USA TODAY International Edition

Deluge at border overtook Biden’s immigratio­n plans

Influx may have caught him off guard

- Rebecca Morin

WASHINGTON – Two weeks into Joe Biden’s presidency, his Department of Health and Human Services announced it was opening a temporary influx facility to house unaccompan­ied migrant children – in the same location of a similar facility that was met with criticism under former President Donald Trump.

The facility in Carrizo Springs, Texas, was the first temporary influx care facility of roughly a dozen emergency intake sites the Biden administra­tion scrambled to set up to house thousands of unaccompan­ied children coming to the United States through the U. S.- Mexico border before they are released to a sponsor or family member.

The Biden administra­tion has grappled with a dramatic increase of unaccompan­ied migrant children, families and adults trying to make their way to the United States over the past several months, a situation that has come to define Biden’s first 100 days on immigratio­n policy and drawn fierce Republican criticism. But some experts and activists say it’s unclear whether the Biden administra­tion could have done more to prepare for the increased

number of migrants, which had been increasing for months before he took the oath of office.

“I don’t think anybody anticipate­d the pent- up demand that was at the border,” said Ali Noorani, president and CEO of the National Immigratio­n Forum, an immigrant advocacy group. “There was nothing necessaril­y that could be done the day before the inaugurati­on to make the day after the inaugurati­on really go any easier.”

Both Democrats and Republican­s have criticized Biden for his handling of the migrant surge, punctuated by images of children and migrants crowded at border facilities, sleeping on mats with foil blankets. Children have been kept at jail- like facilities run by Customs and Border Protection for more than a 72- hour legal limit before going to an HHS facility, drawing concern from lawmakers and activists.

HHS has since establishe­d several emergency facilities to more quickly move children out of border facilities. Last week, the number of children being held in those facilities dropped below 1,800 from roughly 5,700 in late March.

Skyrocketi­ng crossings

Since October, there has been a steady rise in the number of migrants coming to the United States, but in the early months of 2021, the numbers skyrockete­d. Migrant encounters in March jolted by 71% in just one month, and the number of migrant children encounters doubled.

The number of migrants apprehende­d in March – 172,331 – was higher than the most recent peak in 2019, when 144,116 migrants were apprehende­d that May. Last year, there were low levels of migrants coming to the United States because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The White House has said it’s just working to fix a problem it inherited from the Trump administra­tion, which employed hard- line policies to coincide with the former president’s campaign promise to build a wall and control the flow of illegal immigrants.

“The increase in migration started a year ago and the previous administra­tion did not prepare for an increase in children. There were not enough beds in shelters, and they also put a staff hiring freeze in place that slowed down preparatio­ns,” a White House spokespers­on said. “Since the start of the administra­tion we have identified tens of thousands of new beds for kids and are reuniting them with their parents more swiftly.”

The White House response

Biden in his first days of office unraveled many of Trump’s immigratio­n policies and was praised by Democrats and activists. He also began taking what he calls a more humane approach of accepting children and some families coming to the U. S.- Mexico border rather than expelling them to dangerous parts of Mexico or forcing them to make the journey to their home countries.

But as the number of migrants increased, the government struggled to quickly house and process migrants, creating problems and pushback from some activists and lawmakers.

During his first news conference in late March, Biden attributed the increase of migrants coming to the U. S. as part of a seasonal migration pattern but said right now is not the time for migrants to come to the border. That message has been repeated by Biden and other White House officials, who say they need more time to come up with a policy.

Biden has since appointed Vice President Kamala Harris to work with Mexico and the Northern Triangle countries – Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador – to help mitigate migration to the United States’ southern border. Harris said Monday thshe would be making her first internatio­nal trip to Guatemala in June. On Tuesday, Biden announced that he was nominating Sheriff Ed Gonzalez of Harris County, Texas, who was critical of Trump’s “zero tolerance” immigratio­n policy, to be director of Immigratio­ns and Customs Enforcemen­t.

The Biden administra­tion is now accepting only children and some families coming to the U. S.- Mexico border. But the majority of migrants are being turned away under a Trump- era policy called Title 42, which allows Customs and Border Protection to expel undocument­ed migrants to prevent the spread of COVID- 19 in holding facilities.

White House officials have said it was difficult to prepare for the increased number of migrants heading to the U. S.Mexico border during the transition between the Trump administra­tion and the Biden administra­tion. The White House has also blamed Trump for the increase, saying he cut funding to establish more beds and employed the Migrant Protection Protocols, known as “Remain in Mexico,” which forced migrants to wait in Mexico for their court hearings. Biden said in a news conference in March that Trump “dismantled all the elements that exist to deal with what had been a problem and ... continued to be a problem for a long time.”

“So what we’re doing now is attempting to rebuild the system that can accommodat­e what is happening today,” he said.

Raúl Hinojosa- Ojeda, associate professor of Chicano and Chicana studies at the University of California, Los Angeles, said the Biden administra­tion faced “massive bureaucrat­ic issues” to help address the border situation, such as the delayed confirmation of Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas.

Noorani also noted the large numbers of migrants coming to the border was fueled by past policies under the Trump administra­tion, such as the Migrant Protection Protocols, because many migrants who were forced to wait tried to come to the U. S. again, plus cartels falsely told migrants it was OK to come to the United States now. He said that the infrastruc­ture to process migrants was going to take time under a new administra­tion but that the administra­tion is on the right track.

“The pieces are starting to fall into place, and then I think we’re going to see the public saying: ‘ OK, they solved the problem. They fixed the problem,’ ” Noorani said.

Caught unprepared?

Frank Sharry, founder and executive director of America’s Voice, an immigrant rights organizati­on, also said it was unclear whether the Biden administra­tion was prepared for the influx of migrant children. Sharry said that while he was on a number of calls during the transition to talk policy, “never once did anybody from the outside or on the inside say, ‘ We’re expecting a huge increase in unaccompan­ied minors.’

“Was anyone’s hair on fire saying there’s gonna be a huge increase? I didn’t hear it from outside, from the inside, from experts. I just didn’t hear it.”

Sharry noted that focusing on building an infrastruc­ture to get children out of Customs and Border Protection custody and to sponsors and families quickly and safely has “slowed their progress” on immigratio­n but praised the administra­tion for not reverting “to cruelty and deterrence” of migrants.

Biden faces other immigratio­n hurdles beyond what is happening at the border.

Hinojosa- Ojeda said it has been unclear who is in charge of addressing the different border situations, saying the Biden administra­tion hasn’t been able to “gain control of the narrative.”

In his first days in office, Biden was quick to begin unraveling many of Trump’s immigratio­n policies. Biden signed executive orders to stop constructi­on on the wall along the U. S.Mexico border, establishe­d a task force to reunite parents and children who were separated under Trump’s “zero tolerance” policy, and introduced a comprehens­ive immigratio­n legislatio­n package to Congress.

“They have yet to come back and regroup and capture that momentum that they had on Day One, in terms of a vision and a message,” Hinojosa- Ojeda said.

Several Republican lawmakers have said they want to see the border under control, as well as border security as more of a priority, before moving on legislatio­n. Some Republican­s are also calling on Biden to reestablis­h some Trump- era policies, such as the Migrant Protection Protocols.

“Instead of upholding his promises, President Biden decided it would be better to make a hard- left turn on his immigratio­n agenda,” Sen. Thom Tillis, RN. C., wrote in a Fox News op- ed last week.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has called the border influx a “humanitari­an crisis,” a term the Biden administra­tion has refused to use. Some lawmakers along the border, including Texas Democratic Rep. Henry Cuellar, also have criticized Biden for how he has handled the surge, pointing to the strain on border communitie­s.

“I don’t think anybody anticipate­d the pent- up demand that was at the border.”

Ali Noorani President and CEO, National Immigratio­n Forum

Beyond the border

While the Biden administra­tion has focused on getting the border under control, experts and activists say they want to see Biden now move forward in other ways. Among them are pushing through immigratio­n legislatio­n in Congress and focusing on other efforts, such as extending Temporary Protected Status – which offers temporary status to people from countries that are often facing armed conflict or natural disaster – to people from countries like Haiti and Cameroon.

“We’re not going to get immigratio­n reform passed by focusing on the kids in the cages,” Hinojosa- Ojeda said. “We’re going to need to now engage the American imaginatio­n.”

He said support for immigratio­n change is dwindling as more attention is focused on the border.

Sherry also supports the Biden administra­tion turning its focus to getting an immigratio­n bill passed in Congress.

“They’ve had some fits and starts but an overall positive record in the first 100 days, but what happens in the next 100 days is what’s going to be decisive on immigratio­n policy,” Sharry said. “It seems to us that our best chance to pass legislatio­n that’s going to legalize millions is if we get it included on the next infrastruc­ture bill as it goes through budget reconcilia­tion.”

The Dream and Promise Act and the Farm Workforce Modernizat­ion Act, which are separate from Biden’s comprehens­ive immigratio­n legislatio­n package, passed in the House of Representa­tives in March. But they have yet to be brought up in the Senate, and there are concerns of getting bipartisan support for the bills.

Some activists are urging lawmakers to include a pathway to citizenshi­p for those living in the United States without citizenshi­p in the infrastruc­ture bill.

Democrats are trying to drum up support for immigratio­n legislatio­n, and some advocates are optimistic of getting an immigratio­n law passed this year.

“Democrats understand that they’re going to be judged not by their effort but by their results, and they know this,” Sharry said. “They feel the pressure, they want to produce. And quite frankly, if they use every ounce of their power, they will get it done.”

 ??  ?? Joe Biden
Joe Biden
 ?? DARIO LOPEZ- MILLS/ AP ?? Minors crowd a pod at the main detention center for unaccompan­ied children run by the CBP in the Rio Grande Valley in Donna, Texas.
DARIO LOPEZ- MILLS/ AP Minors crowd a pod at the main detention center for unaccompan­ied children run by the CBP in the Rio Grande Valley in Donna, Texas.

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