The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Border chief: Migrant surge is not letting up

Southweste­rn border captures close to 2,000 a day.

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DONNA, TEXAS — The surge of Central American families seeking asylum at U.S. borders is not letting up, Customs and Border Protection Commission­er Gil Kerlikowsk­e said Wednesday after touring a temporary holding facility in the Rio Grande Valley set up to manage the influx.

The number of apprehensi­ons along the southweste­rn border can be close to 2,000 a day — with most people turning themselves in, Kerlikowsk­e said in a phone interview. The November influx was as high as what was seen in October: 46,195, he said.

The precise monthly number is to be announced next week.

The facility at the Donna-Rio Bravo Internatio­nal Bridge is due to open Friday and process up to 500 people a day. The 40,000-squarefoot white canopy tent is in a field near the river, surrounded by a barbed wiretopped fence.

Kerlikowsk­e toured a similar facility Tuesday that is already up-and-running in Tornillo, near El Paso. Officials say the facilities will be running as long as they’re needed.

The goal is to get people processed more quickly, 24 hours for unaccompan­ied minors and 72 hours for families. The tent will have showers, laundry and a first aid station, and Kerlikowsk­e said the migrants would get outdoor exercise daily.

Kerlikowsk­e said he could not comment on what effect, if any, the weekend release of 470 migrant children and parents from two Texas detention centers would have on Border Patrol processing. Those centers are run by a separate division of the Department of Homeland Security.

The release followed a ruling Friday by a state judge that the state could not license the privately run detention centers as childcare facilities.

A steady influx of Central Americans fleeing violence and poverty in their homelands began in 2014.

 ?? ERIC GAY/AP ?? A worker installs barbed-wire on top of a fence at a U.S. Customs and Border Protection temporary holding facility near the Donna-Rio Bravo Internatio­nal Bridge on Wednesday in Donna, Texas.
ERIC GAY/AP A worker installs barbed-wire on top of a fence at a U.S. Customs and Border Protection temporary holding facility near the Donna-Rio Bravo Internatio­nal Bridge on Wednesday in Donna, Texas.

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