Read in Spanish
What’s next along the border? More than 2. 7 million people were turned away during the 3 years of Title 42 restrictions.
At 20:59. Pandemic-era restrictions will be lifted on Thursday.
Journalists from the Republic of Arizona and USA TODAY news in the southwestern United States and Mexico. Check back here for common updates.
NOGALES, Sonora – No one was standing in line for passengers passing through the Dennis DeConcini Access Port when, despite everything, Title 42 was lifted at nine o’clock at night after more than three years.
“It’s a little disappointing,” said Chelsea Sachau, suggested leader of the Border Action Team of the Florence Immigrant and Refugee Rights Project.
Migrants can wait to see what happens in the hours and days after the restriction ends before presenting themselves at the port of entry, Sachau said.
People would likely have been discouraged from coming to the port of access because of the Biden administration’s final rule that would limit their asylum.
Flyers pronouncing CBP One’s new expanded features were recorded along passenger crossing fences.
—Jose Ignacio Castaneda
U. S. Sen. Kyrsten Sinema criticized Biden’s administration just before Title 42 expired on Thursday, reiterating her longstanding complaint that the government was unprepared for its effects along the border.
“The administration’s inadequate preparation to terminate Title 42 is unacceptable, and Arizona’s border communities are paying the cost,” Sinema, I-Arizona, said in a statement.
“At the end of Title 42, I will continue to push for more assistance for Arizona’s communities in need, and I will continue to work with (Sen. Tom Tillis, R-N. C. ) and other bipartisan partners to help secure our border, keep Arizonans safe, and make sure immigrants are treated fairly and humanely.
This reinforces considerations expressed through Sinema since Biden sought to end the pandemic-era fitness rule that has helped restrict immigration.
—Ronald J. Hansen
WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal ruling in Florida on Thursday blocked a Biden administration plan to release immigrants to the U. S. on “parole” because of an expected backlog once the emergency immigration restriction known as Title 42 is lifted. U. S. District Judge T. Kent Wetherell of the Northern District of Florida wrote that a Biden administration memo outlining the parole policy appeared to clash with a court ruling in a separate case earlier this year.
Wetherell, an appointee through then-President Donald Trump, said his order would be taken at 11:59 p. m.
“The southwest border has been closed for 2 years,” Wetherell wrote. “And it’s about to get worse because, at midnight tonight, the Title 42 order expires. “
– USA TODAY
TIJUANA — When the title expired Thursday night, Mexican police and military fanned out along the U. S. -Mexico border fence in Tijuana.
Members of the Mexican Federal Police, Mexican Army and National Guard can be seen Thursday night mounting patrol teams every few hundred meters in areas of Tijuana west of the San Ysidro-San Diego border crossing. The National Guard may also be note moving through Tijuana Thursday night.
Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador had pledged to deploy the military in the run-up to Title 42, meaning along Mexico’s southern border with Guatemala to stem the flow of migrants crossing Mexico.
While most of the attention along the border has focused on Ciudad Juarez, in the past, migrants attempted to cross the border fence in Tijuana, leading the U. S. to cross the border fence. The U. S. has deployed tear fuel on at least two occasions.
Some of the areas where Mexican infantrymen have set up guard include the component where a makeshift camp for asylum seekers had been set up on the U. S. side of the fence, 3 kilometers west of the San Ysidro crossing.
— Rafael Carranza
Despite the upcoming uncertainty related to Title 42, things on the U. S. side of the border in Nogales were largely working as they did last Thursday.
Children continued to play excitedly in schoolyards, just steps from one of the state’s busiest border crossings, as cars and pedestrians drove through the city.
People shopped, ate and drove through Mexico and returned with relative ease, thanks at least in part to a shorter-than-average wait time for most of the day.
If it weren’t for the occasional passage of a marked border patrol car, walking around town this afternoon might be absolutely oblivious to the approaching expiration of pandemic-era restrictions.
While Nogales Mayor Jorge Maldonado has been competing heavily with law enforcement and Mexican leaders, he doesn’t expect anything too out of the ordinary when Title 42 ends after all.
When he wakes up on Friday and looks at the entrance, he says he expects to see the “same tranquility” that regularly characterizes the daily flow of at the port.
Nogales, as well as other state borders, have been told to wait for migrants somewhere in the “small hundreds,” Maldonado said.
But of other people’s mad dash that many might imagine, he said the city’s limited processing capacity will likely mean long wait times, even for those who scheduled appointments through the agency’s app.
While the city has three ports of entry, the Port of DeConcini is the only processing center it has to serve all migrants.
“There’s no explanation for why you have another two or three hundred people online if you can’t treat them,” he said. “Stay in the shelters, eat, sleep, whatever, until your time comes. “
He also warned that those who show up instead of making an appointment will be served last.
Another explanation for why Maldonado is rarely very concerned is that Nogales resists many of the unrest it faces in other occupied border towns because it lacks some resources.
“We don’t have a federal courthouse. We don’t have all that here for all your needs,” he said. “None of those other people will stay here. “
Instead, the city is just one of many stops on a migrant’s journey, he said. Most of those arriving here have left within 48 hours.
And while he wasn’t particularly involved in the influx of people, he joined other city border leaders in calling for an emergency declaration for the region, largely as a precaution for residents.
“If you don’t do it and spend funds, you probably won’t be reimbursed,” he said. “There is no explanation as to why we spend taxpayers’ cash, network cash on the conditions imposed on us. “
— Lace closure
SOMERTON — The organization that helps migrants released through the U. S. Border PatrolThe U. S. Treasury mission in Yuma County reached capacity just hours before the scheduled lifting of Title 42.
The Regional Center for Border Health on Thursday helped 798 asylum seekers in Yuma reach their destinations.
Once the name 42 ends at nine o’clock in the evening. On Thursday night, the local government expects the number of other people crossing the border to increase significantly.
“We’re going to succeed in our ability and not in anything we can do,” said Amanda Aguirre, president and CEO of the Regional Center and a former Arizona state senator.
Its capacity to process migrants and buy them bus and plane tickets from Yuma is between 700 and 800 people.
At Yuma City Hall, Mayor Douglas Nicholls announced Thursday that the Border Patrol plans to release 141 migrants in areas of the county on Friday. Those who will be released are other people who have been screened and allowed to go through the judicial procedure to apply for asylum. , a procedure that can take years.
These 141 outings to the street are added to the 800 migrants that Aguirre expects to spend Friday in the regional environment.
During the press conference, Nicholls also asked President Biden to declare a state of national emergency at the border. He said Yuma County had noticed an increase from 300 to 1,000 other people crossing last month.
“We don’t need exits on the streets, however, the number of other people crossing the border will be overwhelming. We are already overwhelmed,” Aguirre said.
For the 141 people, Aguirre said the center would seek to treat them elsewhere with the Yuma Fire Department.
The Regional Border Health Center is also running to send some of the additional asylum seekers to Phoenix, while placing others in a hotel while they wait for other buses.
As a rule, the Regional Border Health Center sends buses to pick up migrants from detention centers.
Aguirre explained that because of Yuma’s lack of transportation — a bus stop with only one bank and only a few buses a day, and an airport with limited flights — street announcements increase difficulties for asylum seekers seeking to reach their sponsors.
Aguirre said sponsors buy tickets from them and the center will help them with more budget if they want more cash for tickets.
-Sarah Lapidus
ST. LOUIS (AP) — About a hundred more people crammed under white tarps Thursday afternoon, lining up for care through the U. S. Border Patrol. U. S.
Most were men of other ages. They had all been standing in the heat of Yuma County for hours. By 3 p. m. , it was 86 degrees and some of them had been waiting for several days.
The migrants were on the other side of Trump’s 30-foot wall, drinking from water bottles left behind by volunteers from the AZ-CA Humanitarian Coalition. The smell of sweat combined with the hot, dusty air.
In teams of about thirty people, Border Patrol agents took migrants’ passports and photographs of their faces before loading them onto buses to take them to processing centers.
Farmland and bumpy roads stretched in front of migrants to Yuma.
The migrants described how they had stayed in those tents the night before in sub-zero temperatures. The bloodless forced them to fetch firewood to keep them and the children warm. Some other people had been there for 4 days and others had just arrived. In the morning, the migrants said there were about three hundred more people, including women and young people.
Some men wore button-down shirts with jeans, others in T-shirts and others in sweaters. Most had backpacks. All lacked shoelaces, as requested by Border Patrol agents.
After spending hours and days huddled under the white tarps, many were audibly disappointed when the Border Patrol told them they were changing shifts and it would take them another 3 hours.
“Sit down, but stay where you are,” a Border Patrol agent told them.
-Sarah Lapidus
With the expiration of Title 42 tonight, the U. S. House of Representatives will be able to move forward. The U. S. government passed the Secure Borders Act of 2023, the Republican bill on immigration and borders. The law, among other things, would require U. S. Customs and Border Patrol to do so. The border wall.
The Arizona congressional delegation voted along the lines, all Republicans (Reps. David Schweikert; Eli Crane; Andy Biggs; John Ciscomani; Debbie Lesko and Paul Gosar) voted in favor. Only two Republican members in the entire House voted against the legislation: the House representatives. John Duarte, R-Calif. , and Thomas Massie, R-Ky.
“My home state of Arizona is being hit by the onslaught of illegal invaders,” Gosar said in a statement. “I have visited the border countless times. I witnessed firsthand the destruction caused by this anarchy. . . With this vote, Republicans have done what Joe Biden refuses to do: protect the border, end lawlessness, and protect America. I am proud to have voted for the Secure Borders Act.
Biggs said the law “better secures our southern border, disables incentives for illegal immigration, restores order and integrity to our immigration system, and provides border patrol officers with the resources and legal equipment to take back the border. “
All Arizona Democrats (Reps. Ruben Gallego, Greg Stanton and Raul Grijalva) voted for him.
“There is no universe in which this bill is a serious solution to reform our immigration system,” Gallego said in a statement. “Comprehensive reform means addressing the humanitarian crisis, cracking down on smugglers, and reforming the asylum procedure so that valid applicants don’t wait years in limbo. “
Grijalva blamed “the immigration formula that Congress has failed to fix. “
The Secure Borders Act of 2023 will pass the Senate and face a veto risk from President Joe Biden.
—Tara Kavaler
NOGALES, Sonora — Shipping container doors topped with accordion ropes and steel poles blocked 3 vehicle lanes in the United States at the Dennis DeConcini Port of Entry Thursday afternoon. Two of the beige boxes flanked the lane reserved for cars entering Mexico.
Graffiti sprayed on one of the boxes read “bad trash” in ambitious black letters indicating “property of the U. S. military. “U. S. The accordion string reels were stacked from floor to ceiling in one of the harbour openings.
“CBP has taken several steps to maintain the safety of heavy traffic from our services, adding slowing or preventing traffic flow, implementing port reinforcement infrastructure, and deploying officers to ensure the safety and integrity of the port of entry,” said John Mennell. , U. S. Customs and Border Protection Public Affairs SpecialistThe U. S. Department of Homeland Security for Arizona in a written statement.
The accordion cord has been in port since May 3rd, when a photo of the thread was posted on Facebook through someone waiting to pass.
There also appears to be an increased Mexican army presence near the roundabout steps at the access point. The overall picture at the port of access was otherwise calm with general operations underway.
—Jose Ignacio Castaneda
About 50 migrants arrived at the Vineyard Community Church shelter in Gilbert Thursday morning, most of them traveling for weeks from Peru, Colombia, Ecuador and the Dominican Republic.
Most said they came after fleeing harmful circumstances, extortion, threats, monetary and political instability, and a lack of employment opportunities. Many said they had been waiting to enter the US for months.
At the shelter they won water, food, coffee, clothes and a toiletry bag.
Magdalena Schwartz, shelter director and pastor of the church, said the number is about the same as she has noticed in recent weeks.
The shelter opened to receive migrants in October 2018 and has since won them weekly on Thursdays and Fridays, Schwartz said.
“Here we get them, we continue with the whole asylum procedure, we give them all the instructions, we give them food, we give them coffee, we give them what we can,” Schwartz said.
Schwartz said he said the shelter is not ready for the end of Title 42, and suggested that the state government provide more investment to local organizations to better help others who come seeking help.
He also asked the network with donations, adding clothes.
“We have very few garments because the budget is enough,” Schwartz said. “A lot of those other people come with clothes from 3 or two months ago that haven’t been changed, and they really appreciate being able to wear new clothes and feel clean. “
—Laura Daniella Sepulveda
Asylum seekers who were dropped off at Mesa’s Cristina Good Shepherd Church ate a spaghetti lunch served through volunteers, showered and donned new clothes provided through the shelter on Thursday. Hector Ramirez, the pastor, and volunteers have taken some families to the airport or local hotels for the night since the church stopped offering shelter for the night.
None of the families who spoke to The Arizona Republic said they had scheduled their trip to the U. S. Title 42 ended. They said they were fleeing domestic violence, threats from organized criminals and excessive poverty in their communities in Ecuador, Bolivia, Peru and Colombia.
—Daniel Gonzalez
Several small communities in the state are joining the refrain of Arizona politicians and institutions calling for a federal emergency declaration to deal with the end of Title 42.
Those in Douglas, Nogales, St. Louis and Somerton, as well as Yuma County supervisors, are requesting a federal emergency declaration.
“A federal emergency declaration will need to be considered without delay to address the demanding situations that accompany the termination of the provisions of Title 42,” St. Louis Mayor Nieves Riedel said in a news release.
“The large number of migrants can easily overwhelm the capacity of border gym operations to provide transitional shelter and basic medical services. We are concerned that those who are released or enter our city will not have the transportation to get to larger cities with larger cities of accommodation, such as Yuma or Tucson.
Statements from other communities echoed the concerns.
San Luis has about 36,000 inhabitants.
“Our committed men and women in our police and fire departments are under great pressure,” Nieves continued. “Most importantly, we cannot leave our citizens without their help in emergency situations.
— Staff reports
Luis Enrique Chavarria and Jose Palacios are two Nicaraguan immigrants who met Thursday at Phoenix’s Greyhound terminal while waiting for the bus that would take them to their destination, one in Colorado and one in California.
In addition to being from the same country, the two have other things in common: They traveled to the U. S. -Mexico border, applied for asylum and obtained a government work permit while their immigration cases were processed.
As of noon Thursday, the Greyhound Terminal at Buckeye and 21st Street was operating with general weekday activity, with about 30 more people waiting for the bus.
Chavarria and Palacios were released in the United States last month. They head to states where their loved ones live.
Both are in favor of the United States granting asylum to migrants fleeing their country, they have combined opinions on ending Title 42.
“It’s very difficult, you risk your life to adopt this adventure that ends badly,” Chavarria said. “I think finishing Title 42 would be motivating other people to come, hit the road without imagining what awaits them. “
Chavarria, 21, who was a professional soccer player in Nicaragua, said that in Mexico he had to travel in a van with about three hundred other people. many who can’t,” he said.
Palacios, 35, who worked picking crops in Nicaragua, said he had a circle of family and friends who dreamed of traveling to the United States in search of a better life.
“There is no other choice. In Nicaragua you don’t have the government’s, there are no cadres, a lot of crime. I had to leave my wife and daughters to seek a better life,” Palacios said. “I perceive migrants because I am one of them, and I am in favor of welcoming them to the United States, giving them entry because all we need is to paint and have a better life. “
—Javier Arce
Pedro De Velasco, director of education and advocacy for the Kino Border Initiative, has warned migrants who oppose scammers close to Nogales’ access problems to take advantage of the update in U. S. policy.
Kino Border Initiative officials have already obtained reports of immigrants receiving calls from others claiming to be at U. S. Customs and Border Protection. To the U. S. or at the consulate asking them to verify their appointment with CBP One.
De Velasco suggested migrants in a city corridor at the migrant shelter not make fake calls while applying for asylum through the government’s application.
—Jose Ignacio Castaneda
NOGALES, Mexico — News of the sunset of Title 42 was greeted with a circular of applause from about two hundred migrants who had gathered at the Kino Border Initiative migrant shelter in Nogales, Sonora, Thursday morning.
Shelter officials scoured the city’s corridor to inform migrants about the end of the border limitation Thursday night as they briefed them on President Joe Biden’s new rule that would seriously limit their asylum.
The final rule would require migrants to seek and be denied asylum in a country they passed through en route to the U. S. -Mexico border.
In the past, some migrants had asked shelter officials if they could report to the Dennis DeConcini Port of Access when Title 42 expires at 8:59 p. m. m. in Arizona.
—Jose Ignacio Castaneda
TIJUANA, Mexico — A makeshift camp with migrants waiting to be processed by the U. S. Border Patrol. The U. S. Navy has emerged about 2 miles west of San Ysidro’s access port in San Diego.
The camp is located in the border domain on the U. S. side, between the two border fences that separate San Diego from Tijuana.
It’s unclear how many migrants camped out, but authorities in Tijuana estimated there were 500 people.
Makeshift tent tarps or mylar steel blankets covered the secondary border fence.
Another organization sat on the dirt floor, waiting for further instructions a few meters south of the fence.
As of Thursday morning, more than a dozen marked and unmarked Border Patrol cars were at the camp, along with agents. CBP helicopters also flew overhead several times.
Border patrol vans stopped at the camp to pick up smaller teams of migrants, but it was unclear what would happen to the larger group.
A few hours before the end of runway 42, the scene in San Diego resembled that of El Paso as migrants waited to be served.
—Rafael Carranza
Arizona’s congressional delegation took to Twitter to voice their opinion on the completion of Title 42.
Rep. Gosar, R-Ariz. , tweeted that the border would be flooded with immigrants at the end of Title 42. He wrote: “The border states will have to repel the invaders as is their right.
Reps. Andy Biggs, R-Ariz. , and Debbie Lesko, R-Ariz. , spoke in favor of the Secure Borders Act of 2023, the Republican immigration and border bill expected to pass the House on Thursday.
Rep. Greg Stanton tweeted a letter he took the initiative to write with the NDP Coalition to President Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif. , and Minority Leader Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, D-N. Y. , voicing opposition to the GOP bill and calling for a bipartisan approach to immigration. Stanton is the chairman of the coalition’s Immigration and Border Security Task Force.
The senses. Kyrsten Sinema, I-Arizona, and Mark Kelly, D-Arizona, said Arizona would be the worst part of the Title 42 finale, and that they have pushed and will continue to push Biden’s management to provide more assistance in Arizona.
Rep. Ruben Gallego, D-Arizona, at the border Tuesday and spoke to Politico.
“Listen, we are about to encounter a very serious era in two days. I think right now we literally deserve to put an emergency declaration on the table,” Gallego said, according to a transcript provided by his staff. “I think it’s going to help this domain a lot. I think talking to mayors and nonprofits in the domain is something that I think can be a more useful help in dealing with the scenario we’re seeing on the ground.
—Tara Kavaler
A Department of Homeland Security bus stopped in the parking lot of Good Shepherd Christian Church — Good Shepherd Christian Church — in Mesa at 8:19 a. m.
A total of 32 asylum seekers got off the bus, all families with children. Hector Ramirez, the pastor, stood in the parking lot to greet the asylum seekers in Spanish.
“Welcome,” Ramirez said.
Asylum seekers arrived here from Argentina, Peru, Ecuador, Bolivia, Paraguay, Colombia, Brazil and Angola.
The number of asylum seekers and the countries they come from is what the church receives every Thursday. He expects the number of asylum seekers left at the church to triple by next Thursday.
Article 42 expulsions have mainly affected asylum seekers from Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Cuba and Venezuela.
As a result, Ramirez said he hopes to see more asylum seekers from those countries left at the church once the Title ends.
Most asylum seekers only stay in church for a few hours or all night until they or their loved ones in the United States can buy plane tickets to their final destination, in other states.
After arriving at the church, Ramirez explained why they were there.
“They’re in the United States,” Ramirez said inside the church’s sanctuary, as travel-weary asylum seekers sat in chairs, many with small children and babies. “You are prisoners. They are free. “
Asylum seekers received hot coffee, juice and sandwiches for breakfast. They sat at long white plastic tables and texted with updates.
Ramirez also thronged asylum seekers outside the church to pray. He warned that they would face many demanding situations in the United States to seek asylum, and asked God to protect them. Some parents cried.
—Daniel Gonzalez
More: How Phoenix’s humanitarian teams are heading into the end of Title 42
Nogales: Nogales city officials have suggested the Biden administration signal a federal emergency as the network struggles to control the surge in immigrant arrivals in the final hours of Title 42.
The declaration would reduce red tape and give the federal government the ability to supply the people with the resources, workforce and infrastructure they need, according to a letter from Nogales Mayor Jorge Maldonado.
“I’m incredibly proud of the work we’ve done and will continue to do to mitigate the effect of this wave of migrants, but with what we have now, I know it’s not enough,” he said.
“That’s why the option of a federal emergency declaration deserves to be explored. “
—Jose Ignacio Castaneda
DOUGLAS — As street releases of migrants begin in southern Arizona before Title 42 is lifted, medical providers were also preparing for a surge in migrant numbers.
“There is coordination and communication at the local level,” Chiricahua Community Health Centers said in a statement.
The physical care provider operates clinics in Douglas and Cochise counties.
“We’re all looking to perceive what can happen and be as prepared as possible under the circumstances,” Jonathan Melk, executive director of Chiricahua Community Health Centers, said in an interview with KOLK News 13.
He reiterated that there are not enough physical care providers to serve the local community, who will do what they can for the influx of immigrants, but would want help.
“If there was something else I wanted, a greater effort or a more sustained effort, then we would want help with that,” he said.
An extra effort can come with their cellular clinics, which will charge $5,000 per day to operate.
According to a statement released through Chiricahua, Douglas will be used as a “transit point” where asylum seekers will receive transportation to the Casa Alitas migrant shelter in Tucson, run by Catholic Community Services of Arizona.
“Our current understanding is that they plan to release about two hundred people a day and they already have a beta verification of the procedure through which they organize street exits and direct other people to immigration and inform them that there will be a bus in the Walmart parking lot. . to take them to Tucson,” Chiricahua said in the statement.
Although immigrants are required to take the bus, according to the physical care provider, almost all have accepted the offer of transportation.
Douglas Mayor Donald Huish said that while there are no long lines of migrants crossing the border into Agua Prieta, the Mexican city adjacent to Douglas, there are about 6,000 more people in Hermosillo, who are expected to head to Nogales or Agua Prieta in the next few days.
-Sarah Lapidus
What is Title 42?What is Title 8?Here’s what you want to know about U. S. border policies. U. S.
YUMA — Yuma said it is working with federal, state and regional partners to prepare for the expected influx of immigrants after Title 42 is lifted Thursday night and replaced once again with the Title 8 immigration enforcement procedure.
According to the city, Yuma County sees more than 1,000 immigrants crossing the border every day. This peak number of other border crossers prompted Mayor Douglas Nicholls to consider an emergency proclamation.
Those who entered the U. S. U. S. Homeland Security vehicles in Yuma were transported out of the county through the U. S. Department of Homeland Security. The U. S. Department of Homeland Security and the Regional Center for Border Health.
However, after the completion of Title 42, the Yuma Border Patrol sector is expected to be even busier and successful in Capatown. as well as humanitarian organizations to “respond to the humanitarian crisis. “
“The town has no investment for transportation, food and lodging for migrants and should it wish to provide services, it would seek reimbursement from the appropriate state and federal agencies,” Yuma said in a press release.
The town responded to citizens who feared the town would use the Yuma Community and Readiness Center as a transitional domain for migrant release, noting that it had been evaluated for that purpose, but that “that’s no longer an option. “
-Sarah Lapidus
YUMA — Early Thursday morning, more than a hundred more people took cover to become a border patrol in a breach in the wall on the U. S. -Mexico border.
People stood up solemnly in line with exhaustion etched on their faces.
People of all ages were present: parents with infants and toddlers, several older people, some older teens, and many young and middle-aged adults. Some wore winter jackets and hats, others wore jeans and sweatshirts. Quick in the morning, dressed in shorts and sandals to put on.
“Pregnant,” he yelled at the Spanish-speaking agent. He took her to the front of the line.
Border Patrol agents led teams of others to a lighted domain along the wall. They made them remove their shoelaces, put their documents in plastic bags and photographed them. They were then loaded onto white buses to take to the processing plant, registering them before loading them onto the bus.
By 3 a. m. , five buses had arrived and taken another 40 people each. There were at least 20 countries represented that night with a variety of languages spoken, in addition to Spanish, Chinese, French and Nepali, among others. After the buses departed, other people crossed the vehicle barrier, waiting their turn in line.
-Sarah Lapidus
NOGALES, Sonora — Many others waiting in Mexico’s border communities have fled their home countries because of poverty, gang violence, political violence and climate change.
The Kino Border Initiative caters to many other people per day and can accommodate up to 85 people who are allowed to stay in their shelter for up to 10 days. Assistance and therapy. Many come to use the shelter’s Wi-Fi to request appointments on the CBP One app to enter the U. S. They must be in the U. S. and file their asylum applications.
Brayan Martinez, 24, from Colombia, escaped after being forcibly recruited by armed teams in Bogota.
“I got scared, so I came here. They killed two of my uncles,” he said in an interview last week. They raped him, he said, and he was afraid to kill him. One day he discovered an opportunity and escaped.
Martinez said he tried to get an appointment on the CBP One app, kept failing and was shown one error message after another.
He said he hoped he could help him.
“I don’t need to go back. I’m afraid to pass,” Martinez said.
-Sarah Lapidus
TUCSON — Tucson Border Patrol’s lead patrol officer said Monday that the company is “incredibly prepared” for the end of a pandemic-era border restriction days before it expires.
John Modlin, lead patrol officer for the Tucson sector of the U. S. Border PatrolHe detailed how the company is preparing Monday at an event at Davis-Moshan Air Force Base. his sunset is “concerning” and he said capacity is running low at Arizona Border Patrol detention facilities.
“It’s hard to perceive what it’s like for us,” Modlin said. “I think we’re as prepared as possible for that. “
U. S. officials estimate migrant encounters at the U. S. -Mexico border will rise to as many as 10,000 the day the restriction is lifted.
There have been 146,301 migrant encounters through Tucson’s migrant domain so far in fiscal year 2023, which began in October, according to CBP data. Leaving about 19% from the same time last year, according to CBP data.
—José Ignacio Castañeda Pérez
Immigrants seeking asylum in the U. S. U. S. officials will have to use the government’s new CBP One app to schedule electronic appointments with border officials after Title 42 is lifted at 8:59 p. m. m. of Thursday.
However, the app has gotten negative results since its launch through the Biden administration.
Learn more about the legal, technical, and critic considerations that critics have raised about enforcement in this report.
—José Ignacio Castañeda Pérez
Maricopa County Supervisor Thomas Galvin wrote to President Biden on Wednesday requesting more emergency resources for the region to cope with the expected increase in the number of other people crossing the border.
“Unfortunately, for Arizona in general and Maricopa County in particular, the federal government is needlessly creating a humanitarian challenge with very real consequences for the economy and the protection of our communities that are still recovering from the social effect of the pandemic. “” Galvin wrote.
“If the federal government’s plans are not met, before there is an expected increase in migration, it will obviously exacerbate an already dire situation. It’s problematic, at least in terms of smart governance and, at worst, it’s a humanitarian crisis in the making. “.
He said communities in the county deserve to be safe “and immigrants will have to be treated fairly and humanely,” and that county citizens deserve “nothing less” than more emergency resources to make sure that happens.
—Ryan Randazzo
Ten county sheriffs met Tuesday with Gov. Katie Hobbs to discuss considerations that ending Title 42 could raise statewide safety concerns if large numbers of other people cross the border.
According to the Arizona Sheriffs Association, one fears that human and drug trafficking cartels could take credit for a chaotic situation.
“For decades, the federal government has failed Arizona with its failed border security attempts,” said Arizona Sheriffs Association President and Yavapai Sheriff David Rhodes. the country combined. We want resources to fight drugs and human trafficking. Our message to Governor Hobbs is transparent and simple: help is needed.
— Republic of Arizona personnel
Wondering about the turmoil surrounding the end of name 42, which is due at 8:59 p. m. m. from Thursday?
U. S. border officials U. S. officials have used the public fitness policy, which was enacted during the COVID-19 pandemic, to temporarily deport migrants nearly 3 million times.
Since its implementation, asylum seekers hoping to enter the United States have been blocked. The Biden administration is preparing for an increase based on this pent-up call at the border.
José Ignacio Castañeda Pérez, border journalist of the Republic, gave you an extensive course on the name 42 with this explanation: “What is the name 42 and how far does it end?U. S. border immigration policy, he explained. “
—Dan Nowicki