Santa Fe New Mexican

ICE to reopen facility for migrant families in Texas

- By Maria Sacchetti

U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t will soon resume detaining migrant families at a Texas facility outside of San Antonio, clearing the way for the agency to detain hundreds of additional parents and children.

The Trump administra­tion had stopped holding families at the Karnes County Residentia­l Center in the spring, saying it was unable to transport migrants there because of a record influx of families at the border.

But, after a decline in apprehensi­ons in the summer, officials said in a statement Saturday that they will revert Karnes “back to a family residentia­l center in the near future.”

Officials had said earlier that they expected the facility to return to exclusivel­y detaining families after a few months.

Karnes has most recently been used to hold about

700 adult women, and intake has been temporaril­y suspended, ICE spokesman Richard Rocha said in the statement.

Current detainees at Karnes can expect to be transferre­d to other facilities, he said.

Karnes can house up to 830 parents and children, according to Geo Group, the private contractor that runs the facility.

ICE is housing families at two other facilities in Berks County, Pa., and Dilley, Texas. Karnes is the second-largest family center.

Adding Karnes restores ICE’s total capacity to detain families to more than 3,000 people, though most recently its family detention centers were well below capacity.

The Refugee and Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Services, a nonprofit organizati­on based in Texas, said female detainees were told they would be transferre­d to other facilities in a few days.

The nonprofit called for ICE to shut down these and other facilities and said women have complained of poor medical care at Karnes.

“ICE is about to transfer women from Karnes Detention Center to Louisiana & other detention centers across the country to make room for family detention,” the nonprofit tweeted Friday.

Migrant families have flooded the U.S.-Mexico border over the past year seeking refuge from violence and poverty, mainly in Central America. The White House claims they are traveling in families because limited detention means they are likely to be released in the United States, and most are rarely deported.

In recent months, the Trump administra­tion has intensifie­d enforcemen­t and pressured Mexico to detain more families traveling north and host thousands awaiting their asylum hearings.

The Trump administra­tion is also attempting to expand the wall on the U.S.-Mexico border, restrict asylum, and broker deals with Central American nations to absorb mass migration.

Last month, officials took steps to terminate a federal court settlement restrictin­g how long U.S. officials can detain migrant children with their parents. Officials want to replace the settlement with a rule that could expand family detention and dramatical­ly increase the time children spend in custody.

If the administra­tion’s bid is successful, officials would have the legal authority to hold families longer. Homeland Security Secretary Kevin McAleenan has said his goal is to detain families for less than two months to complete their immigratio­n cases, and release or deport them together.

Family apprehensi­ons at the border declined over the summer, from 70 percent in July to 55 percent in August. Arrests typically drop during the scorching summer months.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Detained immigrant children line up in 2014 in the cafeteria at the Karnes County Residentia­l Center, a temporary home for immigrant families detained at the border. The Trump administra­tion is moving to reopen it.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Detained immigrant children line up in 2014 in the cafeteria at the Karnes County Residentia­l Center, a temporary home for immigrant families detained at the border. The Trump administra­tion is moving to reopen it.

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