The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) recentlynotified Congressof its intent to pull $271 million dollars from FEMA, the Coast Guard, and TSA for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
DHS will use this money to increase immigration detention capacity andconstruct tent courthousesalong the Texas border. The department is going through with this reallocation of funds despite Congress’ objections and ICE’s dismal record of caring for people already held in its custody.
This reallocation was made under the government funding bill that President Trump signed into law in January 2019, ending the longestgovernment shutdownin U.S. history.
When that bill passed, ICE was holding approximately 49,000 people in detention centers across the country. That was a record at the time. Appropriators in Congress explicitly instructed DHS to decrease detention levels to an average of 40,500 by the end of the fiscal year.
ICE successfully ignored the will of Congress, however, as the agency was reportedly holding an all-time high of52,398people in custody as of May. The agency is now projecting an average detainee population of 49,661 by the end of the fiscal year. DHSclaimsthat the additional $271 million is necessary to deal with a rise in single adults crossing the southern border. The department is making this claim despite the fact that their own numbers indicate asignificant declinein apprehensions across all demographics over the past five months.
This is not the first time the administration has pulled funds from various parts of the federal government in pursuit of its immigration enforcement priorities. President Trump declared anational emergencyearlier this year to reallocate over $6 billion from the Departments of Defense and Treasury to pay for a border wall.
DHS similarlyreprogrammed$200 million in 2018. This year, the reprogrammed funds will be pulled from several agencies within DHS, including FEMA, the Coast Guard, and TSA. $116 million will be reprogrammed to pay for ICE enforcement activities, including the addition of 9,000 detention beds across the country.
ICE is therefore continuing to increase its detention capacity at a time when numerous investigations bygovernmentandnon-governmentalorganizations have made it clear that the agency is incapable of properly caring for people in its custody.
The administration has repeatedly claimed that detention is necessary to ensure that people appear for their hearings, but the reality is thatimmigrants and their familiesappear in court in high numbers. Meaningfulalternatives to detentionthat allow people to navigate our immigration system in less punitive settings, while also ensuring that they appear in court, exist and should be used more broadly.
DHS will also pull $155 million from the FEMA Disaster Relief Fund for the creation of temporarytent courtsfor people who were subjected to the “Remain in Mexico” policy, officially named theMigrant Protection Protocols. This program requires asylum seekers who arrive at the southern border to await their immigration court hearings in Mexico. Immigration judges from other parts of the country will soon begin to issue decisions in hundreds of asylum cases per day in these courts by video, raising serious due process concerns.
It is also unclear how DHS can legally allocate money for the creation of these facilities given that immigration courts are part of the Department of Justice.
Congress will soon have an opportunity to revisit this issue as it debates DHS funding for FY 2020. Legislators should consider implementing a cap on immigration detention in order to prevent ICE’s manipulation of the appropriations process in the future.
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