Biden to slowly allow 25,000 people seeking asylum into US

The Biden administration on Friday announced plans for tens of thousands of people who are seeking asylum and have been forced to wait in Mexico under a Trump-era policy to be allowed into the U.S. while their cases wind through immigration courts.
The first wave of an estimated
25,000 asylum-seekers with active cases in the “Remain in Mexico” program will
be allowed into the United States on Feb. 19, authorities said. They plan to
start slowly, with two border crossings each processing up to 300 people a day
and a third crossing taking fewer numbers.
President Joe Biden’s
administration declined to publicly identify the three crossings out of fear it
may encourage a rush of people, but U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar, a Texas Democrat,
said officials told him that they are Brownsville and El Paso in Texas, and San
Diego’s San Ysidro crossing.
The move is a major step toward
dismantling one of former President Donald Trump’s most consequential policies
to deter asylum-seekers from coming to the U.S. About 70,000 asylum-seekers
were enrolled in the program officially called Migrant Protection Protocols
since it was introduced in January 2019.
On Biden’s first day in office,
the Homeland Security Department suspended the policy for new arrivals. Since
then, some asylum-seekers picked up at the border have been released in the
U.S. with notices to appear in court.
Biden is quickly making good on a
campaign promise to end the policy, which the Trump administration said was
critical to reversing a surge of asylum-seekers that peaked in 2019. But the
policy also exposed people to violence in Mexican border cities and made it
extremely difficult for them to find lawyers and communicate with courts about
their cases.
“As President Biden has made clear, the U.S.
government is committed to rebuilding a safe, orderly, and humane immigration
system,” Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said. “This latest
action is another step in our commitment to reform immigration policies that do
not align with our nation’s values.”
Asylum-seekers will be released with
notices to appear in court in cities close to or in their final destinations,
typically with family, administration officials said.
Homeland Security said the move
“should not be interpreted as an opening for people to migrate irregularly to
the United States.” Administration officials say the vast majority of people
who cross the border illegally are quickly expelled under a public health order
that Trump put in place in March amid the coronavirus pandemic. But some
asylum-seeking families have been released in Texas and California, working
against that messaging.
White House press secretary Jen
Psaki said Thursday that she was concerned limited releases in the U.S. may
encourage others to cross illegally.
“We don’t want people to put themselves in
danger at a time where it is not the right time to come, because we have not
had time to put in place a humane and moral system and process,” she said.
Court hearings for people enrolled
in “Remain in Mexico” have been suspended since June because of the pandemic.
Getting word to them about when to report to the border for release in the
United States may prove a daunting job.
Homeland Security said it would
soon announce a “virtual registration process” online and by phone for people
to learn where and when they should report. It urged asylum-seekers not to
report to the border unless instructed.
The International Organization for
Migration will help with logistics and test asylum-seekers for COVID-19 before
they enter the U.S., spokeswoman Liz Lizama said. The U.N. migration agency’s
Mexico director, Dana Graber Ladek, said last month that it would seek to
inform and support asylum-seekers on any changes in the “Remain in Mexico”
policy.
Roberta Jacobson, coordinator for
the southwest border on the White House National Security Council, said
asylum-seekers who have been waiting the longest will get priority, along with
people deemed more vulnerable due to their health or threats to their safety.
The announcement provides no
relief to people whose cases were dismissed or denied, and Jacobson told
Spanish-language media that the administration was still considering how to
address any cases beyond those that are active. Advocates argue that
communication problems, including lack of working addresses in Mexico, caused
some people to miss hearings and lose their cases as a result.
Mexico agreed to take back more
asylum-seekers in June 2019 to defuse Trump’s threats of tariff increases.
Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador welcomed Biden’s changes, saying
at a news conference Friday that it would be “good” for the U.S. to host them
instead while their cases wind through the system.
The Remain in Mexico releases will
come as more people are getting stopped crossing the border illegally since
Biden took office, challenging the administration in its early days.
Raul Ortiz, deputy chief of the
Border Patrol, said Tuesday that more than 3,000 people had been stopped in
each of the previous 10 days, compared with a daily average of 2,426 in January.
About 50 to 80 adults and children
have been arriving daily since Jan. 27 at Catholic Charities of the Rio Grande
Valley in Texas, which temporarily houses people released by the Border Patrol,
said Sister Norma Pimentel, the group’s executive director. The charity tests
for COVID-19 and sends anyone who tests positive to a hotel for isolation.
Jewish Family Service of San Diego housed 191 asylum-seekers the first 10 days of February after they were released, up from 144 in January and 54 in December, said Eitan Peled, the group’s border services advocate. They are quarantined in hotels for 10 days.