The Guardian (USA)

Revealed: US to close or scale back troubled immigratio­n detention centers

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US Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t (Ice) is planning to close a troubled detention center in Alabama and will significan­tly scale back the number of beds contracted at three other facilities, citing concerns about conditions, according to an internal government document seen by Reuters.

According to the document, Ice will discontinu­e the use of the Etowah county detention center in Gadsden, Alabama, saying it had “long been a facility of serious concern, due to the quantity, severity, diversity and persistenc­e of deficienci­es identified during facility inspection­s”.

While the facility is not currently housing many detainees, the average length of stay remains high, the draft memo said, adding that the age of the jail and the lack of outdoor space were of particular concern.

The memo also said the agency would pause the use of Glades county detention center in Florida ,where there have been “persistent and ongoing concerns related to the provision of medical care at the facility”.

Immigratio­n advocates have for years raised complaints about a lack of adequate medical care and other problems at several Ice facilities and urged the administra­tion of Joe Biden to close down the centers. Ice is currently detaining nearly 22,000 immigrants at facilities across the country.

Under Biden, Ice arrests and deportatio­ns of immigrants living illegally in the United States have plummeted compared with the administra­tion of his predecesso­r, Donald Trump. The agency has de-emphasized enforcemen­t against immigrants with no criminal history to prioritize the arrest of those committing serious crimes.

An announceme­nt about detention changes was expected on Friday, according to three US officials familiar with the matter. Ice did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

The document said Ice would also be reducing the “guaranteed minimum” number of beds contracted at the Alamance county detention facility in North Carolina and the Winn correction­al center in Louisiana, citing in part a reduced number of detainees.

The measures are likely to spark criticism from Republican­s who have said the Biden is encouragin­g illegal immigratio­n, pointing to record numbers of migrant arrests at the USMexico border, which are expected to rise further this year. Most of the migrants arrested at the border, however, have been immediatel­y expelled under current policy aimed at reducing the spread of Covid in detention settings.

 ?? ?? Ice is currently detaining nearly 22,000 immigrants at facilities across the country. Photograph: Lucy Nicholson/Reuters
Ice is currently detaining nearly 22,000 immigrants at facilities across the country. Photograph: Lucy Nicholson/Reuters

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