U.S. preps for increase in migrant crossings as border restrictions set
to end
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[April 26, 2023]
By Ted Hesson and Matt Spetalnick
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Biden administration is devising a strategy
for the possible arrival of tens of thousands more migrants at the
U.S.-Mexico border after the anticipated end of COVID-19 restrictions
next month, scrambling to find potential holding centers, speed up
deportations and increase processing of refugees abroad.
The administration is expected to announce a package of new measures as
soon as this week that would include stepping up the currently small
number of Latin Americans admitted through the U.S. refugee settlement
program, three people familiar with the matter told Reuters.
At the same time, U.S. officials are expanding holding capacity for
migrants at the border while piloting faster asylum screenings. One
yet-unreported option under discussion is to process migrants at Fort
Bliss, a military base near El Paso, Texas, two U.S. officials and a
third person familiar with the matter told Reuters.
White House spokesperson Abdullah Hasan denied the base was being
considered and the Pentagon said it had not received a request to use it
for migrant processing.
Other steps are likely to include agreements or understandings with
regional governments aimed at curbing migration heading north and
increasing aid to migrants who have already arrived in those countries,
according to the person familiar with the matter. Details were not
immediately known.
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and U.S. State Department
did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The Biden plans aim to address a likely increase in unauthorized
immigration after COVID border restrictions that have been in place
since 2020 are set to end on May 11, barring any last-minute legal or
congressional intervention.
The broader COVID public health emergency is scheduled to terminate on
that date, undercutting the rationale for the restrictions, known as
Title 42.
LOW REFUGEE ADMISSONS
Biden, a Democrat who announced his 2024 re-election campaign this week,
has struggled with record numbers of migrants caught crossing the
U.S.-Mexico border and gradually toughened his approach to enforcement.
Republicans have blamed Biden for abandoning hardline policies
championed by Republican former President Donald Trump, currently the
leading candidate for the party's presidential nomination.
The expansion of refugee processing in Latin America would come as the
Biden administration has yet to restore refugee admissions after they
were slashed under Trump.
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A migrant sleeps, after crossing the Rio
Bravo river border between Mexico and the United States, while
waiting to turn himself in to U.S. Border Patrol agents, seen from
Ciudad Juarez, Mexico April 25, 2023. REUTERS/Jose Luis
Gonzalez/File Photo
Biden carved out 15,000 refugee slots for people in Latin America
and the Caribbean in fiscal year 2022, which ended on Sept. 30,
2022, but only admitted about 2,500.
The administration accelerated the pace through the first six months
of the current fiscal year, letting in 2,300 from the region but
remains far away from the 15,000-person ceiling.
The Biden administration's latest border plan focuses on a
soon-to-be-finalized regulation that would block most migrants
crossing the border illegally from claiming asylum if they passed
through another country without seeking refuge or failed to use
lawful pathways to the United States. For the rule to function as an
effective deterrent, U.S. authorities would detain people who cross
the border and quickly process them for deportation.
Troy Miller, the acting commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border
Protection (CBP), told lawmakers last week that he is preparing for
the possibility that up to 10,000 migrants per day could attempt to
enter the United States illegally - nearly double the daily average
in March. Miller noted that an estimated 660,000 migrants are
currently in Mexico, citing United Nations figures.
CBP has capacity to detain 6,000 migrants at the U.S.-Mexico border
and plans to add space for 2,500 more, Miller said, adding that the
agency has stepped up its ability to quickly transport migrants away
from the border.
When crossings reached record highs in 2022, U.S. officials released
thousands of migrants into Texas and Arizona border cities,
triggering criticism from Republican governors who bused migrants to
Democratic cities further north.
Fort Bliss, the Texas military base, is currently providing shelter
to about 80 unaccompanied migrant children after housing thousands
during a steep rise in crossings in 2021, which led to reports of
overcrowding, unsanitary conditions, spoiled food and struggles with
depression.
(Reporting by Ted Hesson and Matt Spetalnick in Washington; Editing
by Mary Milliken)
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