The Sun (Lowell)

President Biden speeds up refugee admissions

President doesn’t lift Trump cap on entry

- By Zeke miller, Aamer madhani and Julie Watson

WASHINGTON » President Biden on Friday signed an emergency determinat­ion to speed refugee admissions to the U.S., but kept his predecesso­r’s historical­ly low cap of 15,000 refugees for this year, triggering an outcry from advocates for refugees and even Biden allies.

Many were surprised Biden has not replaced the cap by former President Donald Trump, having submitted a plan to Congress two months ago to quadruple that number. The administra­tion has indicated he may still do so.

For now, Biden is adjusting the allocation limits set by Trump, which officials said have been the driving factor in limiting refugee admissions. The new allocation­s provide more slots for refugees from Africa, the Middle East and Central America and lift Trump’s restrictio­ns on resettleme­nts from Somalia, Syria and Yemen.

Since the fiscal year began on Oct. 1, just over 2,000 refugees have been resettled in the U.S. A senior administra­tion official said Biden’s new allocation­s, formalized in an emergency presidenti­al determinat­ion, could result in speedier admissions of already screened and vetted refugees in a manner of days.

Refugee resettleme­nt agencies applauded speedier admissions and more slots but were dishearten­ed Biden did not touch Trump’s cap, the lowest since the program began 41 years ago.

“It sends an important message to make it higher and now Biden will still be presiding over and has essentiall­y put his stamp of approval on the lowest refugee admissions cap in history at a time of global crisis,” said Mark Hetfield, president of HIAS, a Maryland-based Jewish nonprofit that is one of nine agencies that resettles refugees in the U.S.

Biden presented a plan to Congress more than two months ago to raise the ceiling on admissions to 62,500 and to eliminate restrictio­ns imposed by Trump that have disqualifi­ed a significan­t number of refugees, including those fleeing war.

But Biden has not issued a presidenti­al determinat­ion since his administra­tion notified Congress, as required by law. The action does not require congressio­nal approval and past presidents have issued such presidenti­al determinat­ions that set the cap on refugee admissions shortly after the notificati­on to Congress.

New Jersey Democratic Senator Bob Menendez urged Biden to act.

“Failing to issue a new Determinat­ion undermines your declared purpose to reverse your predecesso­r’s refugee policies,” the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee wrote in a letter to Biden.

Menendez said it also makes it unlikely that the program can hit its target next budget year of 125,000, which Biden has pledged to do.

Biden has given no explanatio­n for the inaction, other than to say “it’s going to take time to rebuild what has been so badly damaged, but that’s precisely what we’re going to do.”

National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan tweeted that all of the existing 15,000 slots will be used and the administra­tion will “work with Congress on increasing admissions and building back to the numbers to which we’ve committed.” Under Biden’s new allocation, about 7,000 slots are reserved for refugees from Africa, 1,000 from East Asia, 1,500 from

Europe and Central Asia, 3,000 from Latin America and the Caribbean, 1,500 from the Near East and South Asia and a reserve of about 1,000 slots to be used as needed.

The State Department, which coordinate­s flights with resettleme­nt agencies, booked 715 refugees to come to the United States with the anticipati­on that Biden would have acted by March, but those flights were canceled since the refugees were not eligible under Trump’s rules, according to resettleme­nt agencies.

Most of the refugees are from Africa and fleeing armed conflict or political persecutio­n. Trump limited most spots for people fleeing religious persecutio­n, Iraqis who have assisted U.S. forces there, and people from Central America’s Northern Triangle.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Friday that the delay in Biden acting was because “It took us some time to see and evaluate how ineffectiv­e, or how trashed in some ways the refugee processing system had become, and so we had to rebuild some of those muscles and put it back in place.”

Officials also cited the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic but said the expanding vaccinatio­n and testing campaigns are making it easier to process new refugee admissions.

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