The Day

U.S. to reunite migrant families as immigratio­n politics boil

Starts next Tuesday with kids younger than 5

- By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR

Washington — Stung by a public outcry, the Trump administra­tion said Thursday it will meet court-ordered deadlines for reuniting families separated at the border, even as the politics of immigratio­n remained at a boil.

Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar told reporters that his department is ready to reunite children in its care with their parents, starting next Tuesday with those under age 5. HHS said it’s using DNA testing as a backup to confirm the parent-child link and speed up the process.

However, Azar warned that entire families may remain in the custody of immigratio­n authoritie­s for extended periods, even those who are claiming asylum. Before the Trump administra­tion’s “zero tolerance” policy, migrants seeking asylum under U.S. laws were often granted temporary release as their cases were resolved.

Azar also used a new and much higher number for migrant kids separated from their parents, “under 3,000” as compared with the figure of 2,047 he provided at a Senate hearing last week. Of those, about 100 are under five years old.

He said the new number reflected a more thorough look by HHS at its case files, and over a longer time period, to comply with the court order that families be reunited. That order had been issued after his Senate testimony.

Nonetheles­s, Azar’s effort to provide a more accurate accounting only seemed to create more confusion.

HHS has long been charged with caring for unaccompan­ied minors crossing the border, thousands of children every year. Usually, the agency places kids with a U.S. relative or foster family while their immigratio­n cases are decided. This year, HHS also took on the role of caring for children separated from their parents as a consequenc­e of the Trump administra­tion’s “zero tolerance” policy.

Azar said the new number reflects a case-by-case audit of about 11,800 migrant children in its care, over a longer time frame. About 80 percent of those children arrived unaccompan­ied at the border, and many are teenage boys.

Azar said the audit was done to make sure the agency was in full compliance with a court order issued after he had given senators a lower number.

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