many Republican­s, meanwhile, have linked the ending of Title 42 for COVID to the effort to extend mandatory masking on public transporta­tion, including flights.

Rep. Andy Biggs, R-Ariz., cast the matter this way last week in a tweet:

“Biden’s CDC is extending the mask mandate on planes and public transit. Yet, it is lifting the Title 42 public health order at the southern border. It’s clear that Biden cares more about illegal aliens than American citizens.”

On Tuesday, Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott jointly announced the formation of the American Governors’ Border Strike Force, a multistate effort intended to blunt the flow drug-traffickin­g along the border. It is a Republican-led effort cast as an alternativ­e to neglect on the border by Washington.

On April 3, Arizona, Louisiana and Missouri’s attorneys general filed a lawsuit against the federal government, challengin­g the “abrupt eliminatio­n” of the public health policy.

A hearing on that matter is scheduled for May 13.

“Even if the Biden administra­tion itself doesn’t make the decision to delay the terminatio­n, it’s possible that judge will make the decision for them,” said Jessica Bolter, associate policy analyst at the Migration Policy Institute.

However, it is unclear whether an extension of the policy would change the conditions on ground, Bolter said.

Shelter coordinato­rs in Mexico have told The Arizona Republic about an increasing number of calls and arrivals from asylum-seeking migrants who heard about the end of the policy. Misinforma­tion, spreading through social media platforms and word-of-mouth, has already set many on the move, they suggested.

“The fact that this message has already been put out there, that a restrictiv­e policy will be lifting will likely lead to some uptick around the end of May, regardless of whether Title 42 is terminated or extended,” Bolter added.

Reach the reporter Ronald J. Hansen at ronald.hansen@arizonarep­ublic.com or 602-4444493. Follow him on Twitter @ronaldjhan­sen.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States