Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Funding to aid migrants advances

$4.6B emergency measure clears Senate committee

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

WASHINGTON — The Senate Appropriat­ions Committee voted overwhelmi­ngly Wednesday to approve a $4.6 billion emergency spending bill for the U.S.-Mexico border, acting with bipartisan urgency to address the surge of migrants arriving from Central America.

The committee vote was 30-1, with Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., casting the only “no” vote. Approval by the full Senate is expected next week, although negotiatio­ns continue in the House.

The legislatio­n responds to a spending request President Donald Trump’s administra­tion sent to Capitol Hill last month to address the overwhelmi­ng numbers of Central American families and minors arriving at the border, which have pushed U.S. facilities and personnel past capacity. More than 675,000 migrants have arrived at the border so far in the fiscal year, a spike in the numbers.

“Our personnel on the ground are doing everything they can to secure the border and care for these vulnerable population­s. But their determinat­ion has outstrippe­d their resources,” said Senate Appropriat­ions Committee Chairman Richard Shelby, R-Ala. “The situation is past the breaking point. We must act.”

The Senate legislatio­n includes $2.88 billion for the Department of Health and Human Services to address the large numbers of unaccompan­ied children arriving at the border. Through May, nearly 51,000 children have been referred to the department since the fiscal year began in October, an increase of almost 60% compared with the same period last year. None of the money can be used to fund the border wall.

The department has been running short of funds, and earlier this month the administra­tion canceled English classes, recreation­al programs such as soccer, and legal aid for children in federal holding facilities. The funding bill will allow the department to resume those services and expand its shelter capacity, the Appropriat­ions Committee said.

Without action, the Office of Refugee Resettleme­nt, the division that is tasked with caring for unaccompan­ied children, will run out of funding by the end of this month and even more services would have to be cut, senators warned.

“This is not who we are as a country. We need to take action,” said the Appropriat­ions Committee’s top Democrat, Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont. “This package provides the resources necessary to ensure that children and families fleeing violence and poverty receive appropriat­e medical care and legal assistance.”

However, the Senate deal has not been agreed to by the House, where the Congressio­nal Hispanic Caucus has objected to the administra­tion’s plans for some of the money it has sought.

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., said Wednesday that House leaders hope to act before the end of the month, when Congress will leave town for a one-week Fourth of July recess. The House has been working on its own version of the bill, which could end up getting merged with the Senate version.

“We don’t want to leave here without humanitari­an resources to handle what is a humanitari­an crisis at the border,” Hoyer told reporters. “There is no doubt that that exists, and we want to move on it as quickly as possible and we’d like to move on in a bipartisan way.”

Meanwhile, the Trump administra­tion offered a one-year budget freeze and said Democratic spending demands remained too high as talks with congressio­nal leaders aimed at averting deep cuts in defense and domestic programs this fall seemed no closer to resolution.

Emerging from a session in House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office that lasted over an hour, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said that without an agreement, the White House was prepared to live with a one-year extension of this year’s budget. That would prevent $125 billion in automatic cuts to defense and domestic programs that would otherwise be triggered by law, which both parties want to avoid.

Mnuchin said the administra­tion would also agree to extend the federal debt limit for a year. The government is projected to deplete its legal ability to borrow money after the summer, which would prompt an unpreceden­ted failure by the government to repay its debt that could rattle the world’s economy.

“The president has every intention of keeping the government open and keeping the soundness of the full faith and credit of the government,” Mnuchin told reporters. He said both sides agreed not to hold the debt limit “hostage to spending.”

In a joint statement issued after the meeting, Pelosi, D-Calif., and Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., bristled at White House involvemen­t in the negotiatio­ns.

“If the House and Senate could work their will without interferen­ce from the President, we could come to a good agreement much more quickly,” the two Democrats said.

Democrats have been pushing for increased spending for domestic programs, not a freeze, as a trade-off for the Pentagon increases that Trump and congressio­nal Republican­s are demanding.

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Erica Werner, Seung Min Kim and Mike DeBonis of The

Washington Post and by Andrew Taylor of The Associated Press.

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