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Thread: U.S. plans to overhaul how immigrants are detained

  1. #1
    Senior Member brainplay's Avatar
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    Default U.S. plans to overhaul how immigrants are detained

    Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano proposes, among other reform ideas, holding nonviolent immigrants in minimum-security facilities.






    By Anna Gorman October 6, 2009 | 5:11 p.m.




    Nonviolent immigrant detainees could be held in converted hotels, nursing homes or placed on electronic ankle bracelets for monitoring as part of a series of reforms planned for the nation's detention system, Department of Homeland Security officials said Tuesday.

    The moves would help overhaul a system that houses an average of 32,000 detainees every day across the country and has been criticized as having unsafe and inhumane conditions. Some of the detainees include women and children.

    "This is a system that encompasses many different types of detainees, not all of whom need to be held in prison-like circumstances or jail-like circumstances, which not only may be unnecessary but more expensive," Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said.

    The department plans to build two detention centers, including one in California. Napolitano said some detainees had violent pasts and needed to be securely detained, but others were asylum-seekers with no records and should be held at facilities "commensurate with the risks that they present."

    In August, John Morton, assistant secretary for Homeland Security, pledged to create a more centralized system that increased government oversight and accountability.

    The department began reviewing more than 350 contracts with jails, state prisons and private facilities with plans to centralize the management of the contracts. Officials also are doubling the number of personnel to monitor the facilities that hold more than 80% of detainees and are developing an online system to help families find relatives in the system.

    In addition, the controversial T. Don Hutto Family Residential Facility in Texas has been converted to hold only women.

    Some of the proposed changes are expected to reduce costs for Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which has a nearly $2.5-billion annual budget for detention and deportation. For example, alternatives to detention cost $14 per day, while detention can cost more than $100, officials said.

    Napolitano will submit a plan to Congress this fall on electronic monitoring and other types of supervision. She said the department would ensure that those released on electronic monitoring showed up to court and were able to have their cases decided in a timely way.

    Judy Rabinovitz, deputy director of the American Civil Liberties Union's Immigrants' Rights Project, said she was pleased that the Obama administration was making improvements. But she said the government should reassess whether everyone arrested for an immigration violation should be detained at all.

    "It's obviously encouraging that the administration seems to be taking seriously the immigration detention system and how it needs an overhaul," she said. "But it's not simply about where people are detained. It's about how they ended up in detention and why they are staying there."

    The ACLU also expressed concern that healthcare in detention centers would remain inadequate and that nonemergency services would still be denied. Critics say the detention system lacks medical care that could have prevented dozens of deaths since 2003.

    Napolitano said the department planned to create a classification system to better identify medical and mental health issues and to help manage care.

    Immigrant rights advocates want the federal government to make detention standards legally binding so immigrants can have family visits, recreation time and legal materials.

    The reforms announced Tuesday primarily come out of a 35-page report by Dora Schriro, who was hired to revamp and oversee the immigration detention system but who has since left the department
    Source: http://www.latimes.com/news/nationwo...0,430206.story

    Soooo, why exactly do we detain them for so long? I thought it was supposed to be setup like a waystation type of facility doing the whole catch and release thing.

    The immigrant advocate idea of making it legally binding is funny. Maybe then we could just send the bill straight to Mexico for housing and necessities.

  2. #2
    Zune Free At Last FlintHillBilly's Avatar
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    Im pretty sure if i was caught being an illegal in another country i probably wouldnt get a nice hotel, or nursing home room, etc etc. Nor would i have a anklet.

    I think we do alot as it is for these people......

  3. #3
    Miss Convicted 2009 SBL's Avatar
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    I'm okay with this idea, particularly in regards to women and children.
    So long as they're being dealt with appropriately according to the law, I don't see any reason why they shouldn't be housed in an environment that provides a modicum of safety and cleanliness.

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    Senior Member Chulo's Avatar
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    While they are there can we make them work to pay off the bill too?

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    Zune Free At Last FlintHillBilly's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by chulo_allen View Post
    While they are there can we make them work to pay off the bill too?
    Wont happen. We pay thier bills in this day in age... unfortunetly..

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    Senior Member Dominique's Avatar
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    I've got no problem with treating detainees humanely, or with trying to relieve over crowding in some of the detention facilities, but hotels and nursing homes? WTF?

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