The Mercury News Weekend

23andme donating DNA kits to help reunite families

Speier got in touch with the CEO, who agreed to take on the task

- By Tatiana Sanchez tsanchez@bayareanew­sgroup.com

The CEO of the popular DNA-testing company 23andMe has agreed to provide DNA kits to help reunite the hundreds of migrant families separated at the border in recent weeks, after Congresswo­man Jackie Speier approached the Mountain View-based company with the idea.

“They have committed to providing all the tests necessary to test the parents and the children,” Speier told this news organizati­on.

Speier, D-Hillsborou­gh, said she met with a company leader Thursday to ask if they could use DNA kits to reunite children separated from their parents under President Trump’s “zero tolerance” policy, which aimed to prosecute anyone who crossed the border illegally.

They told her they’d consider the idea, she said. Speier then got in touch with CEO Anne Wojcicki, who agreed to take on the task.

More than 2,000 migrant children have yet to be be reunited with their parents, despite President Trump’s executive order Wednesday reversing the separation of families at the border — families will now be detained together — and it’s unclear how exactly immigratio­n officials plan to do so.

A spokespers­on forWojcick­i declined to provide further details about the company’s proposal, but the CEO tweeted Thursday afternoon, “We would welcome any op-

portunity to help.”

Speier said the next step is to reach out to federal officials for direction on how to move forward with testing.

“It doesn’t change the fact that these children have been subject to clinical child abuse or that they’ve been scarred for life,” Speier said. “But I feel a littlemore confident that we’re going to reunite parents and children.”

Under Trump’s “zero tolerance” policy, parents and their children were sent in different directions: Thousands of kids went to juvenile shelters under the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, while parents were taken to adult detention facilities in other areas under the U. S. Department of Homeland Security.

It’s this discrepanc­y that couldmake reuniting families extremely difficult.

“I was just trying to think, how are we going to connect these two? Howcan we guarantee that the parents are going to get their own child back?” Speier told BuzzFeed, which first reported the news Thursday. “I’mthinking, how else are we going to do that? So I was encouragin­g them to look at whether or not they could provide some kind of assistance here.”

Trump’s “zero tolerance” policy sparked national outrage as images and audio surfaced of children crying out for their parents. Other images showed children in cages in detention facilities in Texas.

Border Patrol agents have said fears of traffickin­g and exploitati­on often lead to family separation, since adults and children who show up at the border aren’t always related. The Border Patrol logged 462 cases of fraud among children and family migrants in the Rio Grande Valley alone in the last five years, according to a report by the Los Angeles Times.

Social justice organizati­ons such as the ACLU said they’d support DNA testing to help parents reunite with their children, while others say it’s an aggressive tactic that would put people’s DNA in thehands of strangers with no knowledge of how it could be used in the future.

In a Tweet Thursday, Ivanka Trump said “it’s time to focus on swiftly and safely reuniting the families that have been separated.”

23andMe uses at-home saliva samples sent to accredited labs to determine ancestry estimates “down to the 0.1%,” according to the company’s website.

Speier will travel to the U. S. - Mexico border in Texas Friday with a small group of constituen­ts to speak to some of the families and to deliver clothing and other items to immigrant children.

 ?? BRYNN ANDERSON — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Immigrant children walk in a line outside the Homestead Temporary Shelter for Unaccompan­ied Children a former Job Corps site that now houses them in Homestead, Fla.
BRYNN ANDERSON — ASSOCIATED PRESS Immigrant children walk in a line outside the Homestead Temporary Shelter for Unaccompan­ied Children a former Job Corps site that now houses them in Homestead, Fla.
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