Daily Breeze (Torrance)

16th busload of migrants from Texas arrives in Los Angeles

Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights group says some hadn't eaten in days

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Another bus carrying migrants from Texas arrived in downtown LosAngeles on Monday, the 16th such arrival since June.

“One bus with migrants on board from Texas arrived around 2 p.m. today at Union Station,” Zach Seidl, deputy mayor of communicat­ions for Mayor Karen Bass, said in a statement.

“This is the sixteenth bus that has arrived,” Bass said. “The city has continued to work with city department­s, the county, and a coalition of nonprofit organizati­ons, in addition to our faith partners, to execute a plan set in place earlier this year. As we have before, when we became aware of the bus yesterday, we activated our plan,”

On X, formerly known as Twitter, the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights confirmed the arrival of the bus with 38 asylum seekers from Texas. The group includes 23 adults and 15 children from Colombia, Ecuador, Honduras and Venezuela.

CHIRLA noted “some have not eaten in days.”

CHIRLA is a member of the L.A. Welcomes Collective, a network of nonprofit, faith groups and city and county services that respond to the arrival of migrant buses.

“Asylum-seekers are human beings who have undergone traumatic experience­s in their country of origin and while en route to the safe haven they call USA. They are in distress and need our support,” CHIRLA said in a statement. “As a nation, we have been kind to strangers and we will do it again.”

The L.A. Welcomes Collective, the city and county of Los Angeles responded to the arrival of migrants last week.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has been orchestrat­ing the trips under Operation Lone Star, saying Texas' border region is “overwhelme­d” by immigrants crossing the Mexican border. OLS is a joint operation between the Texas Department of Public Safety and the Texas Military Department along the southern border between Texas and Mexico.

Abbott added, “Texas secures the border in Pres. (Joe) Biden's absence.”

“Texas' small border towns remain overwhelme­d and overrun by the thousands of people illegally crossing into Texas from Mexico because of President Biden's refusal to secure the border,” Abbott said in a statement after the first bus arrived in Los Angeles in June.

“Los Angeles is a major city that migrants seek to go to, particular­ly now that its city leaders approved its self-declared sanctuary city status. Our border communitie­s are on the front lines of President Biden's border crisis, and Texas will continue providing this muchneeded relief until he steps up to do his job and secure the border,” he added.

Mayor Karen Bass has complained that Abbott's office does not share enough informatio­n with Los Angeles about the shipments. She told KNX that if Abbott's concerns and actions were legitimate and sincere, then “someone in the government and Texas would notify us and coordinate with us.”

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