Border shelters relieved the pressure during migrant surges. Under
Trump, they could become a target
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[January 06, 2025]
By VALERIE GONZALEZ
McALLEN, Texas (AP) — When Roselins Sequera's family of seven finally
reached the U.S. from Venezuela, they spent weeks at a migrant shelter
on the Texas border that gave them a place to sleep, meals and tips for
finding work.
“We had a plan to go to Iowa" to join friends, said Sequera, who arrived
at the Catholic Charities of the Rio Grande Valley in October. “But we
didn’t know how.”
Dozens of shelters run by aid groups on the U.S. border with Mexico have
welcomed large numbers of migrants, providing lifelines of support and
relief to overwhelmed cities. They work closely with the Border Patrol
to care for migrants released with notices to appear in immigration
court, many of whom don't know where they are or how to find the nearest
airport or bus station.
But Republican scrutiny of the shelters is intensifying, and
President-elect Donald Trump's allies consider them a magnet for illegal
immigration. Many are nonprofits that rely on federal funding, including
$650 million under one program last year alone.
The incoming Trump administration has pledged to carry out an ambitious
immigration agenda, including a campaign promise of mass deportations.
The new White House's potential playbook includes using the National
Guard to arrest migrants and installing buoy barriers on the waters
between the U.S. and Mexico.
As part of that agenda, Trump's incoming border czar, Tom Homan, has
vowed to review the role of nongovernmental organizations and whether
they helped open “the doors to this humanitarian crisis.” Entrepreneur
Vivek Ramaswamy, who along with Elon Musk was tapped by Trump to find
ways to cut federal spending, has signaled that the groups are in his
sights and called them “a waste of taxpayer dollars.”
“Americans deserve transparency on opaque foreign aid & nonprofit groups
abetting our own border crisis,” Ramaswamy said last month in a post on
X.
The Trump administration did not respond to repeated requests for
comment.
The developments have alarmed immigration advocates and some officials
in border communities, including Republicans, who say those communities
can collapse without shelter space or a budget to pay for humanitarian
costs.
Aid groups deny that they are aiding illegal immigration. They say they
are responding to emergencies foisted on border towns and performing
humanitarian work.
“The groundwork is being laid here in Texas for a larger assault on
nonprofits that are just trying to protect people’s civil rights,” said
Rochelle Garza, president of the Texas Civil Rights Project, an advocacy
group.
For the past year, Texas has launched investigations into six
organizations that provide shelter, food and travel advice to migrants.
Courts have so far largely rebuffed the state's efforts, including
rejecting a lawsuit to shut down El Paso's Annunciation House, but
several cases remain on appeal.
The Texas Civil Rights Project, which represents two organizations being
probed by the state, says it has trained more than 100 migrant aid
organizations in the weeks since Trump’s reelection on how to respond if
investigators come knocking.
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President-elect Donald Trump speaks at AmericaFest on Sunday,
Dec. 22, 2024, in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Rick Scuteri, File)
The Texas investigations began after Republican Gov. Greg Abbott
alleged in 2022, without evidence, that border nonprofits were
encouraging illegal crossings and transporting migrants.
Catholic Charities of the Rio Grande Valley, which operates a
shelter in McAllen with capacity for 1,200 people, was notified by
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton in March that authorities wanted
to interview the executive director, Sister Norma Pimentel, to
investigate whether there were “practices for facilitating alien
crossings over the Texas-Mexico border.”
Pimentel declined to comment to The Associated Press, citing the
ongoing case, but attorneys representing her organization responded
to the accusations in court calling them a "fishing expedition into
a pond where no one has ever seen a fish.”
In downtown McAllen, a large lobby serves as a welcome center where
families receive travel information while their children play with
volunteers. This year, nearly 50,000 migrants have passed through
the shelter. Personal belongings and sleeping mats are in a separate
section sandwiched between the lobby and the kitchen.
The Sequeras, who stayed two weeks, fell into a regimen of waking at
6 a.m., clearing sleeping mats off the floor and having breakfast by
7 a.m. They performed other chores such as cleaning or doing laundry
to keep the large shelter running.
Volunteer attorneys help migrants apply for work authorization.
Without that help, Sequera said, the process would have taken longer
to learn and cost them thousands of dollars before they would have
been able to continue their journey north.
McAllen Mayor Javier Villalobos is at odds with Paxton, a fellow
Republican, over the Catholic Charities investigation. His city
found room for about 140 migrants a day in 2024 — a dramatic drop
from 2021, when a surge in crossings across the southern U.S. border
that year put the shelter over maximum capacity and forced it to
close for several days.
"They have served the purpose because the feds have not acted in
what they have to do,” Villalobos said. “In McAllen, we would have
been lost without them.”
Former McAllen Mayor Jim Darling still recalls the night he received
a call from the city manager in 2014 explaining that the bus station
was closing, but 25 migrants were still waiting for a bus. He asked
Pimentel at Catholic Charities for help.
Hidalgo County authorities turned to Pimentel in 2021 when migrants
were being released without testing for COVID-19. Catholic Charities
conducted testing and quarantined those who tested positive.
The shelters have received help from U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar, a
Texas Democrat who since 2019 has steered federal funding to them
through the Federal Emergency Management Agency. He beat back
Republican opposition last year.
“Will they attack it again and try to eliminate it?" Cuellar said.
"Yes.”
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