The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

COVID asylum limits at U.S.-Mexico border to end May 23

- By Colleen Long and Zeke Miller

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced Friday that it is ending a policy that limited asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

The use of public-health powers had been widely criticized by Democrats and immigratio­n advocates as an excuse for the United States to shirk its obligation­s to provide haven to people fleeing persecutio­n. The policy went into effect under President Donald Trump in March 2020.

Since then, migrants trying to enter the U.S. have been expelled more than 1.7 million times.

The policy, known as the Title 42 authority, named for a 1944 public-health law to prevent communicab­le disease, will end on paper, but it will not take effect until May 23, to allow border officials time to prepare. The Associated Press first reported the change earlier this week.

The policy was increasing­ly hard to justify scientific­ally as restrictio­ns ended across the U.S.

The federal order says efforts by the Department of Homeland Security to provide vaccines to migrants at the border will step up in the next two months.

“After considerin­g current public health conditions and an increased availabili­ty of tools to fight COVID-19 (such as highly effective vaccines and therapeuti­cs), the CDC director has determined that an order suspending the right to introduce migrants into the United States is no longer necessary,” the CDC said in a statement.

The decision is expected to draw more migrants to the U.S.-Mexico border. Even before it was officially announced, more than a dozen migrants excitedly ran out of their dormitory at the Good Samaritan shelter in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, asking about it.

Pace quickens

The DHS said this week that about 7,100 migrants were coming daily, compared with an average of about 5,900 a day in February,

on pace to match or exceed highs from last year, 2019 and other peak periods. But border officials said they are planning for as many as 18,000 arrivals daily.

Homeland Security said it started a Southwest Border Coordinati­ng Center to respond to any sharp increases, with MaryAnn Tierney, a regional director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, as interim leader,

and a Border Patrol official as deputy.

Officials also are working on additional ground and air-transporta­tion options and tents to house the expected influx, and the Border Patrol has already hired on civilians.

Instead of conducting patrols and uncovering smuggling activity, its agents spend about 40% of their time caring for people already in custody and administra­tive tasks that are unrelated to border security.

The agency hoped to free up agents to go back into the field by hiring civilians for jobs including making sure that microwaved burritos are served properly, checking holding cells, and the time-consuming work of collecting informatio­n for immigratio­n court papers.

‘Broken system’

Administra­tion officials acknowledg­ed the fixes are only temporary measures.

“The Biden-Harris administra­tion is committed to pursuing every avenue within our authority to secure our borders, enforce our laws, and stay true to our values,” said Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas. “Yet a long-term solution can only come from comprehens­ive legislatio­n that brings lasting reform to a fundamenta­lly broken system.”

The limits went into place in March 2020 under the Trump administra­tion as coronaviru­s cases soared. While officials said at the time that it was a way to keep COVID-19 out of the United States, there always has been criticism that the restrictio­ns were used as an excuse to seal the border to migrants unwanted by then-President Donald Trump.

It was perhaps the broadest of Trump’s actions to restrict crossings and crack down on migrants.

CDC officials lifted part of the order last month, ending the limits for children traveling to the border alone. In August, U.S. border authoritie­s began testing children traveling alone in their busiest areas: Positives fell to 6% in the first week of March from a high of nearly 20% in early February.

Asylum limits have been applied unevenly by nationalit­y, depending largely on costs and diplomatic relations with home countries. Many migrants have been spared from Cuba, Venezuela, Nicaragua and, more recently, Ukraine. Homeland Security officials wrote border authoritie­s this month that Ukrainians may be exempt, saying Russia’s invasion “created a humanitari­an crisis.”

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Joe Biden at the White House on Friday, the day the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said it was ending a policy that limited asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s. Numbers of migrants coming to the border are increasing.
PATRICK SEMANSKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Joe Biden at the White House on Friday, the day the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said it was ending a policy that limited asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s. Numbers of migrants coming to the border are increasing.

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