cloud surfing

Sandahl Bergman
dancer actress retired
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editor
rawclyde
!
cloud surfing

Sandahl Bergman
dancer actress retired
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editor
rawclyde
!
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by james gilbert
yuma sun
june 29, 2019
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The Yuma Sector Border Patrol unveiled a massive tent facility within the compound at the Yuma Station recently that will be used to process and house the unprecedented number of migrant families and unaccompanied children still arriving at the U.S./Mexico border.
“We have Border Patrol facilities that can handle processing and detention, but they are inadequate for this population and the amount of people that we are seeing,” Chief Patrol Agent, Yuma Border Patrol Sector, Anthony J. Porvaznik said in reference to the three stations within the sector. “This new facility is CBP’s commitment to bringing better conditions and more humane treatment to people that are taken into our custody.”
Porvaznik explained that the Yuma Sector, which secures 126 miles of U.S. border from the Imperial Sand Dunes in California to the Yuma-Pima County line, has been operating over capacity because so many migrants are entering the country illegally, turning themselves in to agents and asking for asylum.
The temporary tent facility, which is designed to hold up to 500 migrants, is weatherproofed and climate-controlled and will serve as holding facilities for parents with their children until they are transferred to ICE — or in the case of unaccompanied children, the Department of Health and Human Services — hopefully within 72 hours.
“Overall, this is just a much better space for Border Patrol agents to do their jobs,” Porvaznik said. “It’s also a much safer environment for the children in our custody until we can get them transferred.”
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Border Patrol agents guided members of the media through two of the multiple large “soft-sided” structures, one of which had dozens of mats used for sleeping piled up along one side. a guard shack in the center and a large screen TV connected to a DVD player.
Deputy Patrol Agent in Charge Humberto Guerra, who gave one of the guided tours, explained that there are four tents meant to house 125 migrants each. They are cleaned after each use and large enough for each person inside to have 60 square feet of space.
Another of the tents shown to media was the processing center, which featured several rows of benches, tables filled with computers and other electronic equipment, a row of refrigerators for water and other food items and an area with shelves of storage bins containing new clothing such as socks and underwear, nonperishable snacks and other hygiene supplies.
Upon entering the tent, all of which had fabricated flooring, agent Guerra pointed to a partitioned off area where medical personnel would screen migrants injuries and illnesses, explaining that it is also where every detainee’s intake will be conducted, which included running a records check, conducting interviews and entering their personal information.
Guerra also said the tent has separate shower sections for both men and women, each with multiple stalls, chemical toilets, baby-changing tables and sinks. Two additional trailers, filled with giant washing machines and dryers, will serve as laundry rooms. There were also baby cribs being stored nearby.
Porvaznik said while contract staff will do all the cleaning, laundry, meal preparation, assist with providing security around the premises, and maintenance, only Border Patrol agents will have direct contact with the detainee population.
“To do all the work that is needed we are hiring in the neighborhood of 180 people,” Porvaznik said. “Those are local jobs in the community that pay $18 an hour.”
To deal with the continuous overcrowding occurring within the Yuma Sector, the Border Patrol had to expand into a building and a partially outdoor area within its compound on Avenue A, by converting them into a makeshift detention area and a holding space.
The soft-sided facilities will remain in use as long as the migrant crisis continues along the border.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yuma_Sun
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old timer chronicle
editor
rawclyde

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by curt prendergast
arizona daily star
aug 14, 2019
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SAN LUIS — The first section of President Trump’s border wall in Arizona is rising near Yuma.
After years of crowds shouting “build the wall” at political rallies and countless condemnations of the wall as xenophobic or a “vanity project” for Trump, the wall has taken the shape of square, metal poles jutting 30 feet up from the ground in San Luis, a border town south of Yuma.
As early as this month, similar poles could rise along the Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge, Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument and across the San Pedro River.
Despite the wall being the centerpiece of the Trump administration’s immigration agenda, relatively few details about it were announced publicly. Instead, information has come in dribs and drabs from documents disclosed in a federal lawsuit and terse news releases.
Questions remain about whether a wall across the San Pedro River would have sluice gates to allow water to pass through, or whether the gaps between the poles would be big enough to let animals migrate on Cabeza Prieta and Organ Pipe.
The view from up close shows the wall in San Luis dwarfing the panel fencing it replaced, which stood 10 to 15 feet high.
A finger’s-length space between the poles allows Border Patrol agents to watch activity on the south side of the wall and lets air through, but little else. Metal plates on top of the poles are designed to thwart climbers. Tunnel diggers would have to go down about 6 feet, judging by the depth of an open trench dug for the foundation of the wall.
In contrast with the reddish coloring of shorter poles installed on the Arizona border over the last decade or so, the wall in San Luis is so dark it almost gives off a bluish hue.
So far, the wall stretches for about 10 miles along the border on the east side of San Luis.
When the 26-mile project is completed, it will extend farther east into the desert and farther west to the port of entry that connects San Luis with its Mexican counterpart, San Luis Rio Colorado.
On Wednesday morning, heavy machinery was flattening earth and removing panel fencing across the street from a neighborhood in San Luis Rio Colorado that fronts the border.
A guard wearing a cloth mask with a rifle slung by his side kept an eye on the construction from the U.S. side of the street a few miles east of the downtown port of entry.
Closer to the port of entry, drivers jockeyed for position in a seemingly endless line of vehicles as they waited to cross into San Luis, where they would be greeted by a hub of stores catering to Mexican shoppers and travelers. A woman sold hot dogs out of a gleaming metal cart and a few men sold trinkets to the waiting drivers. A handful of taxi drivers waited in the shade and called out to people walking into Mexico.
Schoolchildren were walking to and from the port of entry on Wednesday.
In a few months, Mexican workers will start walking through the port of entry on their way to the fields north of San Luis, where they will pick most of the lettuce and other leafy greens eaten during the winter months in the United States.
Just a few feet from the right-hand side of the vehicles waiting to enter the United States, but virtually invisible to the drivers, 10 rows of razor-sharp concertina wire were set on the ground on the north side of the fence.
This is the area where thousands of migrant families have climbed the border fence in the last year, and where the 30-foot wall eventually will be built.
The families generally surrender to agents and claim asylum after fleeing violence, corruption and poverty in Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador.
Due to a U.S. policy of allowing only a few people to claim asylum each day at a port of entry, nearly 1,000 people are on a wait list in San Luis Rio Colorado to get their turn to start the asylum process, The Associated Press reported in July.
In November, a group of 82 people, mostly families from Guatemala, climbed the panel fence. A few hours later, 83 people from Guatemala and El Salvador crossed in the same area after digging a hole under the fence, according to the Border Patrol.
Other cases involved hundreds of people at a time, including crossings along the nearby Colorado River.
More than 50,000 migrants traveling as families surrendered to Yuma Sector Border Patrol agents from October to July, according to Border Patrol statistics. That was more than four times the 10,700 apprehended from October 2017 to July 2018, which was a marked increase from the previous year.
“Coordinated smuggling of large numbers of Central Americans is taking place daily here in Yuma Sector,” Anthony Porvaznik, chief patrol agent in the Yuma Sector, said in an October news release. “They show flagrant disregard for the laws of our country and are exploiting our need for improved border wall infrastructure.”
The Border Patrol came under fire in recent months after reports from news outlets and government inspectors showed migrants were housed in overcrowded, filthy facilities in Texas.
In June, a tent-like structure was built outside the Border Patrol station in Yuma to house the families.
The “soft-sided facility” in Yuma, which cost $15 million and can house up to 500 people, will remain open for at least four months.
Porvaznik said plans are in the works to build a permanent structure at the Yuma station to house families.
During a visit by reporters and officials Thursday morning, the Yuma facility had considerable empty space, but that could change quickly if more migrant families come to the Yuma area.
Dozens of children and their parents whiled away the hours on gray sleeping mats. The rustle of thin, metallic blankets was almost as loud as the roar of air-conditioning units.
A few kids played hide-and-seek, but most of them were tucked in with their parents. They poked their heads up from blankets to watch the gaggle of reporters and officials. A few returned waves and smiles.
In a separate area of the structure, flyers listed languages for migrants to choose, a recognition that many migrants from Central America speak indigenous dialects, rather than Spanish.
Shelves lined the walls with bins containing baby food, baby bottles, diapers, wipes, sanitary pads, and other assorted items. A separate room had rows of showers.
Other shelves had instant noodles, animal crackers, goldfish crackers and snack mix, while more shelves held underwear, socks, T-shirts and assorted clothing.
Rows of computers were set up on tables to process the migrants.
A bin on one table was labeled “MPP complete,” a reference to the Migrant Protection Protocols used to make migrants wait in Mexico while their asylum claims are processed.
San Luis is slated to join several border towns in Texas and California where the program is already in place.
So far, public information on construction contracts for the border wall is a hodgepodge of vague locations and costs.
The Department of Homeland Security estimates each mile of 30-foot wall will cost about $20 million, but that likely will vary depending on terrain, road access and other factors.
Montana-based Barnard Construction Co. was awarded a $187 million contract to build 11 miles of wall in the Yuma area, the Army Corps of Engineers announced in April.
Southwest Valley Constructors, based in Albuquerque, was awarded a $646 million contract in May to build the wall in the Border Patrol’s Tucson Sector, which includes Cabeza Prieta, Organ Pipe and the San Pedro River.
Acting DHS Secretary Kevin McAleenan said Thursday in San Luis that Customs and Border Protection had developed a plan to build walls in areas “prioritized by agents on the ground, based on vulnerabilities on the border and the traffic that we’re seeing crossing the border.”
After an inquiry to CBP, a spokesman forwarded an Aug. 2 border wall status report that showed $6.2 billion has been appropriated by Congress or reprogrammed from the Defense and Treasury departments since January 2017 to build about 330 miles of fencing along the U.S.-Mexico border.
So far, about 55 miles of border fencing has been built.
The border had 319 miles of pedestrian fencing and 280 miles of vehicle barriers built before January 2017, according to the report.
The plan is to build 86 miles of primary wall, 24 miles of levee wall and 14 miles of secondary wall, as well as replace about 60 miles of dilapidated fencing and 144 miles of vehicle barriers.
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editor
rawclyde !
old timer chronicle
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YUMA — The sandy trails leading out of the Colorado River are covered in fresh footprints, some just a few hours old.
Along the larger, adult-sized shoe prints are smaller ones left behind by children. Some were toddlers who recently crossed with their parents into the United States to seek asylum.
The prints belong to some of the 27,000 migrant families and unaccompanied minors that U.S. Border Patrol agents in the Yuma Sector have processed in the first half of the fiscal year, a sector spokesman said.
It’s a dramatic increase, considering that agents in Yuma apprehended a little more than 26,000 migrants total in the entire previous year, according to statistics from U.S. Customs and Border Protection.
Border Patrol officials showed The Arizona Republic the area along the Colorado River where many of these migrants are crossing, largely unimpeded, in small and large groups.
On a recent morning, agents didn’t spot any migrants. But water levels are so low, that migrants, even children, can easily wade across the river.
Normally, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement would take custody of the Border Patrol-processed migrants and either keep them longer in detention or release them in Phoenix or Tucson.
But the Yuma Sector has been at or over capacity for most of the year, as the number of families arriving and turning themselves in to agents has risen.
So why start directly releasing migrants into Yuma now?
“Because everyone has now reached their capacity,” Kallinger said. “It’s not just us, it’s ICE (Enforcement Removal Operations), it’s the other facilities. They’ve reached their capacities.”
With no end in sight to the continue arrival of migrant families to Yuma, Border Patrol said they expect to continue releasing migrant families in the coming weeks, and maybe even months.
Faced with the possibility of a humanitarian emergency, nonprofit organizations in Yuma stepped up, opening a temporary shelter with capacity for up to 200 people. The immediate goal was to avoid having migrants dropped alone in the streets of Yuma.
On Thursday, Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen will visit Yuma as part of a three-day border tour. She’s expected to meet with border and immigration officials, as well as the nonprofits helping migrants.
Now that the shelter is up and running, these groups are slowly transitioning and preparing for the long run.
When the Border Patrol informed the Yuma Mayor Douglas Nicholls about the imminent release of families, he immediately called a meeting with a collection on nonprofit groups known as Community Organizations Active in Disasters, or COAD.
Members include the Salvation Army, the American Red Cross, Community Catholic Services of Southern Arizona and the Yuma Community Food Bank, among others.
The Salvation Army offered up an empty space they had available. In about a day, they worked with the other groups to set up cots, bring in portable showers and bathrooms, and even two mobile kitchens to provide three hot meals a day.
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“The biggest fear is running out of money and not being able to help out,” he said. “We’re relying heavily on our local donors, our statewide donors, our national donors, and having that compassion to help sustain this for as long as we possibly can.”
As of Sunday, the shelter has housed about 250 migrants. Shelter volunteers also help the migrants arrange transportation to where relatives who are sponsoring them are living. The families were given a notice to appear in court near those destinations.
Breazeale is not disclosing the location of the shelter and they’re not giving media access, he said, to protect the migrants and volunteers.
Initially, there was a concern in Yuma that the Border Patrol would begin releasing as many as 200 migrants per day. While it remains a concern for the future, agents so far have dropped off more manageable, smaller groups at several times throughout the day.
But as the releases continue and both Border Patrol and the nonprofits fall into a more familiar routine, there is a concern among some of the other organizations that resources could eventually run out.
“We have anywhere from 400 to 500 clients that come in here on a daily basis,” said Michelle Merkley, the director of operations for the Yuma Community Food Bank. “So now you got the influx of migrants that now need assistance”
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“We’re approaching our summer months and that’s our hard time here,” Merkley added. “Our shelves tend to get very bare in the summer, so we’re approaching that right now. So I’m going to start slowly running out of food here.”
In addition to the collection drive at the food bank, Breazeale said they will soon launch an online donation page. Those funds will go directly to the day-to-day operations at the shelter.
In October, Immigration and Customs Enforcement released hundreds of families into the streets of Yuma. But at that time, there was no coordinated response.
Immigration officials released them into the care of Catholic Community Services. But after some backlash from local and state officials, the agency decided to transport them to Phoenix and Tucson instead.
One of the main concerns they cited for the pushback was that Yuma, with a county population of over 200,000 people, had significantly fewer resources than Phoenix or Tucson. Most importantly, the city had fewer transportation options to get migrants out of the city and heading to their relatives’ destinations.
Those challenges remain unresolved.
Breazeale said they’ve been able to keep migrant families moving, whether by plane, or by train, or — as is more common because of the price and convenience — by Greyhound bus.
But even getting a ticket has been tough at times because immigration officials are also releasing migrants at other major connection points along the bus routes, such as Phoenix and Tucson.
“It congests those locations, so Greyhound doesn’t send a bus to Yuma,” Breazeale said.
The Salvation Army and other nonprofit groups said they will continue to help as best as they can.
The Border Patrol said they too are getting much-needed assistance to handle the arrival of large groups of migrants in Yuma.
The agency has been spending about $100,000 a month on humanitarian supplies for migrant families in their custody, such as diapers and baby formula.
Even though it has become the third busiest route for migrant families along the U.S.-Mexico border, the Yuma Sector has the second-lowest number of agents compared to the other nine sectors along the southwestern border.
The Border Patrol’s Kallinger said, at some points, up to half of their agents are pulled from enforcement duties to help care for migrants.
But reinforcements have begun to arrive.
Border Patrol said they’ve had a surge of 50 Border Patrol agents from other sectors around the country, as well as about 80 Arizona National Guard troops and 100 Marines assigned to help them.
More controversially, the sector’s deputy chief said 50 customs officers have been pulled from the ports of entry, although it’s unclear which ports, to help care for migrants, as part of a border-wide effort to reassign 750 customs officers.
The move has drawn criticism from business and residents along the border, and even Arizona’s two senators. As a result, wait times have increased at ports of entry along the U.S.-Mexico border.
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editor
rawclyde
!