Houston Chronicle Sunday

Abbott hangs border cities out to dry

It’s far easier to paint foreigners as disease-ridden than to own the failure to end this pandemic.

- By The Editorial Board

To hear Gov. Greg Abbott tell it, if Texas has a problem with COVID at all, it’s because migrants are running loose, spreading the virus among unsuspecti­ng Texans who are otherwise dutifully heeding the governor’s familiar refrain of “personal responsibi­lity.”

For a governor looking to shift blame away from himself and his vaccine-hesitant supporters in this latest COVID-19 wave, a tenuous situation in the Rio Grande Valley has provided plenty of fodder.

The ongoing swell of asylum-seekers and other border-crossers, lured to our southern border in part by the perception of more a humane president, has indeed been aggravated by the pandemic. In McAllen last week, officials reported more than 1,500 migrants testing positive for COVID-19 the previous seven days.

The migrants, legally here while the U.S. considers their asylum claims, aren’t just “released” into the general public, as some have claimed. They’re asked to quarantine, many at local hotels, before they can be transporte­d to their next destinatio­n. But local officials say the Biden administra­tion has failed to provide enough facilities for quarantine so they’ve had to improvise by setting up emergency tents, including one at a Hidalgo County park. The mounting numbers of migrants in quarantine has, understand­ably, drawn concerns from residents. Local officials say they’ve had to issue disaster declaratio­ns to get help from the state and federal government­s to care for the group of mostly families. .

The escalating scene has proven an irresistib­le campaign backdrop for Abbott and a couple of other Republican­s hoping to challenge President Joe Biden if he runs again in 2024. For Abbott, U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas and Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, scapegoati­ng faceless groups of new immigrants has become almost rote, an unquestion­ed custom of pinning many of the nation’s vexing ills on a constituen­cy who can’t retaliate at the ballot box. Add an infectious disease to the mix and it’s pure partisan gold.

It’s pretty good TV, too. If you’ve watched Fox News lately, or merely talked with someone who has, you know that McAllen’s misfortune has been Christmas in July — and now August, too — for the conservati­ve network. Host Sean Hannity flat out said that Americans who get sick or die of COVID can blame Biden for letting in immigrants who are causing a “super-spreader event.” Cruz was quick to echo him, as he often does, saying the election of Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris “was a super-spreader event because their open border is endangerin­g not just the people of Texas but people all across the country.” DeSantis parroted accordingl­y at a press conference.

Abbott, meanwhile, did more than talk. Accusing Biden of “endangerin­g the lives” of Americans and immigrants, the governor issued an order that made the situation even worse by restrictin­g the transport of migrants. The local Catholic Charities shelter, which houses many of the migrants as they come through McAllen, began to overflow, leading to the need for an emergency shelter. The Justice Department sued, and a federal judge has since blocked Abbott’s order.

With the rhetoric turned up fullblast — Disaster! Crisis! Surge! — what are we supposed to believe?

Peeling back the layers, a far more nuanced picture emerges once you talk with local officials, both Democrats and Republican­s. While the delta variant is present among migrants coming across the border, it mirrors the soaring case totals here in Texas where around half the state still remains unvaccinat­ed. The biggest COVID threat in Texas isn’t coming across the border, it’s already here.

Ivan Melendez, the health authority for Hidalgo County, offered a sober assessment that political leaders would be wise to echo.

“Are the migrating folks part of the problem? Absolutely. Are they the problem? No. Are they bringing the disease in? Yes. Are they bringing diseases in that we don’t already have? No. Is their positivity rate greater than our positivity rate is?

No,” Melendez said at a press conference. “Is this a pandemic of the migrants? No, it's a pandemic of the unvaccinat­ed.”

Yes, McAllen officials say that 7,000 migrants have tested positive for COVID since February, but bear in mind, those folks were promptly quarantine­d until they tested negative. Even if a few managed to expose someone during that time, that is certainly less cause for alarm or blame than the estimated 116 million vaccine-eligible Americans who have refused to get their shots.

For years, the Respite Center in McAllen run by Catholic Charities of the Rio Grande Valley has been a way station in a transit route for legal immigrants traveling to their next destinatio­ns, usually near friends and family. Before that point, asylum seekers have to pass a “credible fear interview” that allows them to legally reside in the country under humanitari­an release for six months while they wait for their cases to be adjudicate­d in immigratio­n court.

Catholic Charities receives these migrants from the Border Patrol in downtown McAllen, provides them with necessitie­s and transports them out of town, usually by bus or airplane, to a location approved by federal immigratio­n authoritie­s, typically within 24 hours.

Migrants are not tested for the virus by authoritie­s, and Abbott refused help from the federal government for testing in March, leaving that responsibi­lity to non-government­al organizati­ons, or NGOs, which have gone about it diligently. They say they test migrants as many as three times at the border before they are released for transport. .

Over the past 10 days, though, the positivity rate among migrants in McAllen doubled to nearly 16 percent, a byproduct of the delta variant ravaging the globe. Suddenly, Catholic Charities’ center was at full capacity. Local government­s were overwhelme­d, leading to cities such as Laredo suing the Biden administra­tion over the influx.

Abbott pounced. On July 28 the governor ordered state troopers to begin pulling over any non-government­al group transporti­ng migrants, leading to what some immigratio­n advocates called “a bottleneck on top of a bottleneck.”

That left hundreds of migrants stranded with nowhere to go. The governor drew the ire of the Justice Department and frustrated locals.

“(The executive order) had us in a bind, because we try to get (migrants) in and out as fast as possible,” said Republican McAllen Mayor Javier Villalobos.

In blocking Abbott’s order, U.S. District Judge Kathleen Cardone found it caused “irreparabl­e injury to the U.S. and immigrants in its custody.”

Just as we have called on Abbott to get out of the way of schools and local government­s trying to protect Texans with mask requiremen­ts, the governor should get out of the way of the federal government trying to enforce immigratio­n laws.

If Abbott were truly concerned about the COVID threat posed by migrants, he would’ve accepted the Biden administra­tion’s offer to help test them. And he wouldn’t kneecap border communitie­s from ensuring that the pipeline of migrants coming across the border legally remains safe and efficient. He’d be joining the bipartisan and seemingly smart push from U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar, a Laredo Democrat, and U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham, a South Carolina Republican, for the White House to appoint a “border czar” tasked with prioritizi­ng the health and safety of communitie­s in the Rio Grande Valley. He would call, rightly, for the Biden administra­tion to set up its own COVID wards at the border to relieve overburden­ed NGOs and cities.

There is a long, sordid history in our country of painting migrants, or foreigners in general, as a diseaserid­den scourge — from the exclusion acts targeting Asians that were justified around stopping the spread of diseases, to President Donald Trump, who used the pandemic to pressure the CDC to close the border entirely to migrants entering from Mexico. It’s far easier, and politicall­y convenient, for Abbott and other Republican­s to continue this legacy than to take ownership of their own failure to end this pandemic.

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 ?? Veronica G. Cardenas / Bloomberg ?? Asylum seekers arrive at a COVID-19 testing site after being processed by U.S. immigratio­n officials Wednesday in McAllen. A federal judge temporaril­y blocked the governor’s order to stop NGOs from transporti­ng migrants.
Veronica G. Cardenas / Bloomberg Asylum seekers arrive at a COVID-19 testing site after being processed by U.S. immigratio­n officials Wednesday in McAllen. A federal judge temporaril­y blocked the governor’s order to stop NGOs from transporti­ng migrants.

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