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Thread: Border spending package seeks aid for migrants, but no money for Trump’s wall

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    Border spending package seeks aid for migrants, but no money for Trump’s wall

    Border spending package seeks aid for migrants, but no money for Trump’s wall

    The Senate Appropriations Committee plans to take up a supplemental spending bill to address the migrant surge next week



    Posted Jun 11, 2019 2:45 PM

    David Lerman
    @davidlerman2
    After rebuke from Jon Stewart, panel approves 9/11 victim billContractors would receive shutdown pay in next spending packageDemocrats’ Spending Bill Strategy





    Chairman Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., conducts a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing in Dirksen Building titled “The Secure and Protect Act: a Legislative Fix to the Crisis at the Southwest Border,” on Tuesday, June 11, 2019. Kevin McAleenan, acting secretary of Department of Homeland Security, testified. Graham said the Senate Appropriations Committee plans to take up a supplemental spending bill last week to address the surge of migrants at the U.S.-Mexico border. (Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call)


    The Senate Appropriations Committee plans to take up a supplemental spending bill next week to address the surge of migrants at the U.S. southern border, South Carolina Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham said Tuesday.
    The decision marked the first sign of movement on a stand-alone border funding bill, which President Donald Trump first requested on May 1. Republican leaders had tried to include the money in a $19.1 billion aid package for victims of natural disasters that cleared Congress last week, but Democrats objected, citing various concerns over family detention policies and information sharing about undocumented immigrants among federal agencies.
    [No funding for Trump’s border wall is included in House Homeland Security funding bill]

    Those concerns may still need to be addressed in any legislation that moves forward, but both parties have acknowledged the need to better cope with what many lawmakers say is a humanitarian crisis at the border that shows no signs of easing. “It’s far past time to get serious about this to solve this problem,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said Tuesday on the Senate floor, in urging speedy action.
    The Kentucky Republican said the panel’s markup would take place June 20.
    A Senate appropriations aide said the exact size and content of the package was yet to be determined. In May, the White House requested a total of $4.5 billion, including $3.3 billion for the Health and Human Services and Homeland Security departments mainly to provide shelter and other basic necessities for thousands of unaccompanied children seeking to enter the U.S.
    Trump’s supplemental request stopped short of seeking any additional money for a hotly contested border wall.









    Watch: Trump and May's full press conference








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    The biggest piece of the White House request, about $2.9 billion, would be used to provide shelter and other services for unaccompanied migrant children, including for an additional 23,600 beds. And HHS has warned that even that request may no longer be sufficient to keep up with the surge. As much as $1.4 billion in additional aid could be needed soon, it said.
    “Today, there are 13,347 unaccompanied children that are the responsibility of the federal government,” Sen. Missouri Republican Roy Blunt said last week. “All of the money to take care of those kids runs out sometime in the next 30 days. The appropriation is gone, the transfer authority is about to be gone, and there is no money to take care of these kids.”
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    Another $391 million would be provided for DHS to set up processing facilities and shelters for families as well as unaccompanied children to receive food and medical attention before being transferred to other locations.
    [Judge tosses House lawsuit over border wall spending]
    Information-sharing dispute

    But efforts to speed relief have been hampered by Democratic concerns over Trump administration detention policies and how information on migrants is shared. Democrats have sought limits on how much information HHS, which cares for unaccompanied children, must share with DHS.
    The House Appropriations Committee is considering a fiscal 2020 Homeland Security bill Tuesday that includes language that would bar information sharing that could lead to detention of migrants or the removal of potential sponsors. Exceptions would be allowed in cases when agency officials suspect sponsors have committed crimes such as human trafficking or sexual abuse.
    The Democrats’ fiscal 2020 Labor-HHS-Education bill, would go further and bar any HHS funds from being used to carry out the agency’s information-sharing agreement with DHS. That accord, reached in April 2018, lays out a process for HHS’ Office of Refugee Resettlement and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to jointly determine the suitability of potential sponsors to take custody of unaccompanied children. Democrats charge the deal prevents sponsors from coming forward for fear of detention and deportation.
    Trump’s supplemental request also included $1.1 billion for DHS, with $342 million to expand detention bed capacity, a provision opposed by Democrats. Another $530 million would be for personnel costs and increased transportation and housing expenses.
    An aide to Senate Appropriations ranking member Patrick J. Leahy said the Vermont Democrat had not seen the draft supplemental package being written by the GOP and couldn’t take a position on it. Leahy supports humanitarian assistance but other portions of the White House request are nonstarters, the aide said.
    Meanwhile House Majority Leader Steny H. Hoyer told reporters Tuesday that he’s hopeful a bipartisan deal on border funds can be reached this month, before lawmakers leave town for the July Fourth recess.
    “It is clear that we have humanitarian crisis at the border. We need to act on that. We need to appropriate significant sums ... to accommodate in a humanitarian way those folks who are fleeing oppression, violence, etc, etc,” the Maryland Democrat said. “The key issue is are we dealing with humanitarian or are we dealing with enforcement? They’re not the same. And there is substantial concern that they will conflate them. That’s the problem.”
    Kellie Mejdrich, Jennifer Shutt and Lindsey McPherson contributed to this report.Get breaking news alerts and more from Roll Call on your iPhone.

    https://www.rollcall.com/news/congre...kage-next-week



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  2. #2
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    We need to oppose this entire bill!
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  3. #3
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    NO TAXPAYER MONEY FOR ILLEGAL ALIENS.

    Process those UAC's on our military bases and deport them to THEIR military bases in their country within 48 hours.


    This whole operation needs to be overhauled.

    Let their military feed and take care of them and find their families back home! They are not our responsibility.

    All these illegal aliens should be processed by our military and then deported directly to THEIR military bases!

    Many have criminal records, many do not qualify to come here, we cannot allow foreign countries to dump their unwanted children over our border!

    Get this operation out of the private sector and let the military handle it.

    We are paying BILLIONS of dollars for these private companies to rip us off and they are part of the human trafficking business by keeping this pipeline open so they get rich!

    This will be a BIG deterrent to them coming here illegally if they know they will be handed over to the military here AND there!
    ILLEGAL ALIENS HAVE "BROKEN" OUR IMMIGRATION SYSTEM

    DO NOT REWARD THEM - DEPORT THEM ALL

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