Santa Fe New Mexican

Kids spend weeks at U.S. shelters; more arriving

- By Amy Taxin and Julie Watson

Five months after the Biden administra­tion declared an emergency and raced to set up shelters to house a record number of children crossing the U.S.-Mexico border alone, kids continue to languish at the sites, while more keep coming, child welfare advocates say.

More than 700 children spent three weeks or longer at the government’s unlicensed sites in mid-July, according to declaratio­ns filed with a federal court overseeing custody conditions for immigrant youth. Advocates say children should be released quickly to their relatives in the U.S. or sent to a licensed facility.

In one of the filings, a 16-yearold Salvadoran boy said children were served raw meat. It took more than a month for the boy, who said he speaks with both his parents each week, to be released to his father in Georgia.

“When I wake up every day, I feel really frustrated. Of the youth that I arrived with, I am the last one here,” the boy said in his declaratio­n. “I would like to be home with my dad right now.”

When the Biden administra­tion erected the emergency sites in March to ease dangerous overcrowdi­ng at border stations, they were meant to be a temporary fix. But months later, some wonder whether that’s still the case.

Border crossings by children without an adult in July neared the same levels they did in March despite the summer heat.

“If you have a dinner party that you plan to have for three people, and 30,000 people show up, you’re going to have a problem,” U.S. District Judge Dolly M. Gee, who oversees the decades-old settlement agreement that governs custody conditions for the children, said at a recent hearing.

“The infrastruc­ture is not set up for tens of thousands of people coming in at one time, and somehow the paradigm has to shift to figure out how to deal with these types of numbers.”

U.S. border authoritie­s reported more than 18,000 encounters with unaccompan­ied immigrant children in July, up 24 percent from a month earlier. The rise comes in the busiest month yet for the Biden administra­tion on the border, with a total of nearly 200,000 encounters, even though crossings are typically expected to slow during the summer.

According to a government report in early August, the Department of Health and Human Services had nearly 15,000 children in its care but only 11,000 licensed shelter beds for the immigrant children. Using large-scale facilities can fill this gap, though advocates said the government would do better by expanding licensed shelters where children are given case workers, recreation and six hours of education on each weekday.

The Department of Health and Human Services is tasked with caring for the children until they can be sent to live with relatives or other sponsors in the United States while they wait for an immigratio­n judge to decide whether they can stay in the country. While the agency has a broad network of state-licensed shelters that could be expanded, ample space in foster care programs and large, so-called influx care facilities that adhere to specific standards for staffing and conditions, it continues to turn to these emergency sites.

Advocates say the emergency intake sites adhere to none of the agency’s existing standards and are an inadequate and expensive option, especially for young, vulnerable children already coping with the trauma of leaving home and making the dangerous trip north.

 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Children wait last month outside a room with phones where they can contact family members at an emergency shelter for migrant children in Pomona, Calif. Five months after the Biden administra­tion declared an emergency and raced to set up shelters to house a record number of children crossing the U.S.-Mexico border alone, kids continue to languish at the sites.
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Children wait last month outside a room with phones where they can contact family members at an emergency shelter for migrant children in Pomona, Calif. Five months after the Biden administra­tion declared an emergency and raced to set up shelters to house a record number of children crossing the U.S.-Mexico border alone, kids continue to languish at the sites.

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