The Trump administration has taken a hard-line stance on immigration, promising to deport all undocumented immigrants and end what the president calls an "invasion" of migrants into the U.S.
To carry out this plan, the administration has filled the nation's 47,600-bed capacity of people awaiting deportation and is now scrambling to open new facilities to hold even more.
Since Trump took office, immigration law enforcement officials have arrested and detained more than 32,800 people. However, the administration has largely ended the practice of releasing some people who are considered non-threatening to the community out of detention centers.
DHS officials have now turned to the Federal Bureau of Prisons, Department of Defense and United States Marshals Service to increase bed space while the agency asks Congress for more funding to help carry out President Donald Trump's mass deportation plan.
Trump's team has also partnered with private, for-profit centers to hold migrants awaiting deportation.
As the White House pushes its immigration plans, enforcement agencies have run into financial, administrative and legal roadblocks.
To ease the tension on detention facilities across the country, DHS has begun releasing certain people by following Immigration and Customs Enforcement's Alternative to Detention program, which allows for release based on medical or humanitarian concerns.
The Trump administration had initially sent dozens of undocumented immigrants, some with criminal records, to the U.S. Naval Base at Guantánamo Bay, but officials unexpectedly cleared out groups of migrants on Tuesday. It is unclear why the change, but the administration has faced several lawsuits over its use of Guantánamo Bay for immigration detention.
The administration remains confident it will continue carrying out Trump's immigration agenda at the same pace.
Over the weekend, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said federal law enforcement agencies are planning to detain immigrants at U.S. military bases to deal with the capacity issues.
"Yes, there is a plan to use the facilities at Fort Bliss for detention facilities," she told CBS's Face the Nation. "But also we need to remember to ask — Congress needs to continue through with funding that this administration has asked for."
House Republicans have proposed a resolution that would avert a government shutdown. That suggests slashing the fiscal year's budget by $13 billion in non-defense spending but boosting funding for ICE.
Noem said DHS can't keep pace with Trump's aggressive anti-immigration agenda without it.
"That reconciliation bill needs to happen," Noem said. "We have just weeks before we are out of the funds to continue the operations that we have.
7 Comments
Raphael
Congress needs to provide more funding so DHS can efficiently secure our borders. No question.
Leonardo
America should stand for justice and opportunity, not harsh, punitive immigration policies.
Raphael
Finally, an administration prioritizing the safety of American citizens over foreign nationals.
Michelangelo
Privatization helps reduce strain on government budgets; it's a practical and smart solution.
Donatello
Ensuring that migrants, especially those with criminal records, remain detained protects our communities.
Raphael
Deporting hardworking, law-abiding community members tears apart families for no good reason.
Michelangelo
Using military bases as detention camps? This isn't America—this feels authoritarian.