Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Advocates: Migrant policy a start

Safe mobility program working, but border crossings persist

- GISELA SALOMON AND COLLEEN LONG

LEHIGH ACRES, Fla. — So far, 3,000 refugees have arrived in the U.S., and 9,000 have been approved under the Biden administra­tion’s new “safe mobility offices,” set up in Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador and Guatemala beginning in the fall.

But it’s a small number compared with what’s happening at the U.S.-Mexico border, where there were more than 10,000 arrests for illegal crossing per day over several days in December alone. In cities including Chicago, Denver and New York, migrants who have no access to work permits sleep in police station foyers and in airports.

These are the scenes that dominate the early phase of the 2024 presidenti­al campaign, with Republican­s excoriatin­g President Joe Biden and considerin­g whether to impeach his Homeland Security secretary.

Republican­s are also pushing the Democratic president to back more restrictiv­e policies that would dramatical­ly reduce asylum protection­s, among other things, and they believe they have leverage if he wants to see another infusion of tens of billions in aid to Ukraine.

The Biden administra­tion has worked to crack down on illegal crossings but has also sought to broaden legal pathways through efforts like the safe mobility initiative, to provide alternativ­es for migrants in the hope they don’t journey north.

Those who do arrive on foot to the U.S.-Mexico border and ask for asylum get a court date and must prove they are eligible to stay. The system is badly backlogged, so they often end up waiting years for a court date while they sit in limbo in the U.S. without authorizat­ion to work.

With the safe mobility initiative, they’re arriving as refugees who have already met the requiremen­ts and will be legally allowed to live and work in the U.S. The process takes only months, while more traditiona­l refugee screening is a yearslong effort. Immigrant advocates laud the new pathways but don’t think they replace asylum.

“It is absolutely critical that these pathways now exist,” said Hannah Flamm, policy counsel at the Internatio­nal Refugee Assistance Project. But, “no enhancemen­t of access to refugee resettleme­nt can ever come at the expense of the rights of asylum-seekers at the border.”

To implement its plan, the Biden administra­tion is working with the U.N. High Commission for Refugees and with the U.N.’s Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration. To apply, migrants answer questions online to screen for eligibilit­y, and then the U.N. agencies refer cases to the U.S., which makes the final decision. If they’re denied, the government could evaluate them for different, more temporary programs.

“This process facilitate­s and reduces time” for refugees, said Luiz Fernando Godinho Santos, a UNHCR spokesman for the Americas.

Jefferson Castro, who first told Venezuelan Alexis Llanos about the program, also applied to come to the U.S. from Colombia, after arriving from Venezuela in 2018, when he said he was threatened by police. In September, he traveled nine hours by bus with his wife and their two children, ages 8 and 4, from Medellín to Bogota, where U.S. officials interviewe­d them, examined them medically and provided U.S. cultural immersion courses.

He knew at least three other families had been approved and assumed he would be, too. So he took his children out of school and sold his refrigerat­or, beds and motorcycle, which he used to work as a delivery person. But they heard nothing for weeks.

“I was left without a job, without money, without answers,” said Castro, 28, in a recent phone interview from Medellín.

In late December, he finally received good news. They have one hurdle left: His daughter, born in Colombia, needs a passport. But he lacks the $100 to cover the costs.

“How can I have faith without work? How do I get a passport if I don’t have money?” Castro said. “I don’t know what to do.”

Immigrant advocates say the safe mobility initiative needs work — it can be confusing, isn’t advertised well so enough migrants aren’t aware of it, and it isn’t open to enough people. For example, in Colombia, only Cubans, Haitians and Venezuelan­s present in Colombia on or before June 11 are eligible right now.

Still, they say, it’s a start. And when families do make it, they are usually handed off to a nongovernm­ental organizati­on that helps resettle them into the U.S.

“It is certainly a step in the right direction in terms of providing people mechanisms to seek asylum safely rather than relying on coyotes and undertakin­g a dangerous trip,” said Lee Williams, chief programs officer at Lutheran Immigratio­n and Refugee Service.

 ?? (AP/Rebecca Blackwell) ?? Alexis Llanos (left), his partner Diomaris Barboza and their children Alexa, 7, and Alexis, 3, pose for a picture in December 2023 outside the home they moved into in October 2023, five years after fleeing Venezuela to Colombia to escape death threats and political persecutio­n, in Lehigh Acres, Fla.
(AP/Rebecca Blackwell) Alexis Llanos (left), his partner Diomaris Barboza and their children Alexa, 7, and Alexis, 3, pose for a picture in December 2023 outside the home they moved into in October 2023, five years after fleeing Venezuela to Colombia to escape death threats and political persecutio­n, in Lehigh Acres, Fla.

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