Long Beach Convention Center may hold 1,000 migrant children - Los Angeles Times
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Long Beach Convention Center tapped to hold 1,000 migrant children

The city’s contract with the U.S. Health and Human Services Department would last 90 to 120 days, until Aug. 2.

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The Long Beach Convention Center is poised to become the second temporary facility in California to hold migrant children who traveled to the southern U.S. border without their parents or legal guardians.

Long Beach Mayor Robert Garcia said in an interview Monday that migrant children could begin arriving within a week. The San Diego Convention Center started taking in migrant children late last month. Federal authorities also have requested to use Camp Roberts, a California Army National Guard base along the Central Coast.

The contract still must be approved by the Long Beach City Council, which will hold a special meeting Tuesday to decide whether to move forward. The plan is not expected to face opposition.

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The Long Beach facility, which has 400,000 square feet of space, would ramp up to hold as many as 1,000 children at a time. The city’s contract with the federal Health and Human Services Department, which oversees the Office of Refugee Resettlement, would last 90 to 120 days, until Aug. 2.

As more young migrants arrive at the U.S. border alone, overcrowding at Border Patrol facilities and delays in releasing the children worsen.

April 3, 2021

The children would stay at the facility until they can be connected with family members or sponsors. Garcia said Long Beach has a history of welcoming refugees, such as Cambodians.

“To me, this is about compassion and kindness,” he said. “As an immigrant personally, I know how important it is to help children. This is about supporting our country and getting these kids into homes that are safe and healthy.”

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In a statement, the Department of Health and Human Services said the Long Beach Convention Center is “under active consideration.”

Long Beach Councilwoman Cindy Allen, whose district includes the convention center, said in a statement that communities across the country should be prepared to help migrant children.

“Our convention center is a major asset in the heart of our downtown,” she said. “As it is currently unable to host indoor events, this is a tremendous opportunity to help without impacting operations or businesses.”

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As of Monday, 14,287 children were in the custody of the Refugee Resettlement office after being transferred from Customs and Border Protection. The number of children apprehended by Border Patrol has increased steadily over the last year.

Last month, Border Patrol agents took custody of more than 18,800 unaccompanied children — significantly more than the previous one-month high of nearly 11,900 in May 2019, according to preliminary figures released to the Washington Post last week and confirmed by the Los Angeles Times.

Customs and Border Protection, which oversees the Border Patrol, is required to transfer unaccompanied children in its custody to the Office of Refugee Resettlement within 72 hours. That process has been stymied as more children have been arriving daily than are able to be transferred out.

The unaccompanied teens, ages 13 to 17, are expected to arrive Saturday night.

March 27, 2021

In a report filed Friday in Los Angeles federal court, two independent inspectors appointed by U.S. District Judge Dolly Gee said that Customs and Border Protection facilities in south Texas are “stretched beyond thin” and that “severe overcrowding” is creating unsafe conditions for thousands of migrant children.

Using temporary facilities such as convention centers and military bases is part of the Biden administration’s efforts to speed up the transfer of children out of Border Patrol custody, as the administration works through the lengthy process of increasing state-licensed facilities. Most of the temporary facilities that have opened are in Texas.

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