Here鈥檚 a rundown of immigration and other news from the Texas border and beyond. Look out for a weekly recap from reporters at Texas鈥 public radio stations.
Few Texas ICE Detention Centers Are Administering COVID Vaccines
Immigration detention centers have been hotbeds for coronavirus outbreaks, but Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials do not have a clear vaccine strategy, .
The agency said it鈥檚 up to state and local governments to vaccinate people in their detention centers, and that a limited number of detainees have been vaccinated.
Meanwhile, the Federal Bureau of Prisons has administered more than 160,000 vaccine doses to people in their detention centers, in stark contrast to ICE.
Critics say ICE鈥檚 鈥渟cattershot approach鈥 is problematic, since people's ability to get vaccinated depends on where they happen to be detained.
In Texas, the Department of Health and Human Services has shifted the responsibility to vaccinate detainees back to ICE.
The department has approved two vaccine transfers from local health departments: 130 doses to the , and 500 to another unspecified facility.
Expulsions Continue At U.S.-Mexico Border
The U.S.-Mexico border remains closed to most migrants and asylum seekers under a public health order issued at the start of the pandemic. Since March, the federal government has been flying some migrant families hundreds of miles along the border, from South Texas to El Paso, and then expelling them back into Mexico.
As 四虎影院 reports, these daily expulsion flights have strained local shelters in Ciudad Ju谩rez. Shelter directors are trying to ensure that parents and children don鈥檛 end up on the street, and the city recently opened a new shelter in a municipal gym to accommodate more families.
Migrants desperate to reach the U.S. are turning to smugglers, who have become more brazen and are charging higher fees as the federal government has imposed tighter border restrictions, .
Yet even as many families and most single adults are turned back at the border, some trans migrants and other members of 鈥渧ulnerable populations鈥 have recently been allowed to enter the U.S. and pursue asylum. According to , the Biden administration has decided to make some 鈥渉umanitarian exceptions鈥 to the expulsion policy.
Families Separated Under 鈥榋ero Tolerance Policy鈥 Begin To Reunite
Four families who were separated at the southern border under the Trump administration鈥檚 鈥渮ero tolerance鈥 policy were allowed to reunite in the U.S. this week. They were the first families reunified through a task force formed soon after President Joe Biden took office.
More than 5,000 families were separated at the U.S.-Mexico border between April 2017 and June 2018, and more than a thousand remain separated. The reunification task force is working to bring back parents who were deported without their children through a process known as 鈥渉umanitarian parole,鈥 which will grant them temporary legal status in the U.S.
The families reunited this week included a mother who was separated from her then-15-year-old son at the California border in October 2017, .
captured the moment another mother reunited with her sons, who were 13 and 15 when border agents separated them at a holding cell in New Mexico.
The Biden administration may also bring whole families to the U.S. to reunite with separated children, rather than just parents, . That could include siblings and stepparents.
Mallory Falk is a corps member with , a national service program that places journalists into local newsrooms. Got a tip? Email Mallory at Mfalk@kera.org. You can follow Mallory on Twitter .
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