Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Judge halts preparatio­ns for end of US asylum limit

- By Kevin McGill

NEW ORLEANS » A federal judge ordered a two-week halt Wednesday on the phasing out of pandemicre­lated restrictio­ns on seeking asylum — and raised doubts about the Biden administra­tion’s plan to fully lift those restrictio­ns on May 23.

For now, the decision is only a temporary setback for the administra­tion. But the judge staked out a position that is highly sympatheti­c with Louisiana, Arizona and 19 other states that sued to preserve socalled Title 42 authority, which denies migrants a chance at asylum on grounds of preventing the spread of COVID-19.

“(The states) have establishe­d a substantia­l threat of immediate and irreparabl­e injury resulting from the early implementa­tion of Title 42, including unrecovera­ble costs on healthcare, law enforcemen­t, detention, education, and other services for migrants,” wrote U.S. District Judge Robert Summerhays in Lafayette, Louisiana.

Summerhays, who was appointed by former President Donald Trump, said states were likely to succeed with their argument that the administra­tion failed to adhere to federal procedures when it announced April 1 that it was ending Title 42 authority.

The judge has scheduled a critical hearing on May 13 in Lafayette to hear arguments on whether to block Title 42 from ending as planned 10 days later.

Texas filed a similar lawsuit filed Friday in federal court in Victoria, Texas.

The decision to end Title 42 authority was made by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It has come under growing criticism from elected officials in Biden’s Democratic Party who contend the administra­tion is unprepared for an anticipate­d increase in asylumseek­ers.

The Justice Department declined to comment on the order but the administra­tion has said it will comply, while contending it will hamper preparatio­ns for Title 42 to end on May 23.

About 14% of single adults from Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador were processed under

immigratio­n laws during a seven-day period ending last Thursday. That’s up from only 5% in March, according

to government figures.

Summerhays’ order requires the Homeland Security

Department to “return to policies and practices in place” before it announced plans to end Title 42 and to submit weekly reports that demonstrat­e it is acting “in good faith.”

Migrants have been expelled more than 1.8 million times under the rule invoked in March 2020 by the Trump administra­tion. Migrants were stopped more than 221,000 times at the Mexico border in March, a 22-year-high that has raised concerns about the government’s ability to handle even larger numbers when Title 42 is lifted.

Advocates for asylumseek­ers say the restrictio­ns endanger people fleeing persecutio­n back home and violates rights to seek protection under U.S. law and internatio­nal treaty. As the CDC acknowledg­ed, the public health justificat­ion for the order has weakened as the threat of COVID-19 has waned.

At two often-contentiou­s

hearings Wednesday, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas sought to defend the administra­tion’s handling of an increase of migrants at the Southwest border and its plans to deal with the prospect of more with the potential end of Title 42.

Mayorkas sought to push back on Republican accusation­s that the Biden administra­tion has encouraged irregular migration by allowing some people to seek asylum, blaming economic and political turmoil and violence throughout Latin America and the world.

“Some of the causes of irregular migration have only been heightened by years of distress preceding this administra­tion,” he said.

Mayorkas testified one day after Homeland Security released a plan with more details about how it was preparing for the end of Title 42 authority.

 ?? MARCO UGARTE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE ?? A migrant waits on the Mexican side of the border after United States Customs and Border Protection officers detained a couple of migrants crossing the US-Mexico border on the beach, in Tijuana, Mexico, on Jan. 26. A federal judge in Louisiana has on Wednesday ordered the Biden administra­tion to stop phasing out a public health rule that allows the expulsion of migrants without an opportunit­y to seek asylum.
MARCO UGARTE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE A migrant waits on the Mexican side of the border after United States Customs and Border Protection officers detained a couple of migrants crossing the US-Mexico border on the beach, in Tijuana, Mexico, on Jan. 26. A federal judge in Louisiana has on Wednesday ordered the Biden administra­tion to stop phasing out a public health rule that allows the expulsion of migrants without an opportunit­y to seek asylum.
 ?? FERNANDO LLANO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE ?? A Mexican soldier patrols the internatio­nal border bridge that connects Del Rio, Texas and Ciudad Acuna, Mexico, after its partial reopening, Sept. 25, 2021.
FERNANDO LLANO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE A Mexican soldier patrols the internatio­nal border bridge that connects Del Rio, Texas and Ciudad Acuna, Mexico, after its partial reopening, Sept. 25, 2021.

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