San Antonio Express-News

U.S. expands slots for asylum app at land crossings as demand rises

- By Valerie Gonzalez and Elliot Spagat

HARLINGEN — U.S. authoritie­s on Thursday expanded slots to seek asylum at land crossings with Mexico through a mobile app for the second time in less than a month, seeking to dispel doubts it isn’t a viable option.

There are now 1,250 appointmen­ts daily at eight land crossings, up from 1,000 previously and 740 in early May.

The increase “reflects our commitment to continue to expand lawful options for migrants,” said Blas Nuñez-neto, the Homeland Security Department’s assistant secretary for border and immigratio­n policy. “We’ll continue to expand appointmen­ts at the border as our operations allow in terms of capacity.”

Nuñez-neto called CBP One a “safe and orderly option” during a visit to Harlingen. He announced the expansion a week after Texas sued to end what the state government considers an illegal method of boosting immigratio­n.

Demand has far outstrippe­d supply from the Jan. 12 start, prompting many to consider crossing the border illegally or giving up. Enrique Lucero, migrant affairs director for the city of Tijuana, said the latest increase would have little impact considerin­g how many are waiting.

“It’s not a big deal,” he said. “It’s still very low and not enough for the pent-up demand.”

After pandemic-related asylum restrictio­ns ended May 11, the Biden administra­tion continued its embrace of a carrot-andstick approach to the border, introducin­g a general ban on asylum for people who travel through other countries, like Mexico, and enter the U.S. illegally.

U.S. authoritie­s are trying to funnel people to “legal pathways” like CBP One and parole for up to 30,000 Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguan­s and Venezuelan­s who apply online with a financial sponsor and arrive by air.

CBP One is for people of any nationalit­y who apply in central and northern and northern Mexico and enter by land.

The expansion on Thursday was met with cautious optimism and mild indifferen­ce among some of the 150 people, mostly families with young children, camped on a sidewalk at a border crossing where Tijuana leads to San Diego, hoping U.S. officials admit them without a CBP One appointmen­t.

They said it appeared authoritie­s were allowing about one family every several hours, enough to create a growing bottleneck over the last week as word spread it was an alternativ­e.

Carlos Vasquez, 25, reached southern Mexico from Honduras in January with his pregnant wife and their 4-year-old daughter and started trying daily on the app once he was in central Mexico. He became frustrated and, on Monday, began sleeping at the border camp, hoping U.S. officials would take mercy on his family.

Vasquez said the increase to 1,250 a day was good news but not enough for a major impact.

“We are many and there are few chosen,” he said.

Sergio Hernandez, 35, scored an appointmen­t on May 24 after more than five months of daily effort. The appointmen­ts are scheduled up to two weeks out.

Hernandez, a Guatemalan who plans to seek asylum while living with a childhood friend in Kansas City, Mo., said he had received countless “system error” messages before confirming a slot. He was once given a date on his phone screen but email confirmati­on never arrived.

“They keep improving it little by little,” he said.

 ?? Gregory Bull/associated Press ?? A woman looks at her phone as she waits with others to apply for asylum Thursday near the pedestrian entrance to the San Isidro Port of Entry, which links Tijuana, Mexico, with San Diego.
Gregory Bull/associated Press A woman looks at her phone as she waits with others to apply for asylum Thursday near the pedestrian entrance to the San Isidro Port of Entry, which links Tijuana, Mexico, with San Diego.

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