The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

The new crisis at the border

- — Los Angeles Times

Facing a massive rise in the number of undocument­ed and unaccompan­ied minors crossing the border, overwhelme­d Obama administra­tion offificial­s are seeking up to $2 billion from Congress to deal with the “urgent humanitari­an situation.” In addition, the administra­tion is creating a new branch of AmeriCorps to provide 100 lawyers or paralegals to help the unaccompan­ied youngsters navigate the deportatio­n process. Both are good and welcome steps.

These steps follow the creation of an interagenc­y Unifified Coordinati­on Group to help ensure that the children are decently fed and cared for while their deportatio­n cases unfold. And the administra­tion is opening temporary shelters at military bases, including the Naval Base Ventura County at Port Hueneme, Calif., to house the children.

Why such urgency? Because more than 47,000 children traveling alone have been detained while crossing the border since October, nearly double the number detained in the same period last year. On Thursday, border offificial­s announced they were investigat­ing assertions that children were being mistreated by border agents; some apparently reported that they had been deprived of food and medical care, while others complained of physical abuse.

It’s a vexing problem. Despite the simplistic assertion by the right that the surge in minors is the result of an eased approach to immigratio­n enforcemen­t by the administra­tion, activists interviewi­ng the children say most are sent north by their families in Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador seeking to protect sons and daughters from rising gang and drug violence and sexual assault. This is clearly a regional problem requiring a regional solution, and the administra­tion has taken the welcome step of expanding discussion­s with the involved nations to stem the flflow.

Meanwhile, the kids are here, and more are on their way. The “justice AmeriCorps” program will add to the existing and overwhelme­d pro bono network of lawyers trying to ensure fair hearings for unaccompan­ied minors who face human traffifick­ing, physical abuse and other terrors should they be returned to their home countries. This is not to argue that they all have a right to stay in the U.S., but it is only fair that they be represente­d by an adult during their deportatio­n hearings. An added bonus: Having a lawyer speeds up the process.

It is unlikely the House will take up immigratio­n reform before the August recess. Obama’s critics complain that by seeking regulatory rather than legislativ­e solutions to the immigratio­n problem, the president is ruling by fifiat. But House Republican­s created the problem with their intransige­nce. They should abandon their obstructio­nism and tackle this issue. If they don’t, voters should hold them accountabl­e.

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