The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

America, are you OK with caging kids and families?

- Mary Sanchez She writes for the Kansas City Star.

How cruel is America willing to be to other people’s children?

We’re about to find out. Are you OK with allowing your tax dollars to fund detention centers where Central American children will be locked up indefinite­ly, simply because the Trump administra­tion claims that it can’t manage the numbers of migrants at the border any other way?

This latest pitch would do away with a decadesold consent decree, known as the Flores agreement, that generally limits holding migrant children to 20 days. After that, children must be sent on to either guardians or less restrictiv­e settings.

A “loophole” is how Trump officials term Flores. They even claim that it’s the cause for recent surges in Central American migration, as if the poverty, violence and corruption of Honduras and Guatemala have been horribly miscast.

The administra­tion’s other pitch is that if it weren’t for the bothersome Flores protection­s, they’d have everything under control. On Aug.23, new rules, largely upending Flores, were issued into the Federal Register. Mind you, these are some of the same immigratio­n officials that a federal court had to order in mid-August to provide soap, toothbrush­es and a mat to sleep on for children being held at a border station.

Government lawyers asserted that such items weren’t necessary. Here’s how the judges saw it: “Assuring that children eat enough edible food, drink clean water, are housed in hygienic facilities with sanitary bathrooms, have soap and toothpaste, and are not sleep-deprived are without doubt essential to the children’s safety,” wrote Judge Marsha S. Berzon for a three-judge panel of United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.

That ruling was but a skirmish in this long-running feud between efforts to adhere to Flores, and government officials who try to circumvent it. The Obama administra­tion also had to be reprimande­d by the courts, so it’s unwise to see this as a partisan issue.

It’s about human rights, dignity and ensuring migrant’s care while in U.S. custody, aligns with the medical community’s commitment to do no harm. As any parent can attest, children are incredibly resilient, and also susceptibl­e to life-changing trauma if treated poorly.

Science is learning more about post-traumatic stress disorder almost daily, how it affects mental and physical health. Children, locked up and deprived of basic hygiene, let alone schooling or adequate medical care, surely qualify.

The hope of the Trump administra­tion is to box critics into a corner.

The separation of the migrant children from their parents that has caused such public outrage is related. The administra­tion took the children away from their parents supposedly because Flores wouldn’t allow them to hold the families indefinite­ly.

And Trump wants to hold these immigrants long-term in jail-like settings.

Trump disdains that fact that the families can meet the initial criteria to make a claim for asylum and then be released until those claims can be heard through immigratio­n proceeding­s. He rails against the so-called “catch and release,” maligning it into a slur, as opposed to the completely legal process that it is.

The Trump approach also opens an avenue to forprofit detention centers to warehouse families longterm.

Out of sight, out of the public’s mind. That’s the goal. And it must be fought, not only by advocates and the courts, but by average citizens who care about other people’s children too.

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