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Spike In Undocumented Immigrant Children Prompts Use Of Military Base As Shelter

Posted: 04/18/2012 7:41 am Updated: 04/19/2012 4:40 pm

Unaccompanied Minors

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the Air Force turned a San Antonio Air Force base into temporary shelter for 100 undocumented children Monday, after being overwhelmed by unusually high rates of underage border-crossers, according to a report by the San Antonio Express-News.

Although the number of migrants attempting to cross the border illegally has plummeted in the past five years, the number of children entering the country illegally without guardians has steadily risen in recent years and months, according to the Unaccompanied Children's Services division of HHS. This spike has prompted temporary fixes like the base shelter, and has strained already-limited resources for the federal agencies and legal advocates who represent undocumented children.

Nationally, immigration remains a heated topic. On Sunday, GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney called for a Dream Act-style bill to allow some undocumented immigrants who entered the United States as children to become citizens, though he pledged in January to veto the current Dream Act -- a measure supported by 91 percent of Latinos.

In the past three years, HHS estimates that it has taken in around 8,000 such children. But since October, the agency has housed more than 4,000, a 77 percent hike from the first quarter of last year, according to a report by The Associated Press. According to HHS, the agency currently has more than 2,100 undocumented children in their custody.

Though the recent rise in undocumented children is as of yet unaccounted for, advocates at Kids In Need of Defense (KIND), an organization which provides pro-bono legal representation to unaccompanied minors, told The Huffington Post that many children who come to the United States alone do so to escape domestic abuse, political turmoil and human trafficking.

"Kids don’t just travel across international borders unless there is something wrong with their life," Wendy Young, the president of KIND, told The Huffington Post.

Two-thirds of the minors that started trickling into San Antonio's Lackland Air Force Base on Monday are from Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras, while 12 percent are from Mexico. About 80 percent of the minors are male, and 83 percent are older than 14, according to an AP report -- though the Women's Refugee Commission has found that 14 is the average age of an unaccompanied child in immigration custody.

The San Antonio Express-News reported that the 100 children will stay in an empty 1,000-student dorm, equipped with showers and a dining hall, until the government figures out what to do with each of them. According to the AP, HHS will eventually distribute the 100 children among 13 states, where they will "receive government-provided housing, health care and psychiatric treatment" and await trial.

An unaccompanied minor in HHS custody faces a hearing in which an immigration judge decides if he or she will be sent back home, reunited with a legal guardian in the United States or granted asylum. Nine out of 10 are reunited with a family member, the AP reports.

Yet, under current U.S. law, unaccompanied children are not guaranteed lawyers in deportation and asylum cases. While pro-bono lawyers have done their best to fill this void, in 2011, nearly half of all such children went in front of a judge without any form of representation, according to Elaine Komis, a spokesperson for the Executive Office for Immigration Review in the Department of Justice.

According to Young, the president of KIND, a child with representation is three times more likely to be granted asylum than a child without.

Jennifer Podkul, who has represented nearly 200 unaccompanied minors in her five years serving a pro-bono lawyer, told The Huffington Post that she and her colleagues are overwhelmed.

"We can't move quickly enough from one case to the next," she said. "We just can't keep up."

Judge Bruce Einhorn, a retired U.S. immigration judge who oversaw children's immigration cases for nearly two decades, told The Huffington Post that without lawyers, minors are often left without any representation at all, unable to adequately argue their own case.

"It’s like dealing with someone in a boat in the middle of a lake with no guide and no oars," Einhorn said. "It’s much easier for a child to have someone in the boat with them rowing."

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saint bernard mom
and Newfie Gram ♥spay♥neuter♥adopt♥
03:53 PM on 04/19/2012
I had a long talk with DH this morning about the probability that these kids came by themselves. He was born and raised on the Tx border along the desert. He spent his summer teenage years working on ranches, picking onions, even one summer killing rattlesnakes for ranchers. So he has had more experience than most regarding spending days in the desert and the elements.

His opinion was the same as mine, there is no way 8,000 kids over the last 3 yrs, ages 12-17, can make the trek across Central America, then Mexico (the terrain,the elements, immigration authorities, the drug cartels, etc) and then the US (rivers, deserts, elements, Border Patrol, etc) without assistance and survive.

These kids are being sent here using coyotes or abandoned by their families. 
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saint bernard mom
and Newfie Gram ♥spay♥neuter♥adopt♥
12:25 AM on 04/19/2012
This is what happens to those coming across Mexico. National Geographic article. 

"For many immigrants heading north, the first dangerous crossing is not the one into the U.S. It’s southern Mexico where the peril begins."

http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2008/02/mexicos-southern-border/cynthia-gorney-text

Now add on crossing into the US across rivers and deserts. Many places along the Tx/Mexico border are 20-50 miles between towns. And through brutal terrain. Even those living along the border take precautions against things like becoming dehydrated or being bit by a rattlesnake.

Crossing the AZ desert is even worse than Tx. But in Tx if your car breaks down and the next town is 10 miles away, they tell you to stay with the car because it is shelter, you can succumb to the elements. 

These kids are not coming by themselves.Someone is paying for these kids to get here. It would be virtually impossible to cross Mexico and then the rivers and deserts along the US border with no help or support. 
03:00 AM on 04/19/2012
future ms13 gang members
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saint bernard mom
and Newfie Gram ♥spay♥neuter♥adopt♥
11:36 PM on 04/18/2012
I had heard a few months back (on the local news), that some unused buildings( that had been approved for occupancy) were being used as holding areas for an influx of children in the area without parents, but I had no idea that this was reaching epidemic proportions. 

The report I heard implied that these kids were left by parents after being deported, not that they were coming here on their own. 

Kelly has been set up to house, school, feed, etc those fleeing the coast during evacuations from hurricanes or natural disasters. They housed many for a long period after Katrina.

"Two-thirds of the minors that started trickling into San Antonio's Lackland Air Force Base on Monday are from Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras, while 12 percent are from Mexico."

I am familiar with the Tx border and I find it very hard to believe that "8000 kids in the last 3 yrs" crossed Mexico alone and by themselves and then crossed into the US by themselves. 
02:55 AM on 04/19/2012
its because of the dream act word is out that america is giving money to go to school and then they will get to be legal here
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Julianasmom
Liberty first liberal second
06:49 PM on 04/18/2012
As a mother this really breaks my heart most of those children are physically abused and are orphaned due to extreme poverty. Unlike the dreamer kids who either over stayed a visa or who were smuggled in by their parents these kids really have no one.
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manikajo
06:09 PM on 04/18/2012
When is this idiot government going to realize all the freebies are the magnet and shut the open borders.
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seegray
Nobody can bring you peace but yourself (Emerson)
11:52 PM on 04/18/2012
When are the rest of the idjits going to realize that it is jobs and the American Dream that are the magnet?
04:58 PM on 04/18/2012
I say fine, lets let them stay, just require 4 years of military service after age of 18. Compulsory. then after that they get full citizenship.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fred Bronson
America Unite, Export and Deport
04:43 PM on 04/18/2012
where are the parents?? why are they not being arrested for child abuse?? why are us Americans paying for this again? why is the country they came from not being charged?? we are not the worlds baby sitter
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spytheweb
Black Democrat
04:21 PM on 04/18/2012
Illegal alien children should be turned back over to the Mexican government.
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Snake1994
Snakebite!
04:49 PM on 04/18/2012
They do return some of them, but they just turn around and come right back. Until you secure the border it will never end.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Winter Skye
Spiritual being not human doing
09:28 PM on 04/18/2012
Guess you didn't get the memo: you can FLY in and "vacation" and then stay for 10 years.
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Snake1994
Snakebite!
03:42 PM on 04/18/2012
And they continue to come by the thousands everyday, but the government tells us that the situation is under control. It's costing the US taxpayers a fortune to deal with this nuisance on a daily basis.
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Julia Caskey Marshall
03:00 PM on 04/18/2012
For the love of God, Allah, Buddha, and whatever the name of the Hindu god is, people, get a grip!!! These are children you are talking about. I'd be willing to bet that comments such as are being posted here are very similar to comments made in Nazi Germany as the Gypsys, Jews, and "mentally defective" were tossed into 'camps' to await execution. I am not saying that something shouldn't be done, but a little compassion for parent-less children is not a bad thing.
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spytheweb
Black Democrat
04:23 PM on 04/18/2012
They have found your weakness and you will die because of it. What about our children? These illegal alien children have a government, don't they care about them?
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Julia Caskey Marshall
04:33 PM on 04/18/2012
I repeat: "I am not saying that something shouldn't be done, but a little compassion for parent-less children is not a bad thing."
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manikajo
06:10 PM on 04/18/2012
It's called closing the border. No more problem.
02:35 PM on 04/19/2012
Agreed! Bring the troops home and keep them working by guarding our homeland from any and all non invited intruders that are draining our resources..
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FranklySpoken
I cannot believe you said that…
12:37 AM on 04/20/2012
ENFORCE the law. Fix & fully implement E-Verify. Fine and imprison employers who employ illegal immigrants. Most of the illegal aliens will self-deport.
02:52 PM on 04/18/2012
Sadly I think these children need to be placed with relatives in their native country... we have enough American children on the streets here with no health care, homes, food or education.. and nobody really does anything for them.. we need to clean up our own doorstep before trying to clean some one elses...
Gasparilla
there is no clean coal
06:36 PM on 04/18/2012
Not all the homeless are those who don't want to work. Some are working families who end up living in their car. Time to look out for our own.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Craig Meyer
Independent and proud of it!
02:36 PM on 04/18/2012
There should be no reward for any criminal activity. The US once had laws against being in the US illegally, actually I think we still do. There are some bleeding hearts with obviously huge bank balances think it's OK to harbor, the criminal illegals, educate them, pay for their medical, the prisons to hold them, the welfare and so many incidental costs that according to Judicial Watch the bill now is $562 billion a year at state and federal levels. I can't afford that. Can anyone? If all illegals picked lettuce I would gladly pay $5 a head to get rid of them all but only 2% of illegals work in agriculture. Ship then all back including the poor kids. If they want to live here do it legally.
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Corie Lemmon
02:18 PM on 04/18/2012
"receive government-provided housing, health care and psychiatric treatment......These undocumented children will have it better than MANY other children in this country....Why are they getting better treatment than our own citizens? How man kids in this country starve every day, and then these irresponsible parents from other countries send their children here to get better treatment than those who were born here?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Penelope Pappas Sells
I cast my vote for sanity
01:58 PM on 04/18/2012
Romney's plan does not confer full citizenship on illegals who came as minors, it only allows them to remain as residents, essentially 2nd class citizens. he opposes the dream act which would create a path to citizenship for the deservingwho are already here...... who were brought as children, have been here at least 5 years,, who stay out of trouble, graduate & go on to college or serve in our military.
09:06 AM on 04/19/2012
The Dream Act is a joke - they have six years to complete TWO years of college or TWO years of military service. And it applies to illegals as old as 35. No requirement that they actually graduate college, or serve an honorable 4-6 year term in the military. No requirement that they get a degree in a field that our economy needs (math, science, engineering, biology, technology, medical) - they could spend two years of classes in any subject, and be qualified?? The Dream Act requirements were made so 'low' so that millions of people aged 18-35 could qualify. A major push now for the Dream Actors - they also want financial aide, because they can't afford college - so we should also pay for their education.
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iuriggs6
Sure thing. Shoot, Timmy.
02:55 PM on 04/20/2012
The dream act in it's current form is worthless and will never pass.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JC Phoenix
Logical Liberal
01:36 PM on 04/18/2012
That's really strange. I can see adults wanting to come over, but kids? There's not much you can do without a legal guardian, especially as an illegal immigrant. While I'm generally pro-amnesty (or neutral on the whole thing; hard to formulate an opinion on this), they should be sent back if government(s) can find their families. I can't imagine all of these kids are abuse victims. I'm sure parents sent many up for a "better life." Doesn't quite work out if you don't have family though.
10:07 AM on 04/19/2012
Some of their parents are probably already illegally in this country, and are coming here to join their parents. Most of them are over 14 and men, so they've heard about jobs in construction and landscaping, good money, a relative or friend of a friend who is the foreman or contractor and will get them work, cheap and compliant labor force.

It's not hard to formulate a position on illegal immigration - What would you think if this was 12 million people every year moving here at will - most of them poor, often uneducated beyond the 5th grade, with no English skills (and not much likelihood of attaining English skills) ? Because if we don't have immigration laws, standards, and quotas (that are enforced)- then we have open borders and that's likely what will happen