The Sentinel-Record

US says it will reduce detention of immigrant families seeking asylum

- NOMAAN MERCHANT

HOUSTON — U.S. immigratio­n authoritie­s will no longer use a small Pennsylvan­ia detention center to hold parents and children seeking asylum, part of a broader shift by President Joe Biden’s administra­tion to reduce the use of family detention.

In a court filing Friday, the U.S. government said it had released all families detained at the 96-bed Berks County family detention center in Leesport, Pennsylvan­ia. The detention center will instead be used by U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t to hold adults, the government said.

Families will still be detained at larger detention centers in Karnes City and Dilley in Texas, but the government intends to hold people at those sites for three days or less, the court filing said.

Lawyers who work with detained immigrant families welcomed the news and credited the Biden administra­tion for announcing the shift.

But they noted that even shorter detention stays could be harmful to children.

“Family detention will never truly be over until the facilities are closed and the contracts with ICE end,” said Bridget Cambria, executive director of the legal group Aldea — The People’s Justice Center.

All three family detention centers opened when Biden was vice president to President Barack Obama.

While running for president, Biden pledged to release detained families.

The Biden administra­tion has already released several families seeking asylum who had been detained for a year or longer in Texas and in some cases came within hours of deportatio­n. Those families will pursue their cases while remaining subject to ICE monitoring.

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