San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

RETURNING TO MEXICO, FINDING ‘HEARTBREAK’

DACA recipient aids asylum seekers in first visit in 30 years

- BY KATE MORRISSEY

In her first moments back in Mexico after more than 30 years away, Dulce Garcia laughed at how easily she was able to cross south.

It was a moment that Garcia thought would not be possible. It was also a moment she feared.

Garcia, 38, has lived most of her life as an undocument­ed immigrant in the United States. Under normal circumstan­ces, if she went to Mexico, she would not be able to return to her home in San Diego.

Because she came to the United States at age 4, she was able to enroll in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, program that allows young undocument­ed immigrants to get two-year renewable work permits and temporary protection from deportatio­n. And, because Garcia is an immigratio­n attorney and the executive director of the nonprofit Border Angels, she was able to convince the U.S. government that she needed to do work in Tijuana.

The government gave her emergency permission to leave the United States for up to 60 days and come back — a program called “advance parole.”

After a scramble to pack and prepare, on Thursday, March 25, Garcia found herself waiting to turn left onto an entrance ramp that she had avoided her entire life, the one to Interstate 5 south where the sign reads

“Mexico only.”

As she drove past Mexican officials, no one checked her paperwork. No one asked about the bags of donations piled into her SUV that she gathered to bring to asylum-seeking families.

“This is it? That’s it!” Garcia exclaimed as she rounded the curve from customs to Tijuana. “Que fácil!”

But that giddiness didn’t last long. Once she arrived at the tent camp of asylum seekers who have been waiting at the U.s.-mexico border for months, mere feet

from the entrance to the United States, her feelings quickly turned to anger as she took in their conditions. The lack of access to bathrooms and water particular­ly caught her attention.

“I’m already disillusio­ned,” she said as soft rain splattered on her face shield after she handed out supplies. “Mexico and America are both parts of me. They’re both failing. It’s complete heartbreak.”

Under the Trump administra­tion, officials implemente­d policy after policy that restricted access to the U.S. asylum system — as well as access to U.S. soil — for migrants fleeing their home countries and seeking protection at the southwest border. While the Biden administra­tion has begun to wind down some of those policies, others remain in place. Among them is Title 42, which began under the pandemic and allows officials to expel migrants back to Mexico or their home countries without reviewing their fear claims.

Though President Joe Biden campaigned on making a “humane” asylum system, he has yet to implement that promise.

In the meantime, migrant shelters around Tijuana are full, and the camp at El Chaparral plaza has grown to more than 200 tents, and an estimated 2,000 people, according to Garcia. Waiting asylum seekers face threats from gangs and cartels who take advantage of their vulnerabil­ities. Many are kidnapped, raped or even killed in northern Mexico.

In the void left by the Mexican and United States government­s, organizati­ons like Border Angels and other nonprofits in Tijuana and San Diego have tried to fill in gaps, supporting local shelters, unhoused asylum seekers and the tent camp as best they can with food, legal aid and some basic health care.

At first, Garcia thought she might stay a week or two, but as she learned about more needs from the waiting asylum seekers, she postponed her return again and again until she finally came back the day before her permit would expire.

“I told myself I was going to take it easy now that Biden is in office — gosh, I was so wrong,” Garcia said. “Things were supposed to have been easier.”

In her first days, she quickly installed portable toilets at the tent camp. And, she began to visit the wide range of shelters that Border Angels supports through donations — a total of 18 after she added to the list during her stay.

She showed up unannounce­d to each shelter, hoping to see it in its normal state rather than cleaned up for an official visit from its benefactor.

Most left her feeling disappoint­ed. Many had pushed their capacity past what was comfortabl­e in order to get as many migrants as possible off of the streets. Tents or bunk beds were crowded into the available space.

Some of the shelters charged migrants to stay there. Others required them to leave during the day and come back each night.

Only some had COVID protocols.

“There’s nothing as good as coming over and seeing things for yourself,” Garcia said. “There’s still a lot of work to do to make these spaces feel welcoming so that we can refer people.”

But when she reached Casa Puerta de Esperanza, a Salvation Army shelter specifical­ly for women and children, Garcia began to cry as she took in the vibrant colors and clean, inviting rooms.

“It’s so nice. The others aren’t like this,” Garcia said to the woman in charge. “Thanks for having a space where women can be with their children with dignity. No other space is like this.”

Between shelter visits, she returned to El Chaparral. When some people staying there began to receive threats, she helped them find shelters to go to.

On Children’s Day, she partnered with American Friends Service Committee to bring an obstacle course bouncy house to the plaza. The children were ecstatic.

Once she found out about a new program that could allow especially vulnerable asylum seekers into the United States as exemptions to Title 42 that came out of negotiatio­ns in a lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union over the policy, she began holding legal consults there as well.

Each time she arrived, asylum seekers were already waiting for her in the street where she set up her tables. Psicólogos Sin Fronteras members and American Friends Service Committee staff pitched in with crowd control and intake, passing a megaphone among them to instruct pregnant women to come first.

When a few asylum seekers who weren’t living at the tent camp tried to join in, the crowd protested, and Garcia told them through the megaphone that only those living at El Chaparral would be seen.

“It’s not pretty,” Garcia said of the consults. “I end up being the bad guy because I have to say no to over 90 percent of them. I can’t help everyone.”

The program takes 35 families a day along the entire southwest border, according to Lee Gelernt, lead attorney in the case for the ACLU. A parallel program set up through several global nonprofits is ramping up to help the U.S. government identify and process an addition 250 people per day.

Garcia filled out the exemption paperwork for well over 100 families, some with a dozen family members.

She also submitted an exemption request for Rocio Rebollar Gomez, who was deported at the beginning of 2020 despite being the mother of a U.S. Army officer. Rebollar Gomez had been targeted and attacked since her deportatio­n, so Garcia was able to apply for her based on a new asylum claim.

Garcia also applied for her brother, Edgar Garcia, who was deported the week after Rebollar Gomez while his own DACA protection had lapsed.

He’d hidden what had happened to him after his deportatio­n from his family until his sister showed up in Tijuana. Once together, he confided in her that he’d been kidnapped for months, and that he’d recently been beaten and robbed by police.

“If I had known about that while I was in San Diego, it would have destroyed me,” Dulce Garcia said.

She quickly moved him to her hotel room and kept him by her side as she navigated the final weeks in Tijuana. He helped by putting water

 ?? ALEJANDRO TAMAYO U-T ?? Attorney Dulce Garcia at the border fence at Playas de Tijuana in Tijuana on May 17.
ALEJANDRO TAMAYO U-T Attorney Dulce Garcia at the border fence at Playas de Tijuana in Tijuana on May 17.
 ?? ALEJANDRO TAMAYO U-T PHOTOS ?? Dulce Garcia, an attorney and executive director of the nonprofit Border Angels, speaks to a group seeking asylum at Colonia Empleados Federales on May 13 in Tijuana.
ALEJANDRO TAMAYO U-T PHOTOS Dulce Garcia, an attorney and executive director of the nonprofit Border Angels, speaks to a group seeking asylum at Colonia Empleados Federales on May 13 in Tijuana.
 ??  ?? Garcia hugs Rocio Rebollar Gomez at Colonia Empleados Federales on May 13. Rebollar Gomez would be allowed to enter the U.S. later in the month.
Garcia hugs Rocio Rebollar Gomez at Colonia Empleados Federales on May 13. Rebollar Gomez would be allowed to enter the U.S. later in the month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States