Imperial Valley Press

Long-term consequenc­e of asylum seekers

- JOE GUZZARDI Joe Guzzardi is a Progressiv­es for Immigratio­n Reform analyst who has written about immigratio­n for more than 30 years. Contact him at jguzzardi@pfirdc.org

The immediacy of the U.S.-Mexico border emergency is shocking, almost unfathomab­le, as we appear to be on track to see as many as 1 million migrants during the current fiscal year, as former Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said before her recent departure.

But after a decades-long history of inadequate border and interior enforcemen­t, many Americans aren’t surprised that border patrol agents in March apprehende­d about 100,000 illegal aliens (up from 76,000 in February) that had crossed through Mexico. Over a longer timeframe, the totals will be even more dramatic. So when looking at the U.S. border crisis, driven mostly by Central American asylum seekers, the long view is more important than the short-term perspectiv­e.

Once migrants’ feet touch U.S. soil, the odds are prohibitiv­ely high that they’ll be released into the general population and remain forever. Nearly 100 percent of children and families detained at the border last year are still present. Before 2013, only 1 percent of migrants who arrived at the border sought asylum. The migrants simply have to utter the magic words, “credible fear,” and they’re given the keys to the kingdom. Although Congress has long been aware of this specific loophole, it has done nothing to eliminate it.

Here’s what today’s congressio­nal inaction on Central American migration could mean. Since 1970 when the Central American population in the U.S. was 118,000, an estimated 3.3 million Central Americans, legal and illegal, now live in the United States, a 28-fold surge in less than 50 years. This is a rate that’s six-times faster than overall immigrant population growth.

Factor in fertility rates for those coming from El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala, and a relatively young median age when migrants enter the United States, and Central Americans will be significan­t contributo­rs to growing the U.S. population for years to come. The Census Bureau identified immigratio­n and births to immigrants as the major population driver that will swell U.S. residency by 75 million in 2060. More than 90 percent of the increase will be immigratio­n-related.

Once migrants attain lawful permanent residency, they can petition certain family members. The average number of sponsored immigrants is 3.5 per family, according to a Princeton University analysis. The data isn’t necessaril­y precise, but it provides ballpark estimates, and the population projection­s are frightenin­g.

Newcomers will require roads, housing, schools and hospitals — infrastruc­ture that’s currently in various stages of disrepair or dysfunctio­n. Just as Congress has failed to meaningful­ly address the Central American border surge, so also has it done too little to update our infrastruc­ture. Coincident­al to border news, President Trump met with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer to discuss infrastruc­ture, and the budget for the necessary improvemen­ts.

The White House and Democratic leadership agreed that the overhaul would require $2 trillion. But $2 trillion is catch-up money. By 2060, when the huge projected population increases are a reality, another round of trillion-dollar funding will be needed.

Congress’ border security failures represent a complete abdication of the members’ sworn duty to defend the United States and its citizens. The Senate and the House have the RAISE Act before them that would, among other immigratio­n improvemen­ts, eliminate extended family migration. Congress also could at any time introduce and pass other legislatio­n to restore sanity to the nation’s reckless and destructiv­e immigratio­n laws.

Whether Congress will act, however, is a completely different matter.

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