Obama’s intentional efforts bringing illegal immigrants to DC, Maryland and Virgina?

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King Obama sits on his throne in the White House
King Obama sits on his throne in the White House

 

WASHINGTON (WNEW/AP) — Baltimore may soon be the home to hundreds of illegal immigrant children who were taken into custody at the border.

WBFF-TV reports that the former Social Security building, which has been vacant for months, could be designated to house hundreds of children crossing the border illegally with no adult supervision.

Sen. Barbara Mikulski, D-Md., believes there is a better housing situation than the vacant Social Security building.

“We have told the federal government to look at other facilities in Maryland and to work with faith-based organizations that are experts in the field of child welfare,” she told WBFF.

Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake also believes there is a better solution.

“You know, God forbid, my child were separated from me, I would want them to be at the best possible facility and I don’t know if the Social Security Administration is that facility,” she told WBFF. “Even on a temporary basis, and that’s what we need to look at.”

A Senate appropriations panel voted Tuesday to give the Obama administration $2 billion it requested to handle the dramatic increase in child immigrants caught trying to illegally cross the Mexican border without their parents.

The money is more than $1.1 billion more than President Barack Obama initially asked for in his budget proposal for the Health and Human Services division that cares for and houses immigrant children caught alone at the border. It would effectively come from yet unspecified changes in mandatory programs.

The number of children found trying to cross the Mexican border without parents has skyrocketed in recent years. Between 2008 and 2011, the number of children landing in the custody of HHS’s Refugee Resettlement fluctuated between 6,000 and 7,500 per year. In 2012 border agents apprehended 13,625 unaccompanied children and that number surged even more — to over 24,000 — last year. The total is expected to be as high as 90,000 this year.

The HHS budget approved by the committee would also allow the government to move money from other areas if the flow of child immigrants grows beyond the latest estimate of up to 90,000.

The full Senate will have the final say on its version of the HHS budget. And the House has not yet acted on the issue.
Most children caught crossing the border alone are from Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala and cannot be quickly repatriated.

Under federal law, the children are supposed to be turned over to HHS within 72 hours. Most are then reunited with parents or other relatives already living in the United States.

Because of the massive influx of children this year, the Border Patrol has been forced to house up to 1,000 children in local patrol stations and recently has moved some young immigrants to Nogales, Arizona, where they are being quartered temporarily in a warehouse.

The administration has turned to the Department of Defense to use three military bases in California, Texas and Oklahoma to temporarily house other children once they are transferred to HHS care.


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