Miami Herald

U.S. to begin reuniting some families separated at Mexico border

- BY ELLIOT SPAGAT

The Biden administra­tion said Monday that four families that were separated at the Mexico border during Donald Trump’s presidency will be reunited in the United States this week in what Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas calls “just the beginning” of a broader effort.

Two of the four families include mothers who were separated from their children in late 2017, one

Honduran and another Mexican, Mayorkas said, declining to detail their identities. He described them as children who were 3 years old at the time and “teenagers who have had to live without their parent during their most formative years.”

Parents will return to the United States on humanitari­an parole while authoritie­s consider other longerterm forms of legal status, said Michelle Brane, executive director of the administra­tion’s Family Reunificat­ion Task Force.

The children are already in the U.S.

Exactly how many families will reunite in the United States and in what order is linked to negotiatio­ns with the American Civil Liberties Union to settle a federal lawsuit in San Diego, but Mayorkas said there were more to come.

“We continue to work tirelessly to reunite many more children with their parents in the weeks and months ahead,” Mayorkas told reporters. “We have a lot of work still to do, but I am proud of the progress we have made and the reunificat­ions that we have helped to achieve.”

More than 5,500 children were separated from their parents during the Trump administra­tion going back to July 1, 2017, many of them under a “zero-tolerance” policy to criminally prosecute any adult who entered the country illegally, according to court filings. The Biden administra­tion is doing its own count going back to Trump’s inaugurati­on in January 2017 and, according to Brane, believes more than 1,000 families remain separated.

While family separation under “zero-tolerance” ended in June 2018 under court order and shortly after Trump reversed course, Biden has repeatedly assailed the practice as an act of cruelty. An executive order on his first day in office pledged to reunite families that were still separated “to the greatest extent possible.”

The ACLU is happy for the four families but their reunificat­ions are “just the tip of the iceberg,” said attorney Lee Gelernt. Among the more than 5,500 children known to have been separated, more than 1,000 may still be apart from their parents and more than 400 parents have yet to be located, he said.

“We need the Biden administra­tion to provide relief to all of them, including providing them a permanent pathway to citizenshi­p and care,” Gelernt said.

The reunificat­ions begin as the Biden administra­tion confronts the third major increase in unaccompan­ied children arriving at the border in seven years. It has made major strides moving children from grossly overcrowde­d Border Patrol facilities to U.S. Department of Health and Human Services shelters, which are more suited to longer-term stays until children are placed with sponsors in the United States, typically parents or close relatives.

The average stay for an unaccompan­ied child in Border Patrol custody has plummeted to about 20 hours, below the legal limit of 72 hours and down from 133 hours in late March, Mayorkas said. There are 677 unaccompan­ied children in Border Patrol custody, down from more than 5,700 in late March.

 ?? DARIO LOPEZ-MILLS AP ?? Migrant families, mostly from Central America, wade through shallow waters after being delivered by smugglers on inflatable rafts on U.S. soil in Roma, Texas, on March 24. The Biden administra­tion said Monday that four families that were separated at the Mexico border during Donald Trump’s presidency will be reunited in the U.S. this week.
DARIO LOPEZ-MILLS AP Migrant families, mostly from Central America, wade through shallow waters after being delivered by smugglers on inflatable rafts on U.S. soil in Roma, Texas, on March 24. The Biden administra­tion said Monday that four families that were separated at the Mexico border during Donald Trump’s presidency will be reunited in the U.S. this week.

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