Los Angeles Times

Isolating detained migrants no longer makes any sense

More than two years after the onset of COVID-19, they are still being denied visits from family and advocates.

- By Luis A. Romero Luis A. Romero is an assistant professor of comparativ­e race and ethnic studies at Texas Christian University.

As COVID numbers have declined in the U.S., we’ve lifted masking, vaccinatio­n, social distancing and testing mandates across the country. People are going to concerts and ballgames, eating dinner in restaurant­s and sending their kids to school “normally.” The message is clear: America has reopened.

But there is an important set of spaces that remain in strict lockdown: immigrant detention centers.

U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, part of the Department of Homeland Security, suspended visitation at immigrant detention facilities in March 2020 due to COVID-19. For more than two years, no one other than attorneys — no family members, friends or volunteer advocates — has been allowed to enter these sites or visit those held there.

The only connection migrants in ICE detention centers have to their families and friends is through emails, video and phone calls and physical letters. However, those detained may fear that these forms of communicat­ion, as opposed to face-to-face visits, will be closely monitored. In any case, as virtual classes and work meetings have proved for so many people throughout the pandemic, online interactio­ns are not an equal substitute for in-person interactio­n.

Being held in an immigratio­n detention facility is not a punishment for breaking a law. Migrants are waiting for the adjudicati­on of their immigratio­n cases in civil court. Many are asylum seekers, and more than 60% of those held have no prior criminal record.

But while immigratio­n detention is not supposed to be a punitive prison sentence, it is still a form of incarcerat­ion. Most of those detained are navigating a confusing bureaucrac­y. Investigat­ions and lawsuits uncovered patterns of substandar­d medical care, sexual abuse and solitary confinemen­t in immigrant detention centers during the Obama and Trump administra­tions. Despite efforts to improve the problems, reports of abuse continue under the Biden presidency. All those held in ICE detention centers live confined in limbo, at best repeating daily routines controlled by the facility’s staff.

Being denied visitors only exacerbate­s that limbo. ICE recognizes what it calls “the considerab­le impact” of suspending visitation­s, and after the lockdowns of the past two years, the ill effects of isolation should be clear to all of us. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention notes in its guidance on management of the virus in correction­al and detention facilities that “restrictio­ns on visitation and programmin­g are known to lead to negative impacts on mental health and well-being.”

Visitors, whether family members, friends or volunteers, provide important social and emotional support for migrants in the indetermin­ate world of detention.

Volunteer-driven programs, such as Freedom for Immigrants, train networks of people who visit with and advocate for people held in these facilities. Organizati­ons like these can also help to hold those who abuse detained migrants accountabl­e by bringing attention to the suffering many in detention facilities have endured.

When ICE first suspended visitation, COVID-19 cases were spreading in nursing homes, prisons and other “congregant settings” — including immigratio­n detention centers. It was clear the virus was dangerous and easily transmissi­ble. But a policy decision that was inevitable in the spring of 2020 isn’t justifiabl­e now.

Federal prisons began allowing inperson visitation again only seven months after suspending it in those facilities. With vaccines, distancing and masking, even a detention center can be reopened to visitors and operated safely.

Most of us have been able to get back to some sort of normalcy and to safely see the people who matter most to us. Those detained deserve an end to their isolation too. The Biden administra­tion and ICE need to reopen immigratio­n detention facilities for visits from advocates and loved ones.

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