The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

CT becomes home to many migrant children

- By Julia Bergman julia.bergman@hearstmedi­act.com

“At this point I think the White House said ‘Let’s take a pause. I think we’re taking care of these kids elsewhere right now. But we really appreciate the heart of the state of Connecticu­t to reach out and give us some options.’ ”

Gov. Ned Lamont

As children from places such as El Salvador, Honduras, Guatemala, and Nicaragua flee their native countries in hopes of reaching the U.S. southern border, some have gone on to new homes here in Connecticu­t.

In March, a record 19,000 migrant children were apprehende­d at the border by agents for U.S. Customs and Border Protection — double the levels from February and the most ever in a single month, NPR reported.

The U.S. Border Patrol facilities in Texas have become overcrowde­d as migrant children await relocation to shelters run by the Department of Health and Human Services. Due to the overcrowdi­ng, the Biden administra­tion is considerin­g placing migrant children at temporary shelters in other states.

Vice President Kamala Harris asked Gov. Ned Lamont Lamont during a visit to the state last month whether Connecticu­t could house some of these children on an interim basis, but that plan was put on pause, Lamont said Thursday.

“At this point I think the White House said ‘Let’s take a pause. I think we’re taking care of these kids elsewhere right now. But we really appreciate the heart of the state of Connecticu­t to reach out and give us some options,’” the governor said.

One of the sites being considered by the Lamont administra­tion, the shuttered Connecticu­t Juvenile Training School, drew criticism from several advocacy groups in the state who said it was an unfit space for these children.

While the children are in the shelters, case managers work to vet sponsors, in some cases family members, or other people they know who are already living in the U.S. who they can release them to.

Once a sponsor is identified for these children, that’s when organizati­ons like the Bridgeport-based Connecticu­t Institute for Refugees and Immigrants step in.

The organizati­on doesn’t see every migrant child that comes into Connecticu­t, usually handling about 75 cases a year through a contract with the federal government.

“These children are fleeing for specific reasons,” said Leonela Cruz, director of CIRI’s Project Rescue, which provides programmin­g for unaccompan­ied minors.

Some of the children have witnessed family members being killed or are forced to join gangs if they stay in their home countries. That’s on top of limited opportunit­ies for schooling and finding work, Cruz said.

“This may be only option for people who’ve seen multiple family members being killed or abused,” Cruz said. “I heard from one minor that his only chance of surviving was to come to the U.S.”

Izarelli Mendieta, a case manager with Project Rescue, interviews the minors while they are in the shelters, as well as their identified sponsors and any other household members living with the sponsor.

She makes sure the sponsor and child actually know each other or whether the sponsor has a connection to the child’s family back in their home country, and if the sponsor has sponsored other children, that he or she has followed through with caring for those children.

Before the coronaviru­s pandemic, Mendieta was regularly going into sponsors’ homes to ensure they were suitable environmen­ts for the children. But due to the pandemic, many of her assessment­s have been done virtually.

Once a minor is released to a sponsor, Mendieta handles the case for up to 90 days. She ensures the sponsor enrolls the minor in school, is aware of upcoming immigratio­n court dates, and connects them with legal aid and community resources.

“Ninety days is not enough time but at least they get that initial 90 days. We worry a lot about these other children who get released and get no one to help them out,” Cruz said.

Minors who are identified as victims of abuse or traffickin­g, or who have a medical condition or disability will be monitored until their 18th birthday or until they receive immigratio­n status or an order of deportatio­n, Mendieta said. Cases flagged because there’s a concern with the sponsor will also be monitored for a longer period of time.

“A lot of these children have history of trauma ranging from anxiety, PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder) to a history of sexual and physical abuse,” Mendieta said.

One of the biggest struggles is connecting them with mental health services. Given they are undocument­ed, they don’t qualify for health insurance, so any therapy sessions have to be paid for out of pocket.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has made it even more difficult for sponsors, who are financiall­y responsibl­e for the minors including finding legal representa­tion for them, to make ends meet.

“The sponsors are choosing between bills and basic needs and legal assistance as well,” Mendieta said, adding that many of the sponsors don’t qualify for any of the COVID relief available.

The pandemic has also made Mendieta’s work more difficult. She’s had to navigate enrolling children, who in some cases speak indigenous languages, in virtual schooling from homes where they often don’t have access to laptops or reliable Internet. In some cases, Mendieta has dealt with kids or sponsors who are illiterate.

The children, who often require additional assistance such as English language training, have struggled with being cut off from in-person support from their teachers and peers, she said. On top of that, they’ve been isolated in a new place that is unfamiliar to them.

“Some of the kids haven’t seen their parents in years so it’s like living with a stranger in a way because they’re not someone they grew up with,” Mendieta said. “They were under care of another family member.”

Mendieta said she’s had cases involving children as young as one, minors who make the journey pregnant, and siblings traveling together.

One of her cases involved a 17-year-old boy, 15-year-old girl, and 14-year-old boy, siblings from Honduras who traveled to the U.S. in the fall of 2019 to flee threats from gang member and abusive family members back home and reunite with their 38-year-old mother who was living in the U.S.

The family, who lives in Bridgeport, agreed to speak to Hearst on the condition of anonymity due to fears for their safety.

The 17-year-old, speaking through Mendieta who translated the conversati­on, said it took 18 days for he and his siblings to reach the U.S. border. Once apprehende­d, they were taken to a shelter in Texas where they spent 40 days. He and his siblings were treated well in the shelter, he said, and received lessons in writing, the English language and the alphabet.

The children’s mother, who came to the U.S. in 2015, said she was able to communicat­e with her children by phone for 10 minutes on Wednesdays and Sundays.

“They would cry because they wanted to be with me,” she said through Mendieta. “It was horrible.”

As for reuniting with her children after nearly five years, she said she “felt happy, accomplish­ed, such joy.”

 ?? Cassandra Day / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? The former Connecticu­t Juvenile Training School, at 1225 River Road in Middletown, was shut down in 2018. Several advocacy groups in the state say it is an unfit space for migrant children.
Cassandra Day / Hearst Connecticu­t Media The former Connecticu­t Juvenile Training School, at 1225 River Road in Middletown, was shut down in 2018. Several advocacy groups in the state say it is an unfit space for migrant children.

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