The Mercury News

Border incidents spiked in March.

- By Priscilla Alvarez

U.S. Customs and Border Protection encountere­d 171,700 migrants in March, including a record number of unaccompan­ied minors, far exceeding the prior month’s totals and continuing an upward trend dating back to last year, according to preliminar­y data obtained by CNN.

The data underscore­s the ongoing challenge facing the Biden administra­tion as officials scramble to set up emergency sites to house migrant children, many of whom have been held in poor conditions.

In March, CBP encountere­d 18,800 unaccompan­ied children at the border, according to the preliminar­y data, nearly doubling the number of apprehensi­ons of children in February and setting a record high. In May 2019, the highest month of arrests during that year’s crisis, CBP arrested 11,861 unaccompan­ied children at the U.S. southern border.

Single adults still make up the majority of border apprehensi­ons, with 99,300 encountere­d in March, the preliminar­y data reveals, up from 71,598 in February. Single adults are largely being turned away as soon as they’re encountere­d under a public health order, and as a result, the figure might also account for repeat crossers.

More migrant families are also arriving. In March, around 53,500 families were encountere­d by border officials, up from 19,246 in February. Some families are being swiftly expelled, while others are being released in the U.S. as a result of limited capacity in Mexico.

The White House’s coordinato­r of the southern border, Ambassador Roberta Jacobson, acknowledg­ed the high number of arrivals this week, saying that they will eventually decline.

“Yes, it’s a larger group than usual, but ... they will also diminish at a certain point. And the thing we have to do most quickly is get humanitari­an assistance, job training, education, feeding assistance — because there’s food insecurity throughout these countries. We need to provide options,” she said.

Projection­s reviewed by CNN this week indicate that encounters are expected to continue rising through September, though estimates could be subject to change in the event of policy modificati­ons or other changes in Latin America.

The accelerate­d pace of arrivals has overwhelme­d border facilities as officials race to transfer children to the custody of the Department of Health and Human Services, which is charged with the care of migrant children. Government data released Thursday indicates some level of progress, as the number of children in Border Patrol facilities, akin to jail-like conditions, gradually declines.

As of Wednesday, there were 4,966 children in CBP custody and 13,204 children in HHS custody, that data shows. More than 800 children had been transferre­d out of CBP custody. A day prior, there had been 5,285 children in CBP custody and 12,918 children in HHS custody.

Over recent days, HHS has opened, and announced, a string of sites intended to accommodat­e unaccompan­ied migrant children, while case managers help relocate them with a sponsor, like a parent or relative, in the United States. On Wednesday, HHS said it would open its 10th temporary housing facility for unaccompan­ied migrant children at a site in Houston.

The Office of Refugee Resettleme­nt, a federal agency under HHS, has also deployed staff to initiate the process of reuniting unaccompan­ied children with family in the United States.

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