USA TODAY US Edition

Texas border town: ‘We get the brunt of it’

Life in Rio Grande Valley intertwine­s with migrant surge

- Rebecca Morin

McALLEN, Texas – Holding a small cellphone, Blanca Hernandez’s daughter tapped her mother on the shoulder and held it up to take a selfie, a way to pass the time as they waited for their bus in this border town.

Vareli, 6, checked the photo, and her eyes lit up, though her black face mask, the word “grateful” printed on it, hid her smile. Her mother nodded approvingl­y before continuing her conversati­on with a woman sitting next to her on the bench at the bus station downtown.

Hernandez, 27, and her daughter were among five families awaiting their next stop after a more-than-1,000-mile journey into the USA in mid-April, like

thousands of other families escaping poverty and violence in their home countries.

Many of them end up in McAllen, a city of nearly 142,000 in the Rio Grande Valley, the expansive southern tip of Texas that happens to be the shortest route for Central American migrants making their way to the USA.

“The Valley,” as locals call it, plays an outsize role in caring for migrants once they are out of Customs and Border Protection custody. Local organizati­ons and government­s have stepped up to provide food, clothing, coronaviru­s tests and an opportunit­y to reach their families for the next leg of their journey.

Though the White House acknowledg­es border communitie­s are important to handling an influx of arrivals at the border, community leaders and officials want more communicat­ion from Washington as localities shoulder the day-to-day processing of migrants.

“Because of our bus station, we get the brunt of it all,” McAllen Mayor Jim Darling told USA TODAY, noting that one night, there were at least 500 migrants waiting for buses to take them to their sponsors or families.

Though the Biden administra­tion turns away the majority of migrants, unaccompan­ied children and some families are allowed in what the White House says is a more humane approach than the policy of the Trump administra­tion. But it has led to overcrowdi­ng in Border Patrol facilities and long processing for families.

The final destinatio­n for Hernandez and her daughter was Charlotte, North Carolina, where Hernandez’s brother lives. In her home country of Honduras, she said, she worked 12-hour days but barely had enough money to buy food for her and her daughter. She said that because of their poverty, she was unable to take her mother to a hospital, and she died from cancer. She said her father is also sick, and they cannot pay his medical bills.

After learning some people were being allowed into the USA, she took the chance to come with her daughter.

“We have been fleeing from poverty in our country. There are no sources of work, there is no income anywhere,” Hernandez told USA TODAY. “When I saw that I could not cover their medical expenses, that urged me to leave the country.”

When migrants make it to the USA, they join hundreds of others in the Rio Grande Valley.

‘The Valley’

The Rio Grande Valley sits along the U.S.-Mexican border, encompassi­ng much of South Texas and extending to the Gulf of Mexico. The line between Mexico and the USA is blurred in the Valley. Many residents are of Mexican descent and speak Spanish, though there’s a strong sense of American pride. Writer Gloria Anzaldúa said living in the Valley means you’re “ni de aquí, ni de allá” – neither from here, nor from there.

Spend a few minutes in McAllen, and its evident how everyday life and the migrants are intertwine­d.

Not more than 10 miles from downtown is the border. Over the past several months, thousands of migrant children, families and adults have come in hopes of getting into the USA in an unpreceden­ted surge.

This year, families with young children waited days under the Anzalduas Bridge on the outskirts of Mission, Texas, a town near McAllen, to be processed. After families were processed, they were put in a CBP van and driven to downtown McAllen.

Amid dozens of stores, restaurant­s and bars, migrant families were escorted between a coronaviru­s testing site, a nonprofit group that provides services and a bus station.

In Donna, less than 15 miles from McAllen, CBP and Health and Human Services set up white tents to house unaccompan­ied migrant children less than two blocks from an elementary school.

President Joe Biden has taken heavy criticism from both sides of the aisle for his administra­tion’s handling of the increase of migrants. During the first months of his presidency, officials experience­d overcrowdi­ng in jail-like CBP facilities, such as the one in Donna, where some children were held for more than the legal limit of 72 hours.

Overcrowdi­ng in the Border Patrol facilities has decreased over the past weeks as HHS set up at least a dozen emergency influx facilities.

The Biden administra­tion said children are no longer kept in CBP custody for more than an average of 24 hours. The majority have been transferre­d to HHS custody.

The administra­tion has had to grapple with Mexico not accepting some families who have young children in certain areas along the U.S.-Mexican border, including in the Rio Grande Valley.

“The problem is that this is completely disordered what I see on the border,” Rep. Vicente Gonzalez, D-Texas, said. “We can have policies in place that are compassion­ate, humane and orderly,” but other solutions need to be put in place to address migration.

Catholic Charities

Officials care for migrant families, including children a couple of months to 6 years old.

The majority of encounters that Border Patrol officials had in April were with families. According to CBP statistics, 30,437 family units were encountere­d in the Rio Grande Valley sector, which includes Brownsvill­e, Donna and McAllen. The Border Patrol apprehende­d 21,216 adults and 9,186 unaccompan­ied children. The total number of migrants apprehende­d in April reached a record high: 178,662.

In McAllen, many migrants find themselves at Catholic Charities, a faith-based, nonprofit group funded by donations and run by volunteers.

In April, roughly 800 people were sent to Catholic Charities daily, Sister Norma Pimentel, executive director of Catholic Charities of the Rio Grande Valley, told USA TODAY. As of May, the organizati­on had seen a decrease to 200 to 300 people daily.

Catholic Charities has helped care for migrant adults and families coming to the USA through the southern border since 2014.

Once CBP processes migrants, they are transferre­d to Catholic Charities, where they get tested for the coronaviru­s. Although most individual­s stay at the organizati­on for only a couple of hours, they are given clean clothes, food and a chance to call family before heading to their next destinatio­n, usually with family living in the USA.

Pimentel said that when some migrants were released from CBP custody, she was told they were not tested for the coronaviru­s. She worked with the city to secure test strips for migrants coming to Catholic Charities to protect the families going on to travel by bus or train, as well as the volunteers.

“Because we do that, we have a peace of mind, and volunteers can come on here and can work without the fear that maybe families have COVID,” Pimentel said.

Catholic Charities initially ran the testing site, where volunteers were trained to administer the test. The Department of Homeland Security has since stepped in to run the facility.

‘Tremendous role’

The Catholic Charities Respite Center sits on a corner diagonally across from the McAllen bus station, blocks from City Hall.

The sweltering sun beamed down on a 101-degree day as a handful of protesters chanted outside the building. Holding signs in support of former President Donald Trump, they condemned the conditions at the detention facilities for migrants and criticized Catholic Charities for taking them in during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Border Patrol vans periodical­ly dropped off families in front of Catholic Charities, while a volunteer led children and adults to white tents across a highway, Business 83, to get tested for the coronaviru­s.

When migrants test positive, they and any family traveling with them are set up in a hotel room to quarantine for two weeks, before being tested again. The cost comes out of the city’s pocket.

This year, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott stalled efforts from DHS to get funding to cities to pay for coronaviru­s testing.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said in April that local government­s and nongovernm­ental organizati­ons play “an incredibly important role” helping with testing and paying for hotels to house migrant families.

“They play a really tremendous role in helping ensure we are working in a humane way with those who are coming to our border in a range of ways,” Psaki said during a news briefing.

Local officials said they want to see more communicat­ion and input on their plans from the Biden administra­tion.

“I don’t know how they weren’t ready for this,” Darling said. “The president said, ‘We knew what was going to happen. It happens every winter.’ Well, I thought, if you know what’s going to happen, then why weren’t you more prepared for it?”

Brownsvill­e Mayor Trey Mendez said his city was prepared by past experience for an increase of migrants. Like McAllen, the city has worked with nonprofit groups to give families and their children fresh clothes and food before they head out.

When Brownsvill­e began receiving families, Mendez said, the Biden administra­tion was quick to step in to help provide coronaviru­s testing.

Mendez said he had an open line to officials in the Biden administra­tion. Mendez said the city paid for about a week of costs before the federal government stepped in. The city has yet to be reimbursed, but Mendez maintained the costs were not “significan­t.”

“As the numbers started increasing ... we were ready, and we were in really good communicat­ion with the federal government, with the administra­tion and its officials, to make sure that we never got overwhelme­d,” Mendez said.

Gonzalez, who represents the Rio Grande Valley, said he wants to see the administra­tion “deal with that stream of migrants that are moving through Mexico and Central America,” which would alleviate pressure on cities helping care for migrants.

“We should be having regular meetings about how to resolve this, and I have ideas,” he said. “What I think has happened at the White House, is that a small group of folks want to steer the ship, and I just hope that at some point, they bring in a lot of members that have a lot of expertise and ideas and could be very helpful to them.”

Pimentel said the Biden administra­tion’s response has been “sort of slow,” and she wants to see long-term solutions to help migrants come safely and efficientl­y to the USA.

“It’s extremely controlled and slow, like drip, drip, drip,” Pimentel said. “A lot of families are hurting and suffering, and I think a solution needs to move forward faster and pathways to legalize and to understand who has the right to be in the United States. I’m hopeful and wish that this administra­tion would move forward in doing something quicker.”

Hernandez and her daughter looked forward to getting out of South Texas.

Though she wouldn’t show her daughter, Hernandez said she was nervous, but excited, to start their new life in North Carolina.

“We have suffered enough,” she said. “In this country, people think we want to invade, but we don’t. We want to work, because we don’t have good opportunit­ies in my country.”

 ??  ?? Migrant teenagers, unaccompan­ied when they were detained in the USA, stay at a Health and Human Services shelter in Carrizo Springs, Texas.
Migrant teenagers, unaccompan­ied when they were detained in the USA, stay at a Health and Human Services shelter in Carrizo Springs, Texas.
 ?? PHOTOS BY ANNIE RICE/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? The Border Patrol takes migrants for coronaviru­s tests in McAllen, Texas.
PHOTOS BY ANNIE RICE/USA TODAY NETWORK The Border Patrol takes migrants for coronaviru­s tests in McAllen, Texas.
 ?? PHOTOS BY ANNIE RICE/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Migrants line up to walk to a bus station April 9 in McAllen, Texas. The tents are for coronaviru­s rapid testing before people travel to their asylum contacts.
PHOTOS BY ANNIE RICE/USA TODAY NETWORK Migrants line up to walk to a bus station April 9 in McAllen, Texas. The tents are for coronaviru­s rapid testing before people travel to their asylum contacts.
 ??  ?? Migrants are tested for the coronaviru­s in McAllen, Texas, before they can go to their asylum sponsors. Those who test positive will have to quarantine in a hotel.
Migrants are tested for the coronaviru­s in McAllen, Texas, before they can go to their asylum sponsors. Those who test positive will have to quarantine in a hotel.

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