The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Immigrant detention center to allow visitors

Friends, relatives have been unable to see loved ones since pandemic.

- By Lautaro Grinspan lautaro.grinspan@ajc.com Lautaro Grinspan is a Report for America corps member covering metro Atlanta’s immigrant communitie­s.

Immigrant detention centers in Georgia will start opening their doors to visitors for the first time in over two years.

Last week, U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t (ICE) signaled that detention facilities nationwide would phase in the return of social visits, which had been suspended at the onset of the pandemic. It’s a policy change with significan­t implicatio­ns for Georgia, home to the sprawling Stewart Detention Center. Stewart’s average daily population of 1,095 detainees makes it the busiest immigrant detention facility in the nation, according to federal data, slightly ahead of a detention complex in south Texas.

ICE’S decision to ease its visitation restrictio­ns is welcome news for Amilcar Valencia. Valencia leads El Refugio, a nonprofit founded in 2010 to support family members of Stewart detainees. Given the detention center’s remote location in rural southwest Georgia, logistical hurdles made visits complicate­d.

El Refugio filled that gap by providing families free meals and lodging in a hospitalit­y house just down the road from the detention complex in Lumpkin. Its staff is looking forward to returning to that work.

ICE’S movetoonce again allow visitation “is a good first step in the process to ensuring that people detained have real connection­s with their loved ones and people in the community,” Valencia said. “Visitation breaks down their isolation.”

ICE noted the return of social visits will happen gradually as part of a “fluid” process that takes into considerat­ion local conditions and updates to CDC guidance.

“Teams will continue to closely monitor conditions and alter phases based on new informatio­n as needed. This is how we will continue to deliver high-quality, evidence-based care to detained individual­s in a dignified, respectful manner,” the executive associate director for enforcemen­t and removal operations at ICE, Corey A. Price, said in a statement.

For immigrant advocates, the return of social visits is a long time coming, with other types of penal institutio­ns taking that step much earlier. Federal prisons started allowing inmates’ loved ones to visit again in October 2020.

“We are eager to return to our roots of providing hospitalit­y and visitation in Lumpkin,” said PJ Edwards, board chair of El Refugio. “We have watched the world reopen with COVID-SAFE protocols while people in detention remain cruelly isolated and unable to receive visitors. Having witnessed the value of in-person visits for many years, we welcome the belated restoratio­n of visitation.”

Visitation can also help bring potential human rights violations to light.

“Visitation is not only a crucial means of emotional support for people experienci­ng detention, it also provides a lifeline to advocates and a public window into these otherwise sealed-off prisons,” said Monica Whatley, project coordinato­r with the Southern Poverty Law Center’s Southeast Immigrant Freedom Initiative. “The reinstatem­ent of visitation is vital to protecting human rights and shining a light on the abuses at these detention centers.”

 ?? Center DAVID GOLDMAN/AP FILE ?? Immigrants are walked down a hallat Stewart Detention in South Georgia, whose average daily population of 1,095 detainees makes it the busiest such facility in the U.S.
Center DAVID GOLDMAN/AP FILE Immigrants are walked down a hallat Stewart Detention in South Georgia, whose average daily population of 1,095 detainees makes it the busiest such facility in the U.S.

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