The Norwalk Hour

Pandemic-era asylum limits in hands of federal judge

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LAFAYETTE, Louisiana — An attorney arguing for 24 states urged a federal judge Friday to block Biden administra­tion plans to lift pandemic-related restrictio­ns on migrants requesting asylum, saying the decision was made without sufficient considerat­ion on the effects the move could have on public health and law enforcemen­t.

Drew Ensign, an attorney for the state of Arizona, told U.S. District Judge Summerhays the lawsuit Arizona, Louisiana and 22 other states filed to block the plan was “not about the policy wisdom“behind the announceme­nt to end the plan May 23.

But, Ensign said, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention did not follow proper administra­tive procedures requiring public notice and gathering of comments on the decision to end the restrictio­ns imposed under what is known as Title 42 authority. The result, he said, was that proper considerat­ion was not given to likely resulting increases in border crossings and their possible effects, including pressure on state health care systems and the diversion of border law enforcemen­t resources from drug interdicti­on to controllin­g illegal crossings.

Jean Lin, with the Justice Department, argued that the CDC was within its authority to lift an emergency health restrictio­n it felt was no longer needed. She said the order was a matter of health policy, not immigratio­n policy.

“There is no basis to use Title 42 as a safety valve,“Lin told Summerhays.

Summerhays gave no indication when he would rule, but he noted that time is short and he told attorneys they did not need to file post-argument briefings. In addition to deciding whether to block the policy, he also will decide whether his ruling applies nationwide or in specific states.

So far, Summehays’ rulings have strongly favored those challengin­g the administra­tion.

Migrants have been expelled more than 1.8 million times since March 2020 under federal Title 42 authority, which has denied them a chance to request asylum under U.S. law and internatio­nal treaty on grounds of preventing the spread of COVID-19.

On April 1, the CDC announced it was ending Title 42 authority but would give border authoritie­s nearly two months to prepare. The decision drew criticism from Republican­s and some Democrats who fear the administra­tion is unprepared for a widely anticipate­d influx of migrants.

Arizona, Louisiana and Missouri quickly sued and were later joined by other states in the legal challenge being heard Friday. Texas had sued independen­tly but last week joined the Arizona-led suit along with North Dakota and Virginia.

After the administra­tion acknowledg­ed last month that it had already begun phasing out the pandemic restrictio­n by processing more migrants under immigratio­n law instead of Title 42, Summerhays ordered the phaseout stopped.

An appointee of then-President Donald Trump, Summerhays wrote last month that winding down restrictio­ns before May 23 would inflict “unrecovera­ble costs on healthcare, law enforcemen­t, detention, education, and other services” on the states seeking to keep the policy in effect.

He also said the administra­tion likely failed to follow federal rule-making procedures in planning the May 23 end of the policy. Friday’s arguments pertained to whether to keep restrictio­ns in place beyond that date while litigation proceeds.

Several migrant advocacy groups have asked Summerhays to at least allow Title 42 to be lifted as planned in California and New Mexico, two border states that have not challenged the administra­tion’s decision.

Separately, Congress has presented another potential obstacle to ending Title 42. Several moderate Democrats have joined Republican­s to voice concern that authoritie­s are unprepared for an influx of migrants.

Large numbers of illegal crossings have emboldened some Republican­s to try to make the border and immigratio­n an election-year issue. U.S. authoritie­s stopped migrants more than 221,000 times at the Mexican border in March, a 22-year high. Many of those were repeat crossers because Title 42 carries no legal or criminal consequenc­es.

U.S. authoritie­s say they are readying for as many as 18,000 daily crossings, up from daily average of about 7,100 in March.

Title 42 authority has been applied unevenly across nationalit­ies. Mexico has agreed to take back migrants from Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador and Mexico — and limited numbers from Cuba and Nicaragua. High costs, strained diplomatic relations and other considerat­ions have made it more difficult to remove migrants from other countries, who must be flown home.

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