Los Angeles Times

A ‘tent city’ for immigrant youths closes in the desert

Massive Texas facility became symbol of Trump immigratio­n policies

- By Molly Hennessy-Fiske molly.hennessy-fiske @latimes.com

McALLEN, Texas — The last child departed what was once the nation’s largest shelter for migrant youths on Friday, a “tent city” in the west Texas desert town of Tornillo that had spurred protests, official criticism and proposed legislatio­n.

Workers have been dismantlin­g parts of the massive temporary shelter east of El Paso for months, ever since the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the agency responsibl­e for initially housing migrant youths, ended its contract with the nonprofit BCFS Health and Human Services.

On Friday, Rep. Will Hurd (R-Texas), who pushed for the shelter’s closure, tweeted the news. “I just talked with the management at the Tornillo facility — the last kid just left,” he wrote. “This tent city should never have stood in the first place but it is welcome news that it will be gone.”

Tornillo had held more than 6,200 teens since it opened June 10, according to the Department of Health and Human Services.

Last summer, when immigrant family separation­s on the border spawned protests and outrage from lawmakers and celebritie­s, Tornillo became a rallying point, although officials said few of the migrant children separated from their parents were housed there. Still, a protest camp sprang up, and still remains.

Juan Ortiz has been protesting outside Tornillo since September, commuting from Tucson where he’s working on his doctorate in Mexican American studies at the University of Arizona.

Ortiz, 44, an El Paso native, said that although the children had been moved, many shelter tents remained — and so would he until the shelter disappears.

From outside the facility Friday, he said he worried about the children who’d been moved, concerned that government officials “are just going to keep shuffling them from place to place.”

Victoria Palmer, a spokeswoma­n for the Department of Health and Human Services, said that Tornillo would remain operationa­l “through early 2019” but that no more migrant youths would be placed there.

A spokeswoma­n for BCFS, formerly known as Baptist Child Family Services, referred questions to the U.S. agency.

After visiting Tornillo last month, Rep. Judy Chu (D-Monterey Park) and Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) proposed legislatio­n to close such shelters, including a second facility in Homestead, Fla. They noted that the shelters are exempted from state childcare facility licensing requiremen­ts and that staff at Tornillo had not undergone FBI background checks.

“This makes children vulnerable to abuse, poses serious developmen­tal challenges, and risks retraumati­zing them,” Chu wrote in a statement. “Worst of all, this is a choice that was made by this administra­tion. Unaccompan­ied children have been and can be released to loved ones or family who will look after their safety and well-being. Instead, Trump is fomenting xenophobia.”

The facility was criticized in a Health and Human Services inspector general’s report last year over the lack of required FBI fingerprin­t background checks. The Nov. 27 report also said the Tornillo facility did not employ enough clinicians to provide adequate mental health care for the children held there.

Youths held at Tornillo crossed the border unaccompan­ied by an adult, Palmer said. By law, they must be transferre­d from Border Patrol custody to a Health and Human Services shelter within 72 hours. From there, officials attempt to place them with a relative or other sponsor.

The process became delayed in April, when the department agreed to share fingerprin­ts and other background check informatio­n they gather on wouldbe sponsors with Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t. Sponsors became reluctant to claim youths, and the number in federal custody grew from about 9,000 last spring when family separation­s began to 15,000 last month.

As a result, Tornillo was expanded in September and reached its peak last month, holding 2,800 youths. On Dec. 18, the Trump administra­tion announced it was lifting the fingerprin­t requiremen­t for adults living with a potential sponsor to speed the release of migrant children. The number of youths in custody has since dropped to 11,400.

Groups of youths from Tornillo could be seen at El Paso airport last week, traveling with shelter escorts and carrying matching black duffel bags. But it wasn’t clear how many were released and how many were transferre­d to other shelters.

In response to questions about how many were moved to other facilities, Lynn Johnson, assistant secretary of Health and Human Services’ Administra­tion for Children and Families, said in a statement: “As of this weekend the last group of unaccompan­ied alien children will have been transferre­d or discharged … either released to an appropriat­e sponsor or transferre­d to other shelters throughout our network of care providers.”

The federal government contracts to run 100 migrant youth shelters in 17 states with a total of 16,000 beds, and continues to expand.

The administra­tion had to divert about half a billion dollars from other agency programs to cover added costs in the fiscal year that ended in September. That included the cost of operating Tornillo, at least $144 million between June and November, according to BCFS spokeswoma­n Krista Piferrer.

Even as Tornillo was being dismantled Friday, federal officials were adding a thousand beds to the shelter in Homestead, Fla., bringing the total beds there to 2,350 — the largest in the nation. The center is 1,500 miles from the border, in a hurricane evacuation zone near the Everglades.

‘Unaccompan­ied children have been and can be released to loved ones or family .... Instead, Trump is fomenting xenophobia.’ — Rep. Judy Chu (D-Monterey Park)

 ?? Larry W. Smith EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? NEW YORK MAYOR Bill de Blasio, shown in June, was among politician­s who visited the Tornillo shelter for unaccompan­ied migrant youths in Texas.
Larry W. Smith EPA/Shuttersto­ck NEW YORK MAYOR Bill de Blasio, shown in June, was among politician­s who visited the Tornillo shelter for unaccompan­ied migrant youths in Texas.

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