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Oh look, Trump dropped the ball

He was very busy spreading his big lie and ignoring the pandemic so how could his administration possibly have time to deal with the surge of migrants that was already coming over the border? The Biden transition team were worried but Trump and his henchmen did nothing. If I didn’t know better, they were happily setting up an emergency:

In early December, the Biden transition team and career government officials began sounding the alarm on the need to increase shelter space for migrant children, whom they expected would soon be crossing the border in large numbers, but the Trump administration didn’t take action until just days before the inauguration, according to two Biden transition officials and a U.S. official with knowledge of the discussions.

“They were sitting on their hands,” said one of the transition officials, who does not currently work for the Biden administration and spoke on the condition of anonymity. “It was incredibly frustrating.”

The Biden transition team made its concerns about a lack of shelter space known to Trump officials both at the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Homeland Security, laying out the need to open an influx shelter in Carrizo Springs, Texas, and to issue what’s known as a “request for assistance” that would start the process of surveying new sites for expanded shelters, according to the transition officials.

It was not until Jan. 15 that then HHS Secretary Alex Azar issued the request for assistance, which started the multi-week process of surveying and choosing new sites. The Biden administration opened the Carrizo Springs facility on Feb. 22 and announced this week that it would be expanding the capacity of that site.

As of February, HHS was only able to use about half of its congressionally funded capacity because of Covid-19 protocols and a shuttering of facilities under the Trump administration.

Because of HHS’s extremely limited capacity, unaccompanied children are now backlogged in overcrowded Border Patrol stations, reaching a record high of 5,200 children in custody last week, with hundreds held past the three-day legal limit.

DHS and HHS did not respond to requests for comment.

The transition official said the need to open more shelter space was clear in December 2020, based on a growing trend of unaccompanied minors crossing the border that began to emerge in late fall, and it was communicated to Trump officials in multiple meetings, multiple times a week.

“In a transition team, you don’t have hold of the buttons of power. You can advise, you can strongly direct, you can strongly recommend, but at the end of the day, the outgoing administration was responsible for action and they just didn’t take it. They gave no reason,” the Biden transition official said.

Former acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf told NBC News the outgoing administration warned the Biden transition team that rolling back tough immigration policies like “Remain in Mexico” for asylum seekers and stopping construction on the border wall would lead to increased migrant flows.

A former senior Trump administration HHS official said that when Trump left office, “we were confident we had enough beds to handle any pre-existing surge from the last 20 years.”

At a cost of $250 per bed per day, the Trump administration had 13,000 beds and thousands were empty at that time. The administration was hesitant to expand beyond what it needed, the former Trump official said, but it did not account for Covid-19 social distancing restrictions that would keep facilities from using every bed available.

But a U.S. government official who served under both the Trump and Biden administrations said non-political staff also brought up the need to open more space. The official said it was “irresponsible of the Trump administration not to listen to us when we were throwing up red flags.”

“The writing was on the wall,” the U.S. official said. “It was not at this level yet, but if the number of beds needed was going up, what do we do?”

The capacity of HHS’s Office of Refugee Resettlement was drastically reduced in 2020 as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic. Not only were existing shelters spacing children further apart, thereby decreasing the number of available beds, the Trump administration used a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention authority to expel all asylum seekers, including unaccompanied children, from coming into the U.S.

Shortly after the election, on Nov. 18, a federal judge ruled that the Trump administration could no longer expel children under that CDC authority, leading the numbers of children entering the U.S. to begin climbing. That injunction was later lifted, but the Biden administration made the decision to allow unaccompanied migrant children fleeing violence to enter the U.S. to pursue asylum.

Now, DHS has employed the Federal Emergency Management Agency, usually called in after natural disasters, to help HHS quickly build its capacity in places like Dallas and Midland, Texas. On Tuesday, HHS announced it will expand its capacity at Carrizo Springs to accommodate an additional 500 children. As of Sunday, there were approximately 10,000 children in HHS custody while nearly 5,000 waited to be transferred to those facilities from overcrowded Border Patrol stations

These surges happen on a regular basis. They knew that. And they knew that COVID was going to complicate the matter. They made the decision not to do anything so they could claim that the Biden administration screwed up by refusing to leave those kids in squalid refugee camps on the other side of the border.

Of course they did.

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