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Officials Scramble to Respond as Migrants Overwhelm Texas City

FAUlty Gator

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Oct 27, 2017
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The mayor of Eagle Pass said 2,500 migrants arrived in one day, part of a recent surge in crossings along the border that has taxed local, state and federal resources.

Thousands of migrants crossed into the small city of Eagle Pass, Texas, from Mexico on Wednesday, crowding onto the banks of the Rio Grande and under an international bridge in what officials described as an unfolding crisis.
The mayor, Rolando Salinas Jr., declared a state of emergency, seeking additional support to respond to an influx of migrants that reached 2,500 on Wednesday, overwhelming the city of 28,000 that has been a focal point of efforts by the state of Texas to deter illegal crossings.
The arrivals, including a large number of people from Venezuela, were part of a substantial increase in recent crossings along the southern border. The number of arrivals has reached levels not seen in months, taxing local governments in California, Arizona and Texas as large numbers of people claiming asylum have been released by Border Patrol agents directly into border communities.
That was the case in Eagle Pass, officials said, where the city’s lone shelter provider strained to accommodate the sudden arrival of so many people. Many were released onto the streets of the city.



“They are walking around the streets,” Mr. Salinas said in an interview, describing a situation similar to what the city experienced in 2021. “The hospital is getting swamped also.”
In El Paso, which has seen around 1,200 arrivals each day, officials have been scrambling to place migrants in shelters and also in local hotels.

More on U.S. Immigration​

Gov. Greg Abbott blamed the federal government for the arrival of large groups in Eagle Pass on Wednesday, saying Border Patrol agents cut razor wire that had been installed along the river by National Guard members operating under his direction. He said in a social media post that he had deployed additional guard members “to repel illegal crossings and install more razor wire.”
Mr. Salinas said it appeared that it was not federal officials but rather some of the migrants who were able to cut three sections of the concertina wire. “Once they cut it, it kind of opened the floodgates,” he said.
The crossings came after what had been several weeks during which a relatively small number of people had crossed.


Most of the migrants were being held temporarily under a bridge near a central city park that had served until recently as a staging ground for state police and National Guard members under Mr. Abbott’s border mission, known as Operation Lone Star.

The city recently ended its agreement with the state police to allow arrests for trespassing in the park though Mr. Salinas said he was thinking of declaring it private property again in order to resume those arrests. Part of Mr. Abbott’s border strategy has been to arrest migrants for criminal trespassing, a misdemeanor, as a means of deterring illegal crossings, though the approach has not appeared to have reduced the number of recent arrivals.
Eagle Pass has also been the setting of a legal confrontation between Texas and the Biden administration over Mr. Abbott’s deployment of a 1,000-yard floating barrier of buoys in the middle of the Rio Grande. The barrier has remained in place pending the court fight over its legality. It did not appear to have been a factor in the recent crossings.
Images of people huddled under a bridge in Eagle Pass recalled scenes in September 2021 when thousands of Haitian migrants crowded for days under a bridge in the city of Del Rio, Texas, a short drive north along the border. In that case, it took the Biden administration days to process the migrants or deport them.
On Wednesday, federal officials said that an additional 800 active-duty military personnel had been deployed to the border to help process the arrivals. And Alejandro N. Mayorkas, the homeland security secretary, said the federal government had extended temporary protective status for Venezuelan asylum seekers, protecting those who arrived before the end of July from removal and allowing them to work.

Such an action had been called for by migrant advocates and officials in major cities like New York who sought work authorization for the tens of thousands of Venezuelans who have arrived in recent months.
Mr. Mayorkas, in a statement, said the change would not apply to more recent arrivals, who, he said, would be “removed when they are found to not have a legal basis to stay.”
Two department officials spoke with reporters on the condition of anonymity during a hastily organized call late Wednesday. They said the administration also increased its holding capacity on the border to accommodate an additional 3,250 people, as border processing centers have reached capacity.
One of the officials attributed the spike in illegal crossings to continued instability in countries like Venezuela with authoritarian governments.
The Biden administration introduced new border policies and legal pathways this year that were intended to drive down the number of people seeking to enter the United States. There was a sharp decline in crossings once all of those measures were in place after May 12, a lull that lasted about six weeks. Crossings began to increase again in July and have risen significantly in recent days.

Mr. Salinas in Eagle Pass said he felt he had no choice but to declare a state of emergency to start receiving again the state resources that had pulled away during the decline in arrivals over the summer.
“We need the extra help, the funding,” he said. “We are losing. Every day the bridge is closed we are losing money,” he said, referring to the federal government’s announcement that it was closing one of the international crossings from Mexico, a major source of income for the city, to free up more resources to process migrants.
“They are coming in with no consequence,” he said of the migrants
 
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The mayor of Eagle Pass said 2,500 migrants arrived in one day, part of a recent surge in crossings along the border that has taxed local, state and federal resources.

Thousands of migrants crossed into the small city of Eagle Pass, Texas, from Mexico on Wednesday, crowding onto the banks of the Rio Grande and under an international bridge in what officials described as an unfolding crisis.
The mayor, Rolando Salinas Jr., declared a state of emergency, seeking additional support to respond to an influx of migrants that reached 2,500 on Wednesday, overwhelming the city of 28,000 that has been a focal point of efforts by the state of Texas to deter illegal crossings.
The arrivals, including a large number of people from Venezuela, were part of a substantial increase in recent crossings along the southern border. The number of arrivals has reached levels not seen in months, taxing local governments in California, Arizona and Texas as large numbers of people claiming asylum have been released by Border Patrol agents directly into border communities.
That was the case in Eagle Pass, officials said, where the city’s lone shelter provider strained to accommodate the sudden arrival of so many people. Many were released onto the streets of the city.



“They are walking around the streets,” Mr. Salinas said in an interview, describing a situation similar to what the city experienced in 2021. “The hospital is getting swamped also.”
In El Paso, which has seen around 1,200 arrivals each day, officials have been scrambling to place migrants in shelters and also in local hotels.

More on U.S. Immigration​

Gov. Greg Abbott blamed the federal government for the arrival of large groups in Eagle Pass on Wednesday, saying Border Patrol agents cut razor wire that had been installed along the river by National Guard members operating under his direction. He said in a social media post that he had deployed additional guard members “to repel illegal crossings and install more razor wire.”
Mr. Salinas said it appeared that it was not federal officials but rather some of the migrants who were able to cut three sections of the concertina wire. “Once they cut it, it kind of opened the floodgates,” he said.
The crossings came after what had been several weeks during which a relatively small number of people had crossed.

Most of the migrants were being held temporarily under a bridge near a central city park that had served until recently as a staging ground for state police and National Guard members under Mr. Abbott’s border mission, known as Operation Lone Star.

The city recently ended its agreement with the state police to allow arrests for trespassing in the park though Mr. Salinas said he was thinking of declaring it private property again in order to resume those arrests. Part of Mr. Abbott’s border strategy has been to arrest migrants for criminal trespassing, a misdemeanor, as a means of deterring illegal crossings, though the approach has not appeared to have reduced the number of recent arrivals.
Eagle Pass has also been the setting of a legal confrontation between Texas and the Biden administration over Mr. Abbott’s deployment of a 1,000-yard floating barrier of buoys in the middle of the Rio Grande. The barrier has remained in place pending the court fight over its legality. It did not appear to have been a factor in the recent crossings.
Images of people huddled under a bridge in Eagle Pass recalled scenes in September 2021 when thousands of Haitian migrants crowded for days under a bridge in the city of Del Rio, Texas, a short drive north along the border. In that case, it took the Biden administration days to process the migrants or deport them.
On Wednesday, federal officials said that an additional 800 active-duty military personnel had been deployed to the border to help process the arrivals. And Alejandro N. Mayorkas, the homeland security secretary, said the federal government had extended temporary protective status for Venezuelan asylum seekers, protecting those who arrived before the end of July from removal and allowing them to work.

Such an action had been called for by migrant advocates and officials in major cities like New York who sought work authorization for the tens of thousands of Venezuelans who have arrived in recent months.
Mr. Mayorkas, in a statement, said the change would not apply to more recent arrivals, who, he said, would be “removed when they are found to not have a legal basis to stay.”
Two department officials spoke with reporters on the condition of anonymity during a hastily organized call late Wednesday. They said the administration also increased its holding capacity on the border to accommodate an additional 3,250 people, as border processing centers have reached capacity.
One of the officials attributed the spike in illegal crossings to continued instability in countries like Venezuela with authoritarian governments.
The Biden administration introduced new border policies and legal pathways this year that were intended to drive down the number of people seeking to enter the United States. There was a sharp decline in crossings once all of those measures were in place after May 12, a lull that lasted about six weeks. Crossings began to increase again in July and have risen significantly in recent days.

Mr. Salinas in Eagle Pass said he felt he had no choice but to declare a state of emergency to start receiving again the state resources that had pulled away during the decline in arrivals over the summer.
“We need the extra help, the funding,” he said. “We are losing. Every day the bridge is closed we are losing money,” he said, referring to the federal government’s announcement that it was closing one of the international crossings from Mexico, a major source of income for the city, to free up more resources to process migrants.
“They are coming in with no consequence,” he said of the migrants

Look at all those Democrats they voted for.

Oh well...

 
I'm not afraid of migrants.

Never said you were.

But you know, I know, and everyone on here knows that your flippant attitude on display in post #5 would quickly change if thousands of migrants were milling around in your neighborhood and/or if 20 plus ESL students were dropped into your child's elementary classroom.

You'd think you guys would learn a thing or two as you watch these liberal mayors eat their words.
 
Maybe we should focus on passing some common sense legislation and not all of our efforts on genitalia, CRT and hunter biden. Just a thought.

The house passed a bill. Where is the D led senate and D president?

 
The house passed a bill. Where is the D led senate and D president?

I'm guessing you didn't actually read the article - the bill isn't any way common sense, at all. It's reverting to Trump-era policies that clearly didn't work. Caging and separating asylum seekers - a policy more or less continued by the current administration, with less separating I guess.

Here's my favorite summary:

“For decades, congressional Republicans have blocked efforts to update immigration laws, choosing to focus only on the border, believing if we can only be cruel enough, that will deter desperate people seeking asylum at our nation’s front door. That hasn’t worked,”
 
Seal the border. Make it well known the only way to get in is filing papers.

Destroy companies with fines that hire illegals.
 
I'm guessing you didn't actually read the article - the bill isn't any way common sense, at all. It's reverting to Trump-era policies that clearly didn't work. Caging and separating asylum seekers - a policy more or less continued by the current administration, with less separating I guess.

Here's my favorite summary:

“For decades, congressional Republicans have blocked efforts to update immigration laws, choosing to focus only on the border, believing if we can only be cruel enough, that will deter desperate people seeking asylum at our nation’s front door. That hasn’t worked,”
And the longer the Dems and the President bury their heads in the sand about what's happening at the border, the more reasonable all of these "trump era policies" look to those being impacted by the insane current approach to the border....which still includes cages, btw.
 
And the longer the Dems and the President bury their heads in the sand about what's happening at the border, the more reasonable all of these "trump era policies" look to those being impacted by the insane current approach to the border....which still includes cages, btw.
I mean, one of the main reasons they are coming here are because of US foreign policy in Central and South America over the last several decades. We helped contribute to their current conditions and bear some responsibility for that, no?

We need a hell of a lot more justices to expedite processing for those having to wait indefinitely.
 
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I mean, one of the main reasons they are coming here are because of US foreign policy in Central and South America over the last several decades. We helped contribute to their current conditions and bear some responsibility for that, no?

We need a hell of a lot more justices to expedite processing for those having to wait indefinitely.
Great. And we also need to make sure the border is secure and don't give every 22 year old male with neck tattoos a bus ticket to "wherever you want to go" as soon as they get here as long as they promise to come back for a hearing in 7 months. Might also want to admit that fentanyl is the number one killer and is pouring over the border with Chinese, Afghans, Senegalese and people from all over the world that may or may not want to fvck some shit up while they're here.
 
Maybe we should focus on passing some common sense legislation and not all of our efforts on genitalia, CRT and hunter biden. Just a thought.
Congress passed progressive Immigration Reform Acts in 1965 and 1986 (amnesty included). Those laws are being ignored and vilified. What's the point in passing more laws to ignore? Is it so difficult to simply enforce the law?
 
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Congress passed progressive Immigration Reform Acts in 1965 and 1986 (amnesty included). Those laws are being ignored and vilified. What's the point in passing more laws to ignore? Is it so difficult to simply enforce the law?
So the last time was almost 40 years ago, I'm guessing nothing has changed since then. Keep as is!
 
Great. And we also need to make sure the border is secure and don't give every 22 year old male with neck tattoos a bus ticket to "wherever you want to go" as soon as they get here as long as they promise to come back for a hearing in 7 months. Might also want to admit that fentanyl is the number one killer and is pouring over the border with Chinese, Afghans, Senegalese and people from all over the world that may or may not want to fvck some shit up while they're here.
7 months isn’t even a thing anymore. There are over 1.5M awaiting asylum. The wait time is estimated to be over 4 years on average. Does anyone really think they will be sent back to their original country after being here 4 years???

I know the Dem response is, we need more workers. I get it. But most of these asylum seekers aren’t cleared and legal to work. Meanwhile border states are suffering and picking up the massive tab. As we have discovered, sanctuary cities aren’t prepared or funded enough to handle the overflow from the overwhelmed border states.

Meanwhile, not as much as a peep from the White House. Our Press Secretary scoffs ad laughs off questions about the border.

This should be the biggest issue for the 2024 election cycle. Yet it won’t be. Dems are stuck on Jan 6. Republicans are stuck on stupid.
 
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Maybe we should focus on passing some common sense legislation and not all of our efforts on genitalia, CRT and hunter biden. Just a thought.
THIS! I'm an involved parent, I don't need the government's assistance in this regard. Lock down the eff'n border and do it without a bunch of "who's coming across" rhetoric. I DO NOT CARE who is crossing. ...get the situation under control.
 
So the last time was almost 40 years ago, I'm guessing nothing has changed since then. Keep as is!

What's changed is certain adminstrations abdicating their duties to enforce immigration law.

The states should file suit with the hopes that it goes to the Supreme Court and results in a ruling authorizing the states full authority to enforce immigration laws.
 

Instead, if Americans are serious about changing the situation at the border, we need to address the push and pull factors behind Central American migration. We need to acknowledge the reality of the U.S. economy (in particular, that it demands immigrant labor to work low-wage jobs) and work to construct new legal frameworks that reflect that reality. We need to target financial and logistical support to encourage Central American countries to address the poverty and inequality that fuel migration, rather than cutting foreign aid, as the Trump Administration did. We need to do all we can to end the pervasive gang violence that pushes so many migrants out of their homelands. And of course, we must continue to evaluate our own historical and contemporary role in creating the longstanding problems that are pushing Central Americans to migrate.
 
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What's changed is certain adminstrations abdicating their duties to enforce immigration law.

The states should file suit with the hopes that it goes to the Supreme Court and results in a ruling authorizing the states full authority to enforce immigration laws.
The brute force tactics that your people employed dont work either, hate to burst your bubble.
 
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And please let's have the media writing these stories call this what it is because words matter. These aren't migrants, these are illegal immigrants. Migrants are workers that travel legally in county seeking work, primarily in agriculture. Illegal immigrants illegally cross the border of a sovereign nation breaking the laws of that nation in the process.
 
I find it odd that the Dems love themselves “preventative measures” with everything else except for border security, fentanyl killing children and human trafficking.
Interesting, I was under the assumption that the current WH had record fentanyl seizures and trafficking arrests the last few years. Curious, where are you getting your talking points?
 
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