Chicago Sun-Times

Vaccinatio­ns should be mandatory at ICE detention centers

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Undocument­ed immigrants who cross over into the United States should be required to get vaccinated against COVID-19.

For their sake. For the sake of all those with whom they come in contact, including federal border agents. And for the sake of undercutti­ng a false and scurrilous myth, being pushed by right-wing politician­s and radio talkers, that immigrants are significan­tly to blame for the current surge of the virus.

Since the start of the pandemic, more than 24,000 COVID-19 cases have been reported among immigrants in Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t detention centers. ICE has responded as of early August by administer­ing more than 20,000 vaccinatio­ns — and by encouragin­g every detained immigrant to vaccinated.

But thousands of detained immigrants have chosen not to get vaccinated, which is unfortunat­e. At this very moment, almost 1,400 such immigrants are being monitored or isolated after having tested positive for COVID-19. That need not and should not be.

We believe the Biden administra­tion should make the vaccine mandatory for immigrants being held in ICE detention facilities. This editorial page has long championed better treatment and greater rights for undocument­ed immigrants, on legal and humanitari­an grounds, and we urge mandatory vaccinatio­ns now in that same spirit. For the good of all.

The sad fact is that some Republican lawmakers, any number of ultra-conservati­ve radio babblers and — ironically — about a third of unvaccinat­ed American citizens blame the current increase in coronaviru­s infections on undocument­ed immigrants entering the country.

The reality, as public health experts attest, is that the surge has been greatest in states with pathetical­ly low vaccinatio­n rates — whatever the size of their undocument­ed population — and a hostile attitude toward proven precaution­s such as masks and social distancing.

Consider, for example, the state of Mississipp­i, which has seen a 54% spike in infections in the last week and where hospitals are running out of ICU beds. Only 36% of the people of Mississipp­i are fully vaccinated. Mississipp­i also has one of the lowest numbers of undocument­ed immigrants in the country.

As William Schaffner, a professor of preventive medicine at Vanderbilt University, recently told PolitiFact, it is simply absurd to say that unvaccinat­ed immigrants are a major wellspring of the pandemic’s surge.

“The immigratio­n contributi­on,” Schaffner said, “is akin to pouring a bucket of water into a swimming pool.”

All the same, it remains alarming that some 5,958 detained immigrants, by the most recent count, have refused the vaccine. Though ICE is encouragin­g one and all to get vaccinated.

We can’t help but imagine the wave of outrage among advocates for immigrants if ICE were not offering the vaccine.

Our nation’s immigrant detention centers are overcrowde­d and troubled as it is. If there is anywhere COVID-19 should not be allowed to spread freely, it is there.

 ?? JOHN MOORE/GETTY IMAGES ?? A Border Patrol agent hands out masks to immigrant families after they crossed the U.S.-Mexico border on Friday in La Joya, Texas.
JOHN MOORE/GETTY IMAGES A Border Patrol agent hands out masks to immigrant families after they crossed the U.S.-Mexico border on Friday in La Joya, Texas.

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