The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Administra­tion seeks to expand detention

-

SANTA ANA, Calif. — The Trump administra­tion is calling for the expanded use of family detention for immigrant parents and children who are stopped along the U.S.-Mexico border, a move decried by advocates as a cruel and ineffectiv­e attempt to deter families from coming to the United States.

Immigratio­n authoritie­s on Friday issued a notice that they may seek up to 15,000 beds to detain families. The Justice Department has also asked a federal court in California to allow children to be detained longer and in facilities that don’t require state licensing while they await immigratio­n court proceeding­s.

“The current situation is untenable,” August Flentje, special counsel to the assistant attorney general, wrote in court filings seeking to change a longstandi­ng court settlement that governs the detention of immigrant children. The more constraine­d the Homeland Security Department is in detaining families together during immigratio­n proceeding­s, “the more likely it is that families will attempt illegal border crossing.”

The proposed expansion comes days after a public outcry moved the administra­tion to cease the practice of separating children from their migrant parents on the border. More than 2,300 children have been taken from their parents since Homeland Security announced a plan in April to prosecute all immigrants caught on the border.

It also comes as the Pentagon is drawing up plans to house as many as 20,000 unaccompan­ied immigrant children on military bases.

Tens of thousands of immigrants traveling as families have been caught along the southwest border in recent years, many of them fleeing gang violence in Central America.

About 9,000 immigrants traveling in family groups have been caught on the border in each of the last three months, according to federal authoritie­s. Many immigrant children traveling alone have also been stopped — about 15,000 during the same period.

Immigrant advocates contend detention is no place for children and insist there are other alternativ­es to ensure they and their parents attend immigratio­n court hearings, such as ankle bracelets or communityb­ased programs. The federal court ruled several years ago that children must be released as quickly as possible from family detention.

“It is definitely not a solution under any circumstan­ces,” said Manoj Govindaiah, director of family detention services at the RAICES advocacy group in Texas. “At no point should a child be incarcerat­ed, and children need to be with their parents.”

Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t officials say immigrants are given proper care in its family detention facilities, which include playrooms, educationa­l services and access to lawyers. The Department of Homeland Security issued a statement that says it’s complying with President Donald Trump’s executive order to keep immigrant families together, but called on lawmakers to enact immigratio­n reform, saying “only Congress can fix the problem.”

Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t has three family detention facilities that can house up to 3,300 people— a 100-bed center opened in Pennsylvan­ia in 2001 and two much larger facilities opened in Texas in 2014.

Only the Pennsylvan­ia facility can house men, and all of the detainees at the Texas centers are women with children.

In Dilley, Texas, a facility was built on a remote site that was once an oil workers’ encampment. It includes collection­s of cottages built around playground­s. The other Texas center, in Karnes City, is ringed by 15-foot (4.5-meter) fences and has security cameras monitoring movements. It also offers bilingual children’s books in the library, classes, TVs and an artificial turf soccer field.

Inside the Karnes City center, there are five or six beds to a room typically shared by a couple of families. Cinderbloc­k walls are painted pastel colors, said Govindaiah, who added that the facilities are run by private prison operators, not humanitari­an organizati­ons, as is the case with shelters for unaccompan­ied immigrant children.

Currently, most families spend up to a few weeks in the facilities and are released once they pass an initial asylum screening. They are then given a date to appear before an immigratio­n judge in the cities where they are headed to see if they qualify to stay in the country legally or will face deportatio­n.

Those who do not pass initial screenings can seek additional review in a video conference with a judge, a process that lasts about six weeks.

But that’s much shorter than the six months or a year many families were being held several years ago when the Obama administra­tion began detaining mothers and children in a bid to stem a surge in arrivals on the border, Govindaiah said.

At the time, many were being held until their immigratio­n cases — not just the initial screenings — were resolved.

Advocates then asked the federal court to enforce a decades-old settlement over the detention of immigrant children, and a judge ruled the children should be released as quickly as possible.

The settlement is seen by advocates as a way to ensure children are placed in ageappropr­iate facilities and for no longer than necessary. State licensing adds another layer of oversight.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States