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Title 42
has
ended.
Here's
what it
did, and
how US
immigration
policy
is
changing
By
COLLEEN
LONG
apnews.com
WASHINGTON
- The
U.S. is
putting
new
restrictions
into
place at
its
southern
border
to try
to to
stop
migrants
from
crossing
illegally
and
encourage
them
instead
to apply
for
asylum
online
through
a new
process.
The
changes
come
with the
end of
coronavirus
restrictions
on
asylum
that
have
allowed
the U.S.
to
quickly
turn
back
migrants
at the
U.S.-Mexico
border
for the
past
three
years.
Those
restrictions
are
known as
Title
42,
because
the
authority
comes
from
Title 42
of a
1944
public
health
law
allowing
curbs on
migration
in the
name of
protecting
public
health.
Disinformation
has
swirled
and
confusion
has set
in
during
the
transition.
A look
at the
new
rules
(and the
old
ones):
WHAT IS
TITLE 42
AND WHAT
DID IT
DO?
Title 42
is the
name of
an
emergency
health
authority.
It was a
holdover
from
President
Donald
Trump’s
administration
and
began in
March
2020.
The
authority
allowed
U.S.
officials
to turn
away
migrants
who came
to the
U.S.-Mexico
border
on the
grounds
of
preventing
the
spread
of
COVID-19.
Before
that,
migrants
could
cross
illegally,
ask for
asylum
and be
allowed
into the
U.S.
They
were
then
screened
and
often
released
to wait
out
their
immigration
cases.
Under
Title
42,
migrants
were
returned
over the
border
and
denied
the
right to
seek
asylum.
U.S.
officials
turned
away
migrants
more
than 2.8
million
times.
Families
and
children
traveling
alone
were
exempt.
But
there
were no
real
consequences
when
someone
illegally
crossed
the
border.
So
migrants
were
able to
try
again
and
again to
cross,
on the
off
chance
they
would
get into
the U.S.
President
Joe
Biden
initially
kept
Title 42
in place
after he
took
office,
then
tried to
end its
use in
2022.
Republicans
sued,
arguing
the
restrictions
were
necessary
for
border
security.
Courts
had kept
the
rules in
place.
But the
Biden
administration
announced
in
January
that it
was
ending
national
COVID-19
emergencies,
and so
the
border
restrictions
have now
gone
away.
Biden
has said
the new
changes
are
necessary,
in part
because
Congress
has not
passed
immigration
reform
in
decades.
Migrants
rush for
US as
pandemic
asylum
rules
end
Pandemic-related
asylum
restrictions
that
expelled
migrants
millions
of times
were
lifted
early
Friday,
as
people
raced to
enter
the
United
States
before
new
rules
announced
by
President
Joe
Biden's
administration
set in.
(May 12)
SO
WHAT’S
HAPPENING
NEXT?
The
Title 42
restrictions
lifted
at 11:59
p.m. EDT
Thursday.
The
Biden
administration
has put
into
place a
series
of new
policies
cracking
down on
illegal
crossings.
The
administration
says
it’s
trying
to stop
people
from
paying
smuggling
operations
to make
a
dangerous
and
often
deadly
journey.
Now
there
will be
strict
consequences.
Migrants
caught
crossing
illegally
will not
be
allowed
to
return
for five
years
and can
face
criminal
prosecution
if they
do.
NEW
ASYLUM
RULES
Under
U.S. and
international
law,
anyone
who
comes to
the U.S.
can ask
for
asylum.
People
from all
over the
world
travel
to the
U.S-Mexico
border
to seek
asylum.
They are
screened
to
determine
whether
they
have a
credible
fear of
persecution
in their
homeland.
Their
case
then
goes to
the
immigration
court
system
to
determine
if they
can stay
in the
U.S.,
but that
process
can take
years.
Usually
they are
released
into the
U.S. to
wait out
their
cases.
The
Biden
administration
is now
turning
away
anyone
seeking
asylum
who
didn’t
first
seek
protection
in a
country
they
traveled
through,
or first
applied
online.
This is
a
version
of a
Trump
administration
policy
that was
overturned
by the
courts.
Advocacy
groups
sued to
block
the new
rule
minutes
before
it took
effect.
The
lawsuit,
filed in
federal
court in
San
Francisco
by the
Center
for
Gender &
Refugee
Studies
and
other
groups,
alleges
the
Biden
administration
“doubled
down” on
the
policy
proposed
by Trump
that the
same
court
rejected.
The
Biden
administration
has said
its new
rule is
substantially
different.
WHO’S
ALLOWED
IN?
The U.S.
has said
it will
accept
up to
30,000
people
per
month
from
Venezuela,
Haiti,
Nicaragua
and Cuba
as long
as they
come by
air,
have a
sponsor
and
apply
online
first.
The
government
also
will
allow up
to
100,000
people
from
Guatemala,
El
Salvador
and
Honduras
into the
U.S. who
have
family
here if
they,
too,
apply
online.
Border
officials
will
otherwise
deport
people,
including
turning
30,000
per
month
from
Venezuela,
Haiti,
Nicaragua
and Cuba
who will
be sent
back
over the
border
to
Mexico.
Other
migrants
also may
be
allowed
in if
they
apply
through
the CBP
One app.
Right
now, 740
people
per day
have
been
allowed
in using
the app,
which is
being
increased
to 1,000
per day.
WHAT
ABOUT
FAMILIES?
Families
crossing
the
border
illegally
will be
subject
to
curfews
and the
head of
household
will
have to
wear an
ankle
monitoring
bracelet.
Immigration
officials
will try
to
determine
within
30 days
whether
a family
can stay
in the
U.S. or
be
deported.
Usually
the
process
would
take
years.
The
Biden
administration
considered
detaining
families
until
they
cleared
initial
asylum
screenings
but
opted
instead
for the
curfews,
which
will run
from 11
p.m. to
5 a.m.
and
begin
soon in
Baltimore;
Chicago;
Newark,
New
Jersey;
and
Washington,
D.C.,
according
to a
U.S.
official
who
spoke on
condition
of
anonymity
because
the
information
was not
intended
to be
public.
Families
who do
not
appear
for
their
screening
interviews
will be
picked
up by
immigration
authorities
and
deported.
OVERCROWDING
Border
Patrol
stations
are
meant to
house
migrants
temporarily
and
don’t
have
capacity
to hold
the
volume
of
people
coming.
Some
stations
are
already
too
crowded.
As a
result,
agents
began
releasing
migrants
into the
U.S.
with
instructions
to
appear
at an
immigration
office
within
60 days
or face
deportation.
Agents
were
told to
begin
releases
in any
area
where
holding
facilities
were at
125%
capacity
or the
average
time in
custody
exceeded
60
hours.
They
also
were
told to
start
releases
if 7,000
migrants
were
taken
into
custody
across
the
entire
border
in any
one day.
That’s
already
happened,
with
some
10,000
people
taken
into
custody
on
Tuesday.
This
could
create
problems
for
Biden
administration
officials
trying
to crack
down on
those
entering
the
country.
Florida
filed a
lawsuit
claiming
the
releases
violate
an
earlier
court
ruling.
Late
Thursday,
a
federal
judge
agreed
and at
least
temporarily
halted
the
administration’s
plan for
releases.
Customs
and
Border
Protection
said in
a
statement
that it
would
comply
with the
court
order,
while
also
calling
it a
“harmful
ruling
that
will
result
in
unsafe
overcrowding
... and
undercut
our
ability
to
efficiently
process
and
remove
migrants.”
MIGRATION
HUBS
U.S.
officials
plan to
open 100
regional
migration
hubs
across
the
Western
Hemisphere,
where
people
can seek
placement
in other
countries,
including
Canada
and
Spain.
There
will be
hubs in
Colombia
and
Guatemala,
but it’s
not
clear
where
others
will be
or when
they
will be
up and
running.
___
Associated
Press
Writers
Rebecca
Santana
in
Washington
and
Elliot
Spagat
in San
Diego
contributed
to this
report.
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