Southern California's largest immigrant detention center to expand

Immigrant advocacy groups are protesting the expansion of Southern California’s largest immigrant detention center, arguing the federal government should instead be directing resources to children seeking asylum.

The sprawling detention complex in the high desert town of Adelanto has the capacity to hold 1,300 men. The construction project underway will add 650 beds, including a women’s housing unit.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials say the expansion is necessary in order to meet demand for more bed space in the Los Angeles area. According to ICE spokeswoman Virgina Kice, the agency seeks whenever possible to house detainees near the area of their arrest.

But opponents have raised questions about conditions at the Adelanto facility, saying detainees have reported receiving inadequate healthcare and poor quality food. The center’s remote location 40 miles north of San Bernardino also makes it difficult for attorneys and families to visit, they say. 

Immigrant advocates have long opposed a federal quota that requires the government to pay for 34,000 beds in detention centers each night. They say the government should not be spending to expand its detention system for immigrants, especially as the country grapples with how to house a recent influx of asylum-seeking minors from Central America.

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Southern California's largest immigrant detention center to expand
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Southern California's largest immigrant detention center to expand

Immigrant advocacy groups are protesting the expansion of Southern California’s largest immigrant detention center, arguing the federal government should instead be directing resources to children seeking asylum.

The sprawling detention complex in the high desert town of Adelanto has the capacity to hold 1,300 men. The construction project underway will add 650 beds, including a women’s housing unit.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials say the expansion is necessary in order to meet demand for more bed space in the Los Angeles area. According to ICE spokeswoman Virgina Kice, the agency seeks whenever possible to house detainees near the area of their arrest.

But opponents have raised questions about conditions at the Adelanto facility, saying detainees have reported receiving inadequate healthcare and poor quality food. The center’s remote location 40 miles north of San Bernardino also makes it difficult for attorneys and families to visit, they say. 

Immigrant advocates have long opposed a federal quota that requires the government to pay for 34,000 beds in detention centers each night. They say the government should not be spending to expand its detention system for immigrants, especially as the country grapples with how to house a recent influx of asylum-seeking minors from Central America.

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Southern California's largest immigrant detention center to expand
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Southern California's largest immigrant detention center to expand

Immigrant advocacy groups are protesting the expansion of Southern California’s largest immigrant detention center, arguing the federal government should instead be directing resources to children seeking asylum.

The sprawling detention complex in the high desert town of Adelanto has the capacity to hold 1,300 men. The construction project underway will add 650 beds, including a women’s housing unit.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials say the expansion is necessary in order to meet demand for more bed space in the Los Angeles area. According to ICE spokeswoman Virgina Kice, the agency seeks whenever possible to house detainees near the area of their arrest.

But opponents have raised questions about conditions at the Adelanto facility, saying detainees have reported receiving inadequate healthcare and poor quality food. The center’s remote location 40 miles north of San Bernardino also makes it difficult for attorneys and families to visit, they say. 

Immigrant advocates have long opposed a federal quota that requires the government to pay for 34,000 beds in detention centers each night. They say the government should not be spending to expand its detention system for immigrants, especially as the country grapples with how to house a recent influx of asylum-seeking minors from Central America.

Source Article from http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-immigrant-detention-center-20140707-story.html?track=rss
Southern California's largest immigrant detention center to expand
http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-immigrant-detention-center-20140707-story.html?track=rss
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Southern California's largest immigrant detention center to expand

Immigrant advocacy groups are protesting the expansion of Southern California’s largest immigrant detention center, arguing the federal government should instead be directing resources to children seeking asylum.

The sprawling detention complex in the high desert town of Adelanto has the capacity to hold 1,300 men. The construction project underway will add 650 beds, including a women’s housing unit.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials say the expansion is necessary in order to meet demand for more bed space in the Los Angeles area. According to ICE spokeswoman Virgina Kice, the agency seeks whenever possible to house detainees near the area of their arrest.

But opponents have raised questions about conditions at the Adelanto facility, saying detainees have reported receiving inadequate healthcare and poor quality food. The center’s remote location 40 miles north of San Bernardino also makes it difficult for attorneys and families to visit, they say. 

Immigrant advocates have long opposed a federal quota that requires the government to pay for 34,000 beds in detention centers each night. They say the government should not be spending to expand its detention system for immigrants, especially as the country grapples with how to house a recent influx of asylum-seeking minors from Central America.

Source Article from http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-immigrant-detention-center-20140707-story.html?track=rss
Southern California's largest immigrant detention center to expand
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DISEASE FEARS Border Patrol union warns about immigrant illnesses

Immigration Overload _border_AP_660.jpg

Border patrol officers during a immigration demonstration outside the Border Patrol facility Friday, July 4, 2014 in Murrieta, Calif.AP

A Border Patrol union claims that illegal immigrant minors are coming into the U.S. with “active scabies and other illnesses,” claiming one of its agents already has contracted the mite-borne skin infection and warning it could spread into surrounding communities if precautions are not taken. 

The union’s warning comes amid claims of tuberculosis at one camp in San Antonio and Texas Gov. Rick Perry’s testimony last week of a confirmed case of H1N1, or swine flu. 

The medical issues pertain to illegal immigrant minors crossing the U.S.-Mexico border and being detained in Texas and other states. The most detailed information so far has come out of the San Diego Local 1613 chapter of the National Border Patrol Council. 

“Border Patrol management is aware of the scabies outbreak but continue to ignore recommendations,” Ronald Zermeno, health and safety director for the San Diego chapter, wrote to a top California Border Patrol official in a July 4 letter.   

The chapter revealed Friday that one of its agents had contracted scabies, “sometime during routine processing of the first group of 140 illegal immigrants from Texas.” 

In his letter, Zermeno warned about the possibility of these cases spreading and raised alarm about the alleged lack of precautions being taken during the screening process.  

The agent in question, he said, was doing medical screenings of detainees despite not being a medical professional.

“He observed several people with open sores and which he recorded on the questionnaire,” Zermeno said. “He was not told about any precautions to take such as decontamination of himself and uniform. This demonstrates that we are not properly trained to identify infectious disease and to properly respond when we suspect a disease.”

He added that agents do not know which detainee may have passed on the illness, and said they suspect “they could have been already transferred to ICE custody and may have already been released in the surrounding communities.”

According to the CDC, scabies is caused by the human itch mite, which burrows into the top layer of a person’s skin and lays its eggs. Symptoms include severe itching and a skin rash. The infection can spread rapidly in crowded areas like “nursing homes, extended-care facilities, and prisons.”

Zermeno urged the agency not to release detainees while they await deportation hearings, or at least to quarantine them before release “to ensure that they will not transfer infectious diseases such as scabies into our communities.”

He attached pictures showing “contaminated bedding” in paper bags kept outside the Chula Vista station. 

Internally, the chapter is urging agents to bring a second set of clothes to work, and to place clothing in a plastic bag to transport it to a washing machine after work. Further, they’re urging agents to use gloves to handle all bedding and clothing. 

According to the Department of Health and Human Services, any unaccompanied minor caught crossing the border is given what’s called a “well-child” exam as well as any needed childhood vaccinations. They are also screened for tuberculosis and get a mental health exam. 

According to the department, if they have or have been exposed to a communicable disease, they are put in a facility “that has the capacity to quarantine.”

Source Article from http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2014/07/07/border-patrol-union-claims-scabies-outbreak-threatens-agents-public/
DISEASE FEARS Border Patrol union warns about immigrant illnesses
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Murrieta immigrant protests: Mayor defends his town's actions

The mayor of Murrietta, which has seen protests in recent days that prevented federal officials from housing some immigrant detainees at a facility there, defended his town’s response to the issue.

Mayor Alan Long said on CNN Sunday that residents are worried whether the U.S. Border Patrol could safely house the immigrants — including many children — at its Murrieta facility.

“We’re a very small town here in Murietta, and all the sudden we have a national problem at our doorstep,” Long told CNN. “We had some local residents with some legitimate concerns. I think most of the angry people you saw were from out of town.”

Long also pushed back against criticism that his town is getting over the protests.

“What I’m telling you right now, if those buses were to arrive here tomorrow, and enter the Border Patrol facility, you would see what Murrieta is known for. And that is a caring, compassionate community,” he said.

Long added: “This is a national problem, and the world showed up on our doorsteps. We didn’t have a lot of answers early on, and there were some legitimate concerns, health concerns and humane concerns. People were concerned about the people, the immigrants coming here. Would they have proper facilities? Who is going to take care of them? How long is this going to be for?

Five people were arrested Friday during protests.

A charter plane carrying immigrants who entered the country illegally arrived at San Diego’s Lindbergh Field on Friday evening. Three U.S. Homeland Security Department buses arrived a few minutes later, trailed by numerous law enforcement vehicles.

Federal officials had said earlier in the week that 140 immigrants detained while crossing the border into Texas would arrive Friday. But since a blockade by protesters forced three busloads of migrants to turn around Tuesday in Murrieta, officials have declined to provide information about the movement of the immigrants.

According to a law enforcement source, the latest group to arrive in California was taken to a Border Patrol facility in San Ysidro for processing.

Hundreds of people gathered on the road to the Murrieta processing center, anticipating another convoy of vehicles containing immigrants.

The number of protesters swelled Friday despite the summer heat, the Fourth of July holiday and a police strategy that mostly kept the groups apart and away from the processing center.

In a reversal from earlier in the week, there were substantially more demonstrators on the immigration-rights side.

Authorities kept the road to the center clear and the protesters in check, although scuffles did break out. Murrieta police arrested five people for obstructing officers during an afternoon altercation. One other person was arrested earlier in the day.

The group protesting the transfer of the immigrants to California waved American flags and chanted “USA,” while across the street demonstrators responded with, “Shame on you!”

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times

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Murrieta immigrant protests: Mayor defends his town's actions
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Murrieta immigrant protests: Mayor defends his town's actions

The mayor of Murrietta, which has seen protests in recent days that prevented federal officials from housing some immigrant detainees at a facility there, defended his town’s response to the issue.

Mayor Alan Long said on CNN Sunday that residents are worried whether the U.S. Border Patrol could safely house the immigrants — including many children — at its Murrieta facility.

Source Article from http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-murrieta-immigrant-protests-mayor-defends-his-towns-actions-20140706-story.html?track=rss
Murrieta immigrant protests: Mayor defends his town's actions
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Murrieta immigrant protests: Mayor defends his town's actions

The mayor of Murrietta, which has seen protests in recent days that prevented federal officials from housing some immigrant detainees at a facility there, defended his town’s response to the issue.

Mayor Alan Long said on CNN Sunday that residents are worried whether the U.S. Border Patrol could safely house the immigrants — including many children — at its Murrieta facility.

Source Article from http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-murrieta-immigrant-protests-mayor-defends-his-towns-actions-20140706-story.html?track=rss
Murrieta immigrant protests: Mayor defends his town's actions
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Murrieta immigrant protests: Mayor defends his town's actions

The mayor of Murrietta, which has seen protests in recent days that prevented federal officials from housing some immigrant detainees at a facility there, defended his town’s response to the issue.

Mayor Alan Long said on CNN Sunday that residents are worried whether the U.S. Border Patrol could safely house the immigrants — including many children — at its Murrieta facility.

Source Article from http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-murrieta-immigrant-protests-mayor-defends-his-towns-actions-20140706-story.html?track=rss
Murrieta immigrant protests: Mayor defends his town's actions
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Murrieta immigrant protests: Mayor defends his town's actions

The mayor of Murrietta, which has seen protests in recent days that prevented federal officials from housing some immigrant detainees at a facility there, defended his town’s response to the issue.

Mayor Alan Long said on CNN Sunday that residents are worried whether the U.S. Border Patrol could safely house the immigrants — including many children — at its Murrieta facility.

Source Article from http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-murrieta-immigrant-protests-mayor-defends-his-towns-actions-20140706-story.html?track=rss
Murrieta immigrant protests: Mayor defends his town's actions
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