Las Vegas Review-Journal

Obama expanding efforts to aid Central American immigrants

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cate some families facing the greatest threats to Costa Rica.

The government is also broadening a nearly 2-year-old program to allow some Central American children to reunite with parents already legally living in the United States.

Deputy Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said that program will now allow some unmarried siblings, in-country parents and other caregivers to move to the U.S. with a child approved for the program.

The efforts are designed in part to combat the crush of tens of thousands of families and unaccompan­ied children caught crossing the border illegally this year. But it is unclear how quickly the expanded efforts may impact the flow of immigrants trying to make their way to the United States illegally.

Since the start of the budget year in October, more than 51,100 people traveling as families and more than 43,000 unaccompan­ied children have been caught illegally crossing the Mexican border. The number of such immigrants has been rising this year after significan­t decreases between the 2014 and 2015 budget years.

The Obama administra­tion first launched the effort to allow child immigrants to legally come to the U.S. in December 2014. More than 600 have moved to the United States since then. Mayorkas said 2,884 kids have been approved for the program and more than 9,500 applicatio­ns are pending.

In January, the administra­tion first announced that the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees would pre-screen would-be refugee families. U.S. officials will now handle more in-country processing for those families.

Pope said it is unclear how many families and children may benefit from the enhanced programs, but officials expect requests for help to steadily increase in the coming months.

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