The Border Patrol released 28 migrants in Ajo on Friday morning, marking a shift in how the agency deals with a recent increase in families crossing the border, and spurring local officials to hustle to find transportation for them.
In the month leading up to Friday, the Border Patrol released migrants in Yuma and nonprofit organizations transported them to shelters in Tucson and Phoenix, which have more resources and experience than smaller cities and towns like Yuma and Ajo.
One group of families that was released in Ajo arrived at the Casa Alitas shelter in Tucson around 3 p.m. Friday. They sat in folding chairs as volunteers offered them a snack, went through their paperwork and checked for any medical issues.
Children made up about two-thirds of those family members, many of whom came from Venezuela, Cuba and Ecuador.
One young girl from Venezuela munched on watermelon slices as she swung her feet under her chair. She kept a stuffed giraffe tucked under her arm while her mother and father spoke with a volunteer.
Nearby, a volunteer talked with a mother about getting the right-sized shirt and pants for her 7-year-old son.
The Casa Alitas Welcome Center is run by Catholic Community Services out of a converted wing of Pima Countyβs juvenile detention center. The shelter there serves as a replacement for the former Benedictine Monastery on Country Club Road that housed thousands of asylum seekers in 2019.
Generally, families stay at shelters in Tucson for a few days, enough time to arrange transportation to other cities where they can live with relatives and friends while their asylum claims are processed.
The families released in recent weeks are headed for numerous states, including Florida, Massachusetts and Indiana, according to staffers at the shelter.
The Border Patrol gave little warning to local governments and nonprofits before releasing the families in Ajo around 9 a.m. Friday, Pima County Administrator Chuck Huckelberry said.
βWe found out about the releases yesterday,β which led to a βscramble to get a busβ for the migrants, Huckelberry said Friday.
He said he wants the Border Patrol to resume transporting migrants to Tucson and Phoenix, rather than depend on local governments and nongovernmental organizations.
βIt is poor practice and should not continue,β Huckelberry said.
The releases in Ajo contrast with how the Border Patrol handled asylum seekers in 2019, Huckelberry said.
During the spike in asylum seekers that year, the Border Patrol and other federal agencies transported more than 20,000 asylum seekers to shelters in Tucson.
Huckelberry said he did not know whether Border Patrol officials planned to continue releasing migrants in Ajo. He described communication from the Border Patrol as βpoor to nonexistent.β
Customs and Border Protection did not respond to an inquiry Friday from the Arizona Daily Star.
The Border Patrolβs Tucson Sector has seen a steady increase in apprehensions since April, including a spike from January to February.
Most of the migrants apprehended in the Tucson Sector are single adults, but migrants traveling as families are sharply increasing, according to Border Patrol statistics.
The number of migrants traveling as families more than doubled in the Tucson Sector from January to February, rising from about 400 to nearly 1,000.
The Yuma Sector saw an increase from about 560 to more than 1,700, which prompted the Border Patrol to release certain migrants to nonprofit aid groups.
βThis is exactly what weβve seen in Yuma, now weβre seeing it in Ajo,β said Diego PiΓ±a Lopez, program manager at the Casa Alitas shelter.
Ideally, federal agencies would βgo a few extra hoursβ to transport migrants to Tucson and Phoenix, PiΓ±a Lopez said.
Casa Alitas staff was given βlittle warningβ by federal agencies about the releases in Ajo, he said.
Casa Alitas sent volunteers to Ajo to help with coronavirus testing, arrange bus transportation and generally support the migrants as they were released.
Casa Alitas is recseiving about 80 migrants per day, mostly families from Cuba, Venezuela and Brazil, PiΓ±a Lopez said.
The shelter is not taking in unaccompanied children.
The influx is more than the shelter has seen in recent months, but below the roughly 120 asylum seekers released on a typical day in 2019, PiΓ±a Lopez said.
The migrants who are released in Ajo are being transported in groups of about 15, rather than in numbers to completely fill a bus, as a precaution against spreading the coronavirus, Huckelberry said.
Migrants are tested for the virus, which so far has produced a βfew positive casesβ in recent weeks, Huckelberry said.
A positive test result leads to an isolation period and then another test.
Amid the increase in border apprehensions, CBP officials plan to open tent-like facilities to house migrants in Tucson and Yuma.
Those facilities are expected to open in the middle of April, according to information CBP provided to U.S. Sen. Kyrsten Sinema.
It is unclear where the migrants released in Ajo were apprehended.
A Border Patrol agent told the Willcox City Council on Feb. 18 that the plan in the Tucson Sector was to βrelease that person at the location where that person was first encountered,β The Arizona Republic reported Monday.
In 2018 and 2019, the area south of Ajo saw numerous large groups of asylum seekers, sometimes as many as 300 in a group, cross the border and flag down agents.
Border barriers south of Ajo at the time consisted mostly of head-high vehicle barriers that asylum seekers could walk between. The 30-foot-tall border wall now runs along nearly all the border south of Ajo.
On Thursday, the head of the Border Patrolβs Tucson Sector, John R. Modlin, posted photos on Twitter of migrants being processed by agents at what appeared to be a gas station.
Modlin said agents arrested more than 240 migrants in four separate encounters the previous night but did not say where the groups were encountered.
The groups consisted mainly of families and unaccompanied minors, Modlin said.
So far, Arizona has seen far fewer migrant families in recent weeks than border cities in Texas.
The Biden administration requested planes to transport migrant families from Texas to states near the Canadian border for processing, the Washington Post reported Friday.
On Thursday and Friday, roughly 2,000 migrants traveling as families and unaccompanied children crossed the Rio Grande.
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