More than 2500 immigrant children have been separated from their parents at the U.S. border between October 2017 and June 20, 2018, when the Trump Administration halted the practice in response to a barrage of criticism. Most of those children and their families were fleeing violence in Central American countries and were seeking asylum here. The separated children, including more than 100 under the age of 5, have been placed in a network of child-oriented shelter facilities contracted by the Office of Refugee Resettlement.
Apparently, however — given the government’s difficulty in locating children and parents — the Resettlement Office has not kept reliable records of where children have been sent. The shelters are spread across 16 states, with the largest numbers of separated children in Texas, Arizona, New York, and Florida, but also including some children in Maryland. Many of these shelters are crowded and understaffed, as the few videos obtained by news organizations from inside the shelters have demonstrated. In response to a law suit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union, a federal judge in California has ordered the government to reunite these children with their families by July 26, describing the Administration’s handling of the situation as “attempts to address a chaotic circumstance of the government’s own making.” U.S. government attorneys indicated that they may fail to meet the deadline because of delays in confirming family relationships. The California judge, nevertheless, declined to extend the deadlines without further information from them.
The Trump Administration’s new policy for refugees with children indicates that families will be housed together throughout the period that they await criminal proceedings for improper entry. The Trump administration, however, cannot legally detain children indefinitely — indeed, prior court rulings prohibit the government from keeping children detained for more than 20 days, even if they are with their parents. So the administration appears to be reverting to a “catch and release” policy that tracks families with a monitor but lets them go where they will pending their court dates. Meanwhile, the more than 1500 children who remain to be reunited with their families will probably have to go through a court proceeding and, as reported in Kaiser Health News, “immigrant children as young as 3 are being ordered into court alone for their own deportation hearings.”
Sources for more information:
Christina Jewett & Shefali Luthra, “Defendants In Diapers? Immigrant Toddlers Ordered To Appear In Court Alone,”June 27, 2018.
"Immigrant children: Here's what we still don't know after Trump's executive order,” USA Today, June 21, 2018.
Beatriz Alvarado, “These are the Texas shelters where immigrant children separated from parents can end up,”Corpus Christi Caller Times Published 3:31 p.m. CT June 19, 2018 | Updated 4:57 p.m. CT June 20, 2018.
Doug Stanglin, “Immigrant children: Federal judge orders families separated at border be reunited with in 30 days,” U.S.A. Today , June 22, 2018.
Marty Graham, “Judge Orders U.S. to Provide List of Separated Migrant Children,” Reuters, July 6, 2018.
Title image: Pond at Pickering Creek Audubon Center, Talbot Co. Photo: Jan Plotczyk