Miami Herald

Border agency: No immediate plans to send migrants to S. Fla.

- BY DAVID SMILEY AND MONIQUE O. MADAN dsmiley@miamiheral­d.com mmadan@miamiheral­d.com

As South Florida’s sheriffs and mayors prepared Friday for a looming immigratio­n crisis manufactur­ed by the federal government, U.S. Customs and Border Protection moved to downplay the possibilit­y that planes filled with border-crossing families will begin touching down soon in Broward and Palm Beach counties.

There are currently no imminent plans to send thousands of undocument­ed immigrants to South Florida from the inundated southwest border, CBP officials now say. Rather, they say, efforts to explain “contingenc­y” plans to local sheriffs this week caused a misunderst­anding that mushroomed into a statewide political crisis and underscore­d the haphazardn­ess of President Donald Trump’s immigratio­n policies.

“That’s news to me,” Broward Mayor Mark Bogen said Friday, a full 24 hours after publicly saying that CBP had informed South Florida law enforcemen­t that as

Officials from Customs and Border Protection downplayed concerns that as many as 1,000 immigrants could be flown each month from the Mexican border to Palm Beach and Broward.

many as 1,000 immigrants could be flown each month from the Mexican border. “No one informed us of that. I hope it’s true.”

The belated clarity from the Trump administra­tion could at least temporary quell a tempest that began Thursday after the chief of CBP’s Miami office briefed police in Palm Beach and Martin counties on plans to possibly fly families of undocument­ed immigrants from the southwest border to South Florida. But it was too late to avoid a controvers­y that had Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis — one of Trump’s most visible allies — criticizin­g the idea as out of step with actions taken in the state by the president’s own party.

“We cannot accommodat­e in Florida the dumping of unlawful migrants into our state. It will tax our resources, our schools, the healthcare, law enforcemen­t, state agencies,” DeSantis said Friday, noting that the Legislatur­e just passed a law banning socalled sanctuary cities.

“We’ve been very cooperativ­e and to have this then put into certain communitie­s here. I think it’s just something that we don’t ...” he said, pivoting quickly to a new point without finishing the thought.

DeSantis, who blamed the controvers­y on federal immigratio­n policy coming from Congress, said he had “investigat­ed” the issue but had not spoken with the president.

Like most everyone in Florida, though, the governor seemed to be getting his informatio­n from Palm Beach County politician­s and police officials, who had been briefed this week by Customs and Border Protection about plans to send as many as 1,000 immigrants to South Florida each month. The plan, they said, was necessitat­ed by a surge of border crossings in the southwest U.S., where more than half a million people have sought to enter the country since October.

But details were scarce, and Palm Beach County Sheriff Ric Bradshaw said he was told that immigrants were going to be flown into Palm Beach Internatio­nal Airport, processed, and then released into the community without food or shelter and with only a date to return for a hearing in immigratio­n court. As many as 500 people could be coming each month in Broward, he said, and also in Palm Beach — where Trump has his Mar-a-Lago winter retreat.

In Martin County, Sheriff William Snyder said he was also informed by CBP’s chief in Miami that some of those immigrants would likely make their way to the small and predominan­tly Hispanic village of Indiantown, where some immigrants might have relatives.

“I don’t have enough informatio­n to be calm and I don’t have enough informatio­n to be apprehensi­ve,” Snyder told the Miami Herald. “We’re out in Indiantown today talking with churches and food banks and NGOs, trying to see what are our resources.”

After learning of the Trump administra­tion’s plans, South Florida officials worried about their ability to house, feed, and prepare for what Palm Beach County Associatio­n of Chiefs of Police President Sean Brammer warned Thursday in a letter to the governor could be as many as 14,000 families dropped each year into South Florida. Bradshaw said Palm Beach County was already grappling with measles and Hepatitis A and was not prepared to safely accommodat­e an influx of immigrants with unknown background­s.

“We think it’s a dangerous plan,” said Bradshaw.

Bogen, the mayor of Broward County, accused Trump of making good on plans reported last month to move immigrants from the border and dump them in Democratic stronghold­s. Broward is the most Democratic county in Florida, a crucial swing state that could decide whether Trump remains president next year.

But, after saying nothing for more than 24 hours, CBP officials explained during a conference call with reporters Friday afternoon that there were no scheduled flights to South Florida. A CBP official — who spoke to reporters on the condition that he not be named — said the agency is looking at possibly sending “non-criminal” immigrant families to South Florida as well as other parts of the country where CBP offices have the computer capacity to process immigratio­n cases.

What flights and transfers are occurring, the official said, involve moving families back and forth from high-volume locations like Yuma, Arizona; El Paso, Texas; and the Rio Grande Valley to CBP sub-stations. Since October, CBP has made about 530,000 apprehensi­ons at the southwest border, and on March 19, the agency began releasing families that aren’t dealing with criminal charges.

Those families, mostly from the violent Northern Triangle in Central America, are being moved by bus to Laredo or by plane to Del Rio, Texas. On Tuesday, there will be another plane from the Rio Grande Valley to San Diego.

South Florida remains a possible destinatio­n should a rush of desperate immigrants continue to pour from Central America through Mexico and into the U.S. An average of 4,500 people have been apprehende­d each day over the last week, according to CBP, and old and outdated facilities are too strained to hold everyone. About 180,000 people have been released on notices to appear since March 19, according to CBP.

There are no plans for federal assistance for those immigrants released into random communitie­s nor is there any expectatio­n that those immigrants know anyone in the communitie­s where they are sent, according to CBP.

Even after CBP moved to downplay the chances of flying immigrants to South Florida, confusion lingered. Two hours after reporters were briefed, a Palm Beach County spokesman sent out a news release saying CBP “has plans to transport 270 immigrants, presumed to be undocument­ed, into Palm Beach County each week for an undetermin­ed time period.”

“Details regarding this immigrant placement strategy from the federal government have not been provided to the county,” the statement said, “nor is there any evidence of a federal plan to address the basic needs of food, shelter and security for the arriving families and the impact on our community. Until we have official notice or order, we are closely monitoring the situation.”

That no one knew or trusted informatio­n about what was happening for more than a day was largely blamed Friday on Trump’s scattersho­t immigratio­n policies. Snyder, who attended Trump’s inaugurati­on in 2017, said it was “sublimely disconcert­ing at best” that reporters were calling him to explain the details of federal immigratio­n policy.

“This directly can be related to the federal government’s utterly incoherent immigratio­n policy,” he said. “That’s why we’re having this conversati­on. This does not make sense. If I ran my sheriff’s office like the federal government handles its immigratio­n policy, the governor would remove me from office today.”

El Nuevo reporter Nora Gámez Torres, McClatchy DC reporter Franco Ordoñez, and Bradenton Herald reporter Sara Nealeigh contribute­d to this report.

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