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Trump Administration Plans to Detain More Immigrants in Texas

Trump Administration Plans to Detain More Immigrants in Texas
Trump Administration Plans to Detain More Immigrants in Texas

Several new facilities have already opened this summer, and the federal government has requested up to 15,500 beds at two Texas military bases.

President Donald Trumpโ€™s administration is working to dramatically ramp up its capacity to detain immigrants โ€” especially in Texas.

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Despite protests, several facilities have opened to hold more migrant adults and children this summer, and there areย proposals that would nearly double the total number of beds at authorized centers. For family detention and child-only shelters, the capacity would nearly triple.

The vast majority of the requested increase would hold children and families on two Texas military bases. The federal government has made initial requests for up to 15,500 beds at the Fort Bliss Army post in El Paso and Goodfellow Air Force Base in San Angelo, according to Army Lt. Col. Jamie Davis, a spokesperson with the U.S. Department of Defense.

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And the state has already seen new and revived facilities pop up along the Texas-Mexico border, like the temporaryย tent city in Tornilloย holding migrant children andย a new adult facility in the Rio Grande Valleyย on the site of a detention center that closed years ago amid accusations of horrid conditions.

The new and prospective facilities have faced controversy โ€” protestersย have ralliedย outside the facilities, includingย Texas lawmakers, and immigrant advocates have raised renewed criticisms over the civil detention facilities being primarily run by private prison corporations with deep pockets and powerful political connections.

โ€œThe pattern with the private prison industry and this administration is to give away contracts to companies no matter how bad they are,โ€ said Bob Libal, executive director of Grassroots Leadership, an immigrants rights and anti-prison group. โ€œYou also see โ€ฆ extreme problems when you rapidly expand the system like this: Thereโ€™s a lack of oversight, a lack of accountability.โ€

Increased detention has been a key part of Trumpโ€™s efforts to crack down on illegal immigration since he took office last year. Days after his inauguration, heย signed an executive orderย that included building more detention facilities to enable ending the โ€œcatch-and-releaseโ€ policy where migrants apprehended at the border are released while they await a court date.

โ€œWeโ€™re going to create more detention space for illegal immigrants along the southern border to make it easier and cheaper to detain them and return them to their country of origin,โ€ said Sean Spicer, then the White House press secretary.

But the issue of detention sparked a crisis at the border this year after U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessionsย announced in Aprilย a โ€œzero toleranceโ€ policy promising to criminally prosecute all those who cross the border illegally, regardless of potentialย asylum claims. The policy led to more than 2,500 migrant children being separated from their parents at the border and placed in federal custody, some of whom haveย yet to be reunited.

After harsh backlash from Democrats and his own party, Trump hastilyย reversed the practiceย of separating children from their parents but vowed to continue โ€œzero toleranceโ€ while detaining families together. Though the prosecution of migrant parentsย seems to be on holdย and there areย legal restrictionsย against prolonged family detention, the administration has trudged ahead to build more facilities to hold immigrants while they undergo the often-long asylum process.
Holding adults, families and children
Currently, only three facilities nationwide are authorized to detain immigrant families together: a small center in Pennsylvania and two larger sites in Texas south of San Antonio, run by private prison corporations GEO Group and CoreCivic. The Texas centers can hold about 3,500 migrants together, andย advocates have reportedย that they are now holding reunited families set for deportation and arenโ€™t near capacity.

Still, the federal government has looked to drastically increase that number by seeking bed space at the military bases. Davis, the defense department spokesperson, said federal government agencies have asked the defense department to find room for up to 12,000 beds to detain families.

Under the proposal, the first 4,000 beds would be at Fort Bliss, and if they need more, Goodfellow would be targeted to house another 4,000 migrants, he said. The military has also marked Goodfellow to be able to house up to 7,500 children alone.

The necessary checks have been met to house children at Goodfellow, Davis said Wednesday morning, but the government has yet to officially request the use of the base โ€” which is when a 45-day clock to develop a facility would start. Fort Bliss has not yet passed all its bureaucratic hurdles.

A proposed child migrant center in a converted warehouse in downtown Houston has been criticized by state and city officials.

Aside from space at military bases, the Texas Health and Human Services Commission, which regulates child immigrant shelters, has given at leastย 14 facilitiesย permission to increase their capacities as of mid-July, including a converted Walmart in Brownsville that now can house about 1,500 migrant children. Though some centers closed, the increase far outweighed the loss, andย two groups are seekingย to establish new shelters in the Rio Grande Valley and downtown Houston.

The increase hasnโ€™t only been for families and children โ€” ICE is also expanding its capacity for adults. In April, the White Houseย greenlit a new $110 million, GEO Group-run complexย in Conroe near Houston that is expected to be completed later this year. Last month, ICE opened a Raymondville lockup on the same site and with the same management โ€” private prison company Management and Training Corporation (MTC) โ€” as a notorious center that closed down afterย reportsย of inhumane treatment.

And in early June, ICE announced a new, temporary agreement with the FederalBureau of Prisons to hold up to nearly 1,700 civil detainees in five federal prisons throughout the country โ€” one of which is in El Paso.

The agencies arranged to hold up to 220 detainees at La Tuna prisonโ€™s low-security satellite campus, according to the prison bureau. In June, more than 150 detainees were held at the prison; on Wednesday, the number had dropped to 40.

Despite assurances that the detainees were not to be housed with federal prisoners, the president of the American Federation of Government Employees slammed the agreement in a statement, citing safety concerns for detainees and the already short-staffed guards under Trump cuts.

โ€œAt any given moment, at almost any prison in any community you could have an accountant, teacher, or food service worker augmented to oversee hundreds of murderers and rapists,โ€ said J. David Cox Sr. โ€œAnd instead of properly funding the Bureau of Prisons to remedy the situation, this administration has jammed almost 2,000 detainees into the system.โ€

Adult detention centers

These are detention centers that are regularly inspected by ICE and hold people for more than 72 hours. Almost all are run by private prison companies โ€” largely The GEO Group and CoreCivic.Child-only facilities

These facilities are usually regulated by the Texas Health and Human Services Commission, but Tornillo isnโ€™t because itโ€™s on federal property. New military installations would also likely be managed by the federal government.
Family detention

Two Texas centers are currently able to hold families together, but that may change with the request for more space on military bases.

Darla Cameron contributed to this report.

Source-houstonpublicmedia.org

Trump Administration Plans to Detain More Immigrants in Texas

Trump Administration Plans to Detain More Immigrants in Texas

Trump Administration Plans to Detain More Immigrants in Texas

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