Las Vegas Review-Journal

Suit says Houston blocking facility for migrant kids

- By Juan A. Lozano The Associated Press

HOUSTON — A nonprofit sued the city of Houston on Friday, alleging officials are obstructin­g its efforts to open a facility in the city to house unaccompan­ied immigrant children as part of an “improper political exercise” that’s “motivated by hostility” toward federal immigratio­n law.

Austin-based Southwest Key Programs claimed the city improperly invalidate­d previously issued permits that would have allowed it to open the facility, which was set to house more than 200 unaccompan­ied minors.

The nonprofit also alleged the city is incorrectl­y designatin­g the shelter as detention and not a residentia­l facility, which means significan­t structural changes to the building and “enormous amounts of additional paperwork” for approval “which, as the city has clearly demonstrat­ed, will never be forthcomin­g.”

Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner and other local community leaders have been vocal about their opposition to the facility, which would be located in a building that had previously been used as a homeless shelter and a temporary shelter for Hurricane Harvey evacuees.

In a statement Friday, Turner said the city will continue to enforce all building codes and regulation­s related to the safety and well-being of children.

“Southwest Key has repeatedly been asked to provide plans that meet existing building codes for the intended use of the facility,” Turner said. “They have failed to do so.”

Southwest Key operates 26 shelters in the United States, providing housing to about 23,000 immigrant children, most of them from Central America.

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