Current:Home > InvestBorder Patrol releases hundreds of migrants at a bus stop after San Diego runs out of aid money -ProfitPoint
Border Patrol releases hundreds of migrants at a bus stop after San Diego runs out of aid money
View
Date:2025-04-26 12:15:21
SAN DIEGO (AP) — Hundreds of migrants were dropped off Friday at a San Diego bus stop instead of at a reception center that had been serving as a staging area because it ran out of local funding sooner than expected, showing how even the largest city on the country’s southern border is struggling to cope with the unprecedented influx of people.
Migrants who previously had a safe place to charge phones, use the bathroom, eat a meal and arrange to head elsewhere in the U.S. were now left on the street as migrant aid groups scrambled to help out as best they could with makeshift arrangements.
Border Patrol buses carrying migrants from Senegal, China, Ecuador, Guatemala and many other countries arrived outside a transit center. Migrant aid groups said they would be bused from there to a parking lot where they could charge their phones and get a ride to the airport. The vast majority planned to spend only a few hours in San Diego before taking a flight or having someone pick them up.
“Are we in San Diego?” asked Gabriel Guzman, 30, a painter from the Dominican Republic who was released after crossing the border in remote mountains on Thursday. He was told to appear in June in an immigration court in Boston, where he hopes to earn money to send home to his three children.
Abd Boudeah, of Mauritania, flew to Tijuana, Mexico, through Nicaragua and followed other migrants to an opening in the border wall, where he surrendered to agents Thursday after walking about eight hours. The former molecular engineering student said he fled persecution for being gay and planned to settle in Chicago with a cousin who had been in the U.S. for 20 years.
“I’ve dreamed about this (moment) a lot, and thank God I’m here,” Boudeah, 23, said in flawless English.
Volunteers gave instructions in English, Spanish and French to small groups, all of them single men and women. They used translation apps for other languages.
“We’re going to cross the street together and line up,” a volunteer said into his phone, which then translated it into Hindi for a group of men from India.
“Tired from the road,” Alikan Rdiyer, 31, of Kazakhstan, said in Russian as he waited for instructions to give to a friend from Los Angeles who was going to pick him up. The Border Patrol gave him a notice to appear in immigration court in August 2025 in Philadelphia — a city he hadn’t heard of.
The transit center parking lot was full of cars, giving migrants nowhere to stand, and there were no public bathrooms. A taxi driver offered a ride to San Diego International Airport for $100, double what ride-sharing apps were charging. Some migrants dispersed in the neighborhood when volunteers were unable to reach them with instructions to wait on the sidewalk.
San Diego County has given $6 million since October to SBCS, a nonprofit formerly known as South Bay Community Services, to provide phone-charging stations, food, travel advice and other services at a former elementary school. The group aimed to keep it open through March, but Thursday was its last day.
San Diego is one of many local governments that have struggled to help migrants without sacrificing key services, including New York, Chicago and Denver. Like other border cities, migrants tend to stay in San Diego less than a day before moving on, but large shelters operated by Jewish Family Service and Catholic Charities have been full for months, giving priority to families.
Nora Vargas, chair of the San Diego County board of supervisors, steadfastly supported the migrant welcome center but said the county had to pause spending as it assesses damages from catastrophic January flooding and addresses homelessness and lack of health care among its residents. “We have to be financially prudent about it,” she said.
SBCS, which has come under withering criticism from some migrant advocacy groups, told the county that its services cost $1.4 million a month, said spokesperson Margie Newman Tsay. The county asked that it aim for $1 million.
“It’s not that funds ran out early, it’s that the funds were stretched as far as they could go,” Newman Tsay said.
Aid groups have given critical support to new arrivals, eliciting criticism from some quarters. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton threatened this week to sue and shut down Annunciation House, a decades-old organization that shelters migrants in El Paso. Paxton said the group might be “facilitating illegal entry to the United States.”
Ruben Garcia, Annunciation House’s director, gathered supporters at a news conference Friday to denounce Paxton’s tactics. “It is a full warning to other entities that also do the work of hospitality that they can very well be next,” he said.
SBCS said it had served 81,000 migrants in San Diego since Oct. 11. A report to the county showed it spent $750,000 on personnel through Dec. 24 and $152,000 on operating expenses, including shelter, transportation and security.
“I could have done a lot more with $6 million,” said Erika Pinheiro, executive director of Al Otro Lado, a migrant aid group that is assisting with street releases.
Vargas, who wrote President Joe Biden last week seeking support, defended SBCS’s performance and noted its previous work sheltering unaccompanied child migrants at the San Diego Convention Center in 2019.
“Nobody is perfect, especially when you’re trying to fill a gap from the federal government,” said Vargas, echoing a common view among big-city mayors.
From October to January, the Border Patrol released more than 500,000 migrants with orders to appear in immigration court. Migrant aid groups are generally able to provide temporary shelter, but street releases are not unheard of. The San Diego transit center was also the scene of large-scale releases last year.
San Diego has emerged as one of the busiest corridors for illegal crossings, with an average of 800 arrests a day in January. Many are from West Africa and Asia, with a daily average of more than 100 from China in January.
The Border Patrol told migrant aid groups to expect 350 street releases on Friday, said Pedro Rios, director of American Friends Service Committee’s U.S.-Mexico border program. The Border Patrol had no immediate comment.
___
Associated Press writer Valerie Gonzalez in McAllen, Texas, contributed.
veryGood! (43)
Related
- Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
- Brittany Snow and Tyler Stanaland Finalize Divorce 9 Months After Breakup
- Can Wolves and Beavers Help Save the West From Global Warming?
- Amazon Shoppers Swear By This $14 Aftershave for Smooth Summer Skin—And It Has 37,600+ 5-Star Reviews
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- In Atlanta, Work on a New EPA Superfund Site Leaves Black Neighborhoods Wary, Fearing Gentrification
- Weak GOP Performance in Midterms Blunts Possible Attacks on Biden Climate Agenda, Observers Say
- Why Jennifer Lopez Is Defending Her New Alcohol Brand
- Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
- European watchdog fines Meta $1.3 billion over privacy violations
Ranking
- Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
- In a Bid to Save Its Coal Industry, Wyoming Has Become a Test Case for Carbon Capture, but Utilities are Balking at the Pricetag
- At COP27, an 11th-Hour Deal Comes Together as the US Reverses Course on ‘Loss and Damage’
- What to know about the federal appeals court hearing on mifepristone
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Maryland Department of the Environment Says It Needs More Staff to Do What the Law Requires
- At the Greater & Greener Conference, Urban Parks Officials and Advocates Talk Equity and Climate Change
- 5 things people get wrong about the debt ceiling saga
Recommendation
Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
Do dollar store bans work?
Soaring pasta prices caused a crisis in Italy. What can the U.S. learn from it?
A ride with Boot Girls, 2 women challenging Atlanta's parking enforcement industry
Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
Slim majority wants debt ceiling raised without spending cuts, poll finds
Parties at COP27 Add Loss and Damage to the Agenda, But Won’t Discuss Which Countries Are Responsible or Who Should Pay
Intel named most faith-friendly company