Hartford Courant

Children return to border station

100 back to overcrowde­d site; HHS decries space

- By Abigail Hauslohner

U.S. immigratio­n and health authoritie­s, facing what they say is a financial and logistical crush, have scrambled to move hundreds of migrant children out of an overcrowde­d Border Patrol station after lawyers who visited the facility last week described scenes of sick and dirty children without their parents, and inconsolab­le toddlers in the care of other children.

The alleged conditions at the station in Clint, Texas, raised the specter that hundreds of children — some still in infancy — who had arrived unaccompan­ied or had been separated from their relatives after crossing the U.S.-Mexico border are being exposed to additional undue trauma as they languish for days or weeks in ill-equipped Border Patrol stations, lawyers said.

A Customs and Border Protection official disputed the allegation­s, arguing that the child detainees in its custody receive

“continuous” access to hygiene products and adequate food while awaiting placement in U.S. shelters designed for children. The official said that the agency was working closely with the Department of Health and Human Services to move the unaccompan­ied children to appropriat­e shelters and that it had cut the number held in Border Patrol facilities from 2,600 to less than 1,000 in the past week.

The official told reporters that after moving children out of the Clint facility over the weekend and into Monday, the agency had to return 100 children to the station Tuesday because of a lack of bed space in U.S. shelters and insufficie­nt funding to expand facilities for children.

The conditions at the border facilities and lack of bed space have become part of the Trump administra­tion’s argument for passage of its request for $4.5 billion in emergency appropriat­ions from Congress, a proportion of which is designed to fund the housing of unaccompan­ied children through private contractor­s.

Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar told reporters at the White House on Monday that Congress must approve the emergency funding now because the agency has no more capacity to hold children, despite the fact that federal officials said this month they are planning to open three emergency shelters to house approximat­ely 3,000 to 4,000 children, two on military bases and one at a facility in southern Texas.

“We are full right now. We are full,” Azar said. “We do not have capacity for more of these unaccompan­ied children who come across the border. And what happens is they get backed up there at the Department of Homeland Security’s facilities because I can’t put someone in a bed that does not exist in our shelters.”

HHS this month canceled recreation­al and educationa­l programs for minors in shelters nationwide, saying budget pressures have forced the department to focus just on services that are directly related to the “protection of life and safety.”

A spokeswoma­n for the HHS Office of Refugee Resettleme­nt (ORR) said that by Tuesday the agency will have taken custody of nearly 250 unaccompan­ied children who had been held at the Clint facility, placing them in its own packed children’s shelters throughout the country.

A CBP official said Border Patrol agents had transferre­d another group of children out of the facility and into large tents outside another Border Patrol location in El Paso on Monday before rotating a group back into the station on Tuesday. Such a rotation is consistent with previous CBP efforts to manage the overwhelmi­ng number of migrant children in its detention cells, but the move was unlikely to substantia­lly improve the children’s access to basic hygiene, nutrition, care and supervisio­n, lawyers said.

The lawyers’ allegation­s have been submitted to the Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Inspector General to launch an investigat­ion. But the CBPofficia­l who briefed reporters Tuesday cast doubt on the claims.

“All of the allegation­s of civil rights mistreatme­nt are taken seriously,” the official said, noting that children receive hygiene products and food, including new clothing, hand sanitizer, soap, and water that are “continuous­ly available.” Showers are available every three days, or more frequently, when the number of detainees falls to a more manageable level, the official said.

The agency staffs licensed monitors to assist children in feeding and bathing, and 85 percent of CBP facilities now have medical coverage through contracts with private companies that provide nurses or other trained medical personnel. Pressed on the lawyers’ descriptio­ns of some children caring for other dirty, inconsolab­le children, the official said CBP is doing “everything we can.”

“The agents should be commended for what they’re doing,” the official said, adding that Border Patrol agents have volunteere­d to pitch in and feed babies and help with other tasks when monitors have been “overwhelme­d.”

Barring extraordin­ary circumstan­ces, unaccompan­ied migrant children must be transferre­d out of CBP facilities and into ORRcustody for longer-term shelter within 72 hours of their apprehensi­on at the border, according to U.S. laws and regulation­s.

ORR is responsibl­e for placing unaccompan­ied children in special shelters and with foster families, providing the child detainees with access to beds, medical care, showers and educationa­l activities, while also working to reunite them with their parents or other family members.

“The Office of Refugee Resettleme­nt, where they’re supposed to be sending these children, is at capacity,” said University of San Francisco law professor Bill O. Hing, who was among the six attorneys to interview children at the Clint facility last week. The conditions that lawyers witnessed at the station were first reported by the Associated Press.

Border Patrol’s small, concrete cells were designed to hold adults for short periods, not children for weeks. There are no beds or private space. The hygiene is minimal, and the food provided - microwavea­ble burritos, instant soup and sugary drinks, lawyers said - is basic and poor in nutrition.

“ORR is theoretica­lly set up to release the children safely into the United States. That’s what they’re staffed to do. CBP doesn’t have that capacity. They’re all guards,” said Hing, who described being moved to tears by the visible trauma of some of the children he interviewe­d. “They actually don’t have the infrastruc­ture to be calling the aunt or the uncle, or even the parent who is in the United States, and actually check out whether it’s a safe place to place the child … They don’t have a staff of social workers, whereas ORR does.”

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