The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Migrant kids could end up in already strained foster system

- By Jesse J. Holland

Foster care advocates say the government won’t likely be able to reunite thousands of children separated from parents who crossed the border illegally, and some will end up in an American foster care system that is stacked against Latinos and other minorities.

With few Spanish-speaking caseworker­s, it’s a challenge tracking down family members of the children who live south of the U.S.-Mexico border, and other relatives living in the states might be afraid to step forward to claim them because of fears of being detained or deported themselves.

Many complicati­ons have arisen for these separated families since the Trump administra­tion adopted its “zero-tolerance” policy on entering the country illegally. As many as 2,300 children have been taken from their migrant parents at the border and long-term treatment of them is a concern.

“Because they are Latino and because their relatives are living, not in Europe, not in Asia, but down south of the border, they are going to be discrimina­ted against,” said Richard Villasana, founder of Forever Homes for Foster Kids, who concentrat­es on locating relatives of foster children. “That’s exactly what’s going to happen to these migrant kids. The probabilit­y they are going to get better treatment than our U.S.-born Latino children? It’s not going to happen.”

Those children who do get placed with families face the likelihood of losing their language and culture, which advocates say could have a detrimenta­l effect on how they develop.

Peter Schey, the attorney in a lawsuit resulting in the 1997 Flores settlement that generally bars children from being kept in immigratio­n detention for more than 20 days and is now being challenged by the Trump administra­tion, said he was concerned that several thousand children have already been separated from their parents “without the Trump administra­tion having any effective procedures in place to reunite children with their parents, many of whom have already been deported.”

Officials have said they are working to reunite families as soon as possible but have provided no clear answers on how that will happen. The children are now in the custody of the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Refugee Resettleme­nt, and can be “held in a temporary shelter or hosted by an appropriat­e family.”

The Homeland Security Department said in fiscal year 2017, before the zero tolerance policy began, it was able to place 90 percent of its children with either a parent or close relative. And Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t is working on “dedicating a facility as its primary family reunificat­ion and removal center,” a briefing sheet said.

However, many child welfare profession­als worry these children will “end up in a child welfare system where we already have thousands of children across this country where many of them are trying to reunify” with parents and relatives, said Maria L. Quintanill­a, founder and executive director of the Latino Family Institute.

In 2016, more than 91,000 Hispanic or Latino children were in the foster care system in the United States, according to government data. Hispanic children made up a little more than 1 in 5 — 21 percent — of all children in foster care in September 2016, according to the most recent data available. That was an increase from 10 years earlier, when Hispanic children made up 19 percent of the foster care population.

More than 54,000 Hispanic children entered foster care in 2016, with more than 25,000 waiting to be adopted at the end of the fiscal year. More than 53,000 exited the foster care system that year because they were reunified with their parents, adopted or entered guardiansh­ip with another family.

By comparison, there were more than 191,000 non-Hispanic white children in foster care in fiscal 2016, with around 127,000 entering the system, 112,000 exiting the system and 51,000 waiting to be adopted at the end of the fiscal year.

In a July 2017 paper, San Diego State University economics department chair Catalina Amuedo-Dorantes and Oxford University professor Esther Arenas-Arroyo wrote that the increase in immigratio­n enforcemen­t between 2001 and 2015 contribute­d to raising the share of Hispanic children in foster care between 15 and 21 percent.

Villasana said it’s rare that foster care agencies will go the extra mile to find families who live in Mexico or Latin America for children already in the foster care system.

“These migrant kids are going to be put into the same discrimina­tory system that discrimina­tes against a Latino child because their relatives happen to be located south of the border,” Villasana said. “You’ve got individual­s who will not pay to bring in someone who speaks Spanish, understand­s Spanish, can read Spanish and knows the country and knows how to proceed in this matter, and will pick up the phone and go do this work.”

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