Summary of Emergency Supplemental Funding Bill

Similar documents
STATEMENT FOR THE RECORD. An Administration-Made Disaster: The South Texas Border Surge of Unaccompanied Minors. Submitted to the

Summary of the Issue. AILA Recommendations

A Plan to Address the Humanitarian and Refugee Crisis on the Southern Border and in Central America

Statement of. JAMES R. SILKENAT President. on behalf of the AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION. for the record of the hearing on

STATEMENT OF. RONALD D. VITIELLO Deputy Chief Office of the Border Patrol U.S. Customs and Border Protection U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

Border Crisis: Update on Unaccompanied Children

Q&A: DHS Implementation of the Executive Order on Border Security and Immigration Enforcement

Child Migration by the Numbers

Asylum Removal and Immigration Courts: Definitions to Know

SUMMARY AND ANALYSIS OF DHS MEMORANDUM Implementing the President s Border Security and Immigration Enforcement Improvements Policies

HALFWAY HOME: Unaccompanied Children in Immigration Custody

The President s Budget Request: Fiscal Year (FY) 2019

Challenges at the Border: Examining the Causes, Consequences, and Responses to the Rise in Apprehensions at the Southern Border

Backgrounders. The U.S. Child Migrant Influx. Author: Danielle Renwick, Copy Editor September 1, Introduction

RISE IN APPREHENSIONS AT THE SOUTHERN BORDER

Executive Summary: Mexico s Other Border

because it does not seek information regarding the implementation of the Settlement Agreement.

Unaccompanied Alien Children: An Overview

Unaccompanied Alien Children: An Overview

WOMEN AND CHILDREN AT THE BORDER

How to Stop the Surge of Migrant Children

Mariana s Story. Unaccompanied Children: The Journey from Home to Appearing before the Immigration Court in the United States

July 26, A Humanitarian Call to Action: Unaccompanied Alien Children at the Southwest Border

February 17, Kevin McAleenan Acting Commissioner U.S. Customs and Border Protection

14 facts that help explain America's child-migrant crisis - Vox

ST. FRANCES CABRINI CENTER FOR IMMIGRANT LEGAL ASSISTANCE Presenter: Wafa Abdin, Esq.

What is the Definition of an Unaccompanied Alien Child under U.S. Federal Law?

AMERICA NEEDS IMMIGRATION REFORM

S Helping Unaccompanied Minors and Alleviating National Emergency Act (HUMANE Act) Senator John Cornyn (R-Texas), introduced July 15, 2014

November 5, Submitted electronically at Dear Assistant Director Seguin:

Executive Order: Border Security and Immigration Enforcement Improvements

SUMMARY OF LEAKED, DRAFT REPORT DETAILING DHS PROGRESS ON IMPLEMENTATION OF BORDER ENFORCEMENT EXECUTIVE ORDER

Statistical Analysis Shows that Violence, Not U.S. Immigration Policies, Is Behind the Surge of Unaccompanied Children Crossing the Border

Central American Women and Children Migrants and Refugees to and through Mexico

Unaccompanied Alien Children: An Overview

Unaccompanied Alien Children: Demographics in Brief

A LONG AND DANGEROUS ROAD: HOW FUNDERS CAN RESPOND TO THE SURGE MIGRATING TO THE UNITED STATES OF UNACCOMPANIED CHILDREN

A LONG AND DANGEROUS ROAD: HOW FUNDERS CAN RESPOND TO CHILDREN MIGRATING TO THE UNITED STATES THE SURGE OF UNACCOMPANIED

Summary of the Full-Year Appropriation Act for the Department of Homeland Security, 2019

Oversight of Immigration Enforcement and Family Reunification Efforts

CGRS Statement for Hearing: The 2014 Humanitarian Crisis at Our Border: A Review of the Government s Response to Unaccompanied Minors One Year Later

Addressing the Legal and Mental Health Needs of Undocumented Immigrant Children

How the Unaccompanied Minor Crisis Is Affecting the State Courts

Unaccompanied Alien Children: An Overview

TVPRA 2008 & UACs. Sponsored by Houston UAC Task Force. University of Houston Law Center Immigration Clinic, Joseph A.

Streamline: Measuring Its Effect on Illegal Border Crossing

Dramatic Surge in the Arrival of Unaccompanied Children Has Deep Roots and No Si...

CENTRAL AMERICA. Improved Evaluation Efforts Could Enhance Agency Programs to Reduce Unaccompanied Child Migration

Justice for Immigrants Webinar

Presidential Documents

STATEMENT OF. David V. Aguilar Chief Office of Border Patrol U.S. Customs and Border Protection Department of Homeland Security BEFORE

NAVAL POSTGRADUATE SCHOOL THESIS

Immigration in the Age of Trump

JTIP Handout:Lesson 34 Immigration Consequences

In the absence congressional action to reform our immigration laws, the next Administration should continue administrative relief programs.

TESTIMONY OF MICHAEL J. FISHER CHIEF UNITED STATES BORDER PATROL U.S. CUSTOMS AND BORDER PROTECTION DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY BEFORE

UNACCOMPANIED CHILDREN Agency Efforts to Identify and Reunify Children Separated from Parents at the Border

Results of Unannounced Inspections of Conditions for Unaccompanied Alien Children in CBP Custody

GLO-ACT Needs Assessment. General questions on trends and patterns Trafficking and Smuggling

October 29, 2018 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT

otnngr 55 of t}fr lltnit taf 5 ma.s ingtnn, i)qt 20515

Statement for the Record of Eleanor Acer Director, Refugee Protection Human Rights First

Annual Report. Immigration Enforcement Actions: Office of Immigration Statistics POLICY DIRECTORATE

BORDER SECURITY AND IMMIGRATION. Initial Executive Order Actions and Resource Implications

Department of Homeland Security

What Should I Tell My NIJC Pro Bono Client About the Immigration Executive Orders?

MEXICO S SOUTHERN BORDER SUMMARY RESEARCH REPORT. Security, Central American Migration, and U.S. Policy

Trump, Immigration Policy and the Fate of Latino Migrants in the United States

Routes of migration into the U.S. from Central America and below are becoming increasingly more life-threatening due to the hyper-militarization of

THE ROLE OF THE HOUSTON COMMUNITY

PRESIDENT TRUMP S EXECUTIVE ORDERS ON IMMIGRATION

Unimaginable Human Tragedy On The Texas Border

M U YL D AS NTION AN DETE

8 USC NB: This unofficial compilation of the U.S. Code is current as of Jan. 4, 2012 (see

Special Report - Senate FY 2012 Department of Homeland Security Appropriations and California Implications - October 2011

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

Statement on protecting unaccompanied child refugees against modern slavery and other forms of exploitation

Immigration Issues in Child Welfare Proceedings

Division of Unaccompanied Children s Services

The Legal Landscape for Unaccompanied Children... 2 Statistics... 4

Unaccompanied Immigrant Youth in Alameda County: Building Communities of Support

MEXICO (Tier 2) Recommendations for Mexico:

Immigration Enforcement Benchmarks

Immigration and the Southwest Border. Effect on Arizona. Joseph E. Koehler Assistant United States Attorney District of Arizona

Further, we ask that you consider the following steps to help ensure that refugees have access to counsel and are able to have their day in court:

Central American Children in Removal Proceeedings: A General Overview. ABA Commission on Immigration Oct. 1, 2014

Separated Children Placed in Office of Refugee Resettlement Care

What Does the Upsurge in the Numbers of Unaccompanied Immigrant Children Entering the United States Mean for the State Courts

ZACATECAS DECLARATION 15 October 2004

November 20, Acting Director U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. R. Gil Kerlikowske Commissioner U.S. Customs and Border Protection

Esperanza hope amid immigration crisis

ADVANCES IN U.S.-MEXICO BORDER ENFORCEMENT A Review of the Consequence Delivery System

Introduction to Homeland Security

July 2, 2018 COMMUNITY TEACH-IN. Stefania Arteaga Rebecca O Neill, Immigration Attorney for CCLA

Testimony of. Most Reverend Mark J. Seitz Bishop of El Paso, Texas. Before. The Senate Committee on Homeland Security & Governmental Affairs

Rep. Pete Sessions (R-TX): Families First Act of Introduced 6/22/2018. Introduced 6/22/2018

Immigration Court Appearances Rates

Border Security: History & Issues for the 116th Congress

GLOSSARY OF IMMIGRATION POLICY

The Honorable Patrick J. Leahy, Chairman Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs

Transcription:

For Wildfires: Summary of Emergency Supplemental Funding Bill The supplemental includes $615 million in emergency firefighting funds requested for the Department of Agriculture s U.S. Forest Service. These funds are needed to cover anticipated fire suppression funding shortfalls for the remainder of 2014. These funds will prevent the Forest Service from having to borrow money from other funds, such as fire prevention, timber and construction projects or other programs. For the past two years, Congress has been forced to appropriate more than $1 billion to repay funds that were transferred from other programs to pay for firefighting shortfalls. The supplemental also includes the President s request to authorize disaster funding for Forest Service and Department of Interior firefighting needs. This provision is modeled on S. 1875, the bipartisan legislation authored by Senators Ron Wyden (D- Ore.) and Mike Crapo (R- Idaho). This bill allows disaster funding to pay for a portion of catastrophic firefighting needs, just as the United States does with hurricanes, floods and other natural disasters. The legislation will allow Congress in future years to provide additional firefighting funds before fire season start up, to break the destructive cycle of borrowing fire prevention and other funds to put out burning fires. The provision also prevents other important programs from being cut to pay for escalating firefighting costs. For Iron Dome: The bill includes $225 million in Department of Defense emergency supplemental funding for Israel to procure additional Iron Dome interceptors. The ongoing crisis in Israel and Gaza has resulted in thousands of rockets being launched at Israeli cities and towns, and the Iron Dome missile defense system has proven highly effective at neutralizing these threats. U.S. Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel wrote to congressional leadership on Tuesday, July 22, 2014, stating that the Government of Israel has asked for additional funds to maintain adequate stockpiles of Iron Dome interceptors. The $225 million in this new request is in addition to $351 million for fiscal year 2015 that would be provided in the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2015, reported to the full Senate on July 17, 2014. For Border Crisis Department of Homeland Security: The supplemental provides more than $1.1 billion for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). At this funding level: Without these additional funds in 2014, ICE will deplete its custody and removal funding in August and Border Patrol will run out of funding in September. Without this emergency funding, DHS will need to divert other crucial resources from critical programs to keep these two agencies operating for the rest of the fiscal year. Funding is also provided for ICE, CBP and the DHS Inspector General to respond to immediate needs related to the surge in unaccompanied children and families early in fiscal year 2015. Funding levels for both fiscal years 2014 and 2015 reflect the fact that more than 61,000 unaccompanied children have crossed the southern border so far in fiscal year 2014, with this figure expected to grow to 90,000 by the end of fiscal year 2014 and to 145,000 unaccompanied children in fiscal year 2015. In addition to unaccompanied children, more

than 55,000 families have been apprehended to date in fiscal year 2014; this trend is expected to continue into fiscal year 2015 as well. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE): The Senate bill includes $585.984 million for the detention, prosecution and removal of undocumented families including: Provides funds to expand and operate family detention facilities in Berks, Pennsylvania; Artesia, New Mexico; and Karnes County, Texas, as well as obtain additional family detention beds as needed. Detained individuals who do not qualify for asylum can be removed more quickly if they are detained instead of released. Recently, 138 family members who had recently crossed our border and were detained briefly in Artesia have been returned to their home countries. The Senate bill fully funds the request of $116 million for transportation costs associated with the surge of apprehensions in unaccompanied children for their transfer to the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR). Fully funds removal costs for undocumented families and the Alternatives to Detention program increase; This funding level requires ICE to place more families in the Alternatives to Detention (ATD) program instead of housing them in detention facilities. ATD s on average costs range from pennies to $7 dollars a day for electronic monitoring, whereas family detention costs average $266 per person per day. For families, only the adults would be on ATD so using this form of detention would result in significant cost savings. Customs and Border Protection (CBP): The Senate bill includes $291,416,000 for operational costs associated with responding to surge of apprehensions of unaccompanied children and families. This includes funds for immediate need items for children such as meals, clothing, child care supplies, laundry and shower facilities and medical supplies and support. It also funds agent overtime and temporary duty costs, transportation and guard contracts and emergency surge requirements for processing the children. Current law requires all unaccompanied children to be transported to the ORR within 72 hours of their being determined to be unaccompanied. CBP s facilities were not designed nor intended to be used to detain children for any length of time. They were designed to detain drug smugglers and adults apprehended crossing our border illegally. ORR has the appropriate personnel and training to meet the requirements of the children, which is why funds in the Senate bill for shelters managed by Health and Human Services are directly linked to the funds for CBP and ICE. Enforcement and Disrupt Activities: It is imperative that we break up the cartels and other transnational criminal organizations which see children as a commodity for profit much like a load of cocaine. They lure families into sending their children on a dangerous journey and lie to the parents by claiming that children will receive a special status and be allowed to remain in the United States.

The Senate bill includes a total of $112 million for ICE and CBP enforcement and disruption activities to break up those smuggling and trafficking rings, expand Border Enforcement Security Task Forces and vetted units and expand air surveillance to ensure border security in the Rio Grande Valley and other areas along the Southwest border. This will maintain the ongoing focus against traditional threats such as drug smuggling and illegal crossings by adults. DHS Office of Inspector General: The bill includes oversight funding of $1 million for the DHS Office of Inspector General to conduct site visits of detention facilities as well as screen and investigate into complaints about treatment of unaccompanied children and families apprehended at our Southwest border. For Border Crisis Department of Justice The bill provides $124.5 million to allow the Department of Justice (DOJ) to better respond to the significant rise in unaccompanied children and adults with children at the Southwest border. This level is an increase of $60.5 million above the President s request with the additional funding providing more immigration judges and increasing direct legal representation and legal services for unaccompanied children. Funding will be spent on: New immigration judge teams: The bill provides $61.2 million, $22.5 million more than the request of $38.7 million, to begin hiring 40 new immigration judge teams. These judges will reduce the pending case backlog, help mitigate the anticipated future increase in immigration cases and expand the children s docket to all 59 immigration courts. Children s dockets are currently only available in 26 immigration courts. DOJ s Executive Office of Immigration Review currently has a total backlog of over 375,000 cases which includes both adults and unaccompanied children. An additional 40 judges will reduce this caseload by 32,000 with a priority focus on unaccompanied children cases. The 40 new judge teams are in addition to 15 temporary judge teams and the 30 new judges DOJ is currently in the process of hiring with fiscal year 2014 funds. Legal representation services: The bill provides $50 million, $35 million above the request of $15 million, for direct legal representation services to children in immigration proceedings so children do not enter a courtroom alone. Funding in this bill will help an estimated 20,000 children who would not otherwise receive pro bono legal support. Legal orientation program: The bill includes $5 million, doubling the $2.5 million request, to provide legal advice to both custodians of children and family groups going through the immigration court system. The increased funding will primarily expand this program to new locations like Artesia, New Mexico which will house approximately 700 family units. These services also provide families and guardians with referrals to pro bono legal services, which is important because DOJ estimates that only half of the unaccompanied children currently have pro bono legal assistance in the courtroom. It will also help to reduce legal representation costs. Immigration courtroom video equipment: The bill provides $6.7 million, same as the request, to improve and expand courtroom equipment including additional video conferencing capability to support additional immigration judge teams. Immigration litigation attorneys: The bill provides $1.1 million, same as the request, to hire five additional immigration litigation attorneys and one paralegal to handle

an anticipated increase in litigation workload for the Office of Immigration Litigation (OIL). DOJ expects a rise in both class action lawsuits and cases filed for appeal. OIL also helps with determining if new detention facilities meet the needs of unaccompanied children. Office of Inspector General: The bill provides $500,000, $500,000 more than the request, to ensure the Inspector General has the proper resources to monitor DOJ s spending of these supplemental funds, and to provide grant oversight for legal representation and legal orientation programs. For Border Crisis Department of Health and Human Services The supplemental includes $1.2 billion for the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) for the unaccompanied children program. This level will allow HHS to continue to expand shelter capacity and provide critical services for unaccompanied children through calendar year 2014. If the number of children continues to increase, HHS will need additional resources in fiscal year 2015 but this supplemental provides necessary resources to respond to the immediate and urgent humanitarian crisis. The Senate level also allows HHS to better- manage this program and enter into contracts for shelter space and services. Without these funds, HHS would be forced to rely on more costly Department of Defense facilities and other very short- term emergency shelters. These emergency shelters can cost two to three times as much per child per day than HHS typical shelters. Short- term funding makes it more difficult for non- profit and faith- based organizations that actually provide services because they have to operate month- to- month with no guarantee of continued funding. Finally, less funding would also jeopardize funding for other refugee programs that HHS has been forced to divert funding from to pay for increased costs in the unaccompanied children program. Ensuring basic care for children and access to critical services After initial apprehension by DHS, HHS provides temporary housing and services for unaccompanied children, including medical care, mental health services, education, counseling, and basic legal services. HHS is tasked with caring for unaccompanied children to protect the welfare and best interest of the child. The supplemental ensures that these basic protections for children, many of whom are fleeing unthinkable violence, are maintained. Without additional funding, HHS will not be able to increase shelter capacity enough to keep up with the number children arriving in the United States. When this happens, as we have already seen this summer, children are forced to stay at border detention facilities intended for adults for extended periods of time until space opens up at an HHS- funded shelter. This situation is grossly inappropriate for children and puts a strain on DHS border security resources. Many of the children transferred to HHS are fleeing severe gang and drug violence in their home countries and seeking relief in the United States and to reunite with families already living here. Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador, where the vast majority of the children are from, are three of the most dangerous and violent countries in the world. Some organizations have estimated that approximately 60 percent of unaccompanied children are fleeing situations that could make them eligible for relief under U.S. and international laws.

Protecting existing programs and services for refugees Under current funding levels, HHS has diverted $94 million, a 47 percent cut, from other refugee programs to pay for sudden and dramatic increases in costs in the unaccompanied children program. HHS only made this decision after exhausting all other options under current law but it will nonetheless have a dramatic impact on refugees living across the United States. The President s supplemental request included sufficient funding to reverse this reprogramming of refugee program funds. The Senate supplemental requires HHS to reverse it, and provides adequate resources to do so. These refugee programs provide a variety of social services for refugees already living in the United States and support for states and school districts with large refugee populations. Organizations providing these services, largely non- profit and faith- based organizations, were planning on receiving this funding the end of this fiscal year. However, due to the sudden increase in costs in the unaccompanied children program, HHS just notified these organizations in June they would not be receiving this funding. That has left states and non- profit organizations, many already operating on shoestring budgets, with little to no time to plan for the cut in funding. Without additional funds for the unaccompanied children program this fiscal year, HHS has little choice but to divert funds from these critical programs. The United States has made a commitment to resettle refugees fleeing persecution, or a fear of persecution, due to race, religion, nationality, political opinion or membership in a particular social group. The supplemental will allow HHS to avoid making deep cuts to these critical programs and maintain that commitment. For Border Crisis Department of State & U.S. Agency for International Development: The bill includes $300 million and authority for State- Foreign Operations will enable the Department of State and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) to immediately address the contributing causes of migration from Central America, inform Central Americans of the dangers of the journey and support the safe repatriation and reintegration of the migrants from Central America. The emergency supplemental bill supports the Department of State and USAID programs by: Dismantling criminal gangs, combating other organized crime and violence (including domestic and sexual abuse), combating extortion, eliminating public sector corruption and fighting narcotics and human smuggling and trafficking; Strengthening social services, law enforcement and judicial system capacity, with an emphasis on community policing and community violence reduction programs; Developing child welfare services, including establishing shelters; Providing safe educational, vocational and technical training opportunities; Addressing obstacles to equitable economic growth and support job creation; and Expanding the activities of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in Central America. The Senate bill directs that $10 million be transferred to the Department of Justice to build investigative and prosecutorial capacity to fight crime, $3 million more than the President

requested. It also requires that not less than $1.5 million be transferred to the Inspectors General of the Department of State and USAID to conduct oversight of these programs. Funding levels provided by the bill include: $212.5 million under Economic Support Fund. Authority is provided to transfer funds to the Complex Crises Fund; $85 million under International Narcotics Control and Law Enforcement; $2 million under Diplomatic and Consular Programs to support media campaigns and public diplomacy outreach in Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras to discourage families from sending children on the dangerous journey; and $500,000 for Broadcasting Board of Governors for public service announcements targeted to local communities in El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras. ###