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  • 2021-03-10 (xsd:date)
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  • Were Hundreds of COVID-Positive Immigrants 'Recklessly Released' in Texas? (en)
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  • In early March 2021, readers inquired about a claim involving immigrants who tested positive for COVID-19 in Texas. On March 2, Gov. Greg Abbott blamed the Biden administration for what he called a callous act. On the same day, the state as a whole recorded 7,822 new COVID-19 cases. The Associated Press reported that Abbott was unable to provide evidence that illegal immigrants were a significant factor in the current spread of the virus. AP published that the focus by Abbott and other Republicans on migrant families has drawn criticism about invoking a long history in the U.S. of wrongly suggesting migrants spread diseases. Abbott's tweet came one day after he announced a mask mandate had been lifted in Texas. He also said that all businesses could fully reopen. ABC News Political Director Rick Klein asked White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki about Abbott's tweet. She responded that it was not factual: We reached out to Abbott's press office about his tweet, but did not hear back. According to The Texas Tribune, Abbott's claim was in reference to events in the city of Brownsville. On March 1 and 2, Telemundo (Spanish) and NBC News (English) published a story about migrants who entered Brownsville, Texas by way of the U.S.-Mexico border. It stated that 108 of the migrants tested positive for COVID-19 after they were released by the U.S. Border Patrol. The hundreds referred to by Abbott appear to be those 108 immigrants who crossed the border between Jan. 25 and March 1, for an average of about three positive cases of COVID-19 per day. According to The New York Times and The COVID Tracking Project, Texas as a whole recorded more than 400,000 new cases in that same time period. The Texas Tribune reported on the release process for the migrants, describing them as asylum-seekers with pending cases: The Telemundo/NBC News article said that the COVID-19 tests on the migrants had been performed at the local bus station: We reached out to Felipe Romero, the director of communications and marketing with the city of Brownsville. He confirmed to us that 108 migrants did indeed test positive there between Jan. 25 and March 1. However, he also provided information that undermined the claim that the migrants were released recklessly. Those who tested positive were offered resources: A shelter or hotel would be provided if they agreed for the time that they would quarantine; whether or not they accepted that assistance, they were also given instructions to social distance and quarantine away from other individuals. He said local officials followed guidelines set out by the CDC and Texas DSHS (the Texas Department of State Health Services). The City of Brownsville continues to follow all guidelines provided by the CDC and DSHS for COVID-19, Romero said. The migrants who test positive at the B-Metro facility are advised of quarantine procedures and are asked to socially distance. There are several NGOs providing resources to a positive case. For example, organizations help with quarantine either in a shelter or at a hotel. Telemundo acknowledged that some of the 108 asylum-seekers who tested positive were planning to travel to their destinations anyway. While local officials provided guidance and resources to them, they were not detained against their will. We contacted the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to ask what happens when a migrant crosses the U.S.-Mexico border in the time of COVID. They told us that U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) personnel conduct initial inspections for symptoms or risk factors associated with COVID-19 and consult with onsite medical personnel, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), or local health systems as appropriate. Basically, CBP delegates appropriate testing, diagnosis, and treatment of migrants to local health facilities. The statement also noted that these methods are consistent with longstanding CBP procedures for preventing the spread of communicable diseases. U.S. President Joe Biden was sworn in on Jan. 20, 2021. We asked Romero if there were any new guidelines or procedures for infected individuals since Biden's inauguration. I can tell you, we have been following CDC and DSHS guidelines since the start of the pandemic last year, he said. There are a few important dates to note in relation to all of the hubbub. On Oct. 3, 2020, former Vice President Mike Pence and the Trump administration closed the U.S.-Mexico border due to COVID-19. When Trump was still in office, that closure was extended through Feb. 21, 2021. Under Biden, it was extended again through March. On Feb. 12, under the Biden administration, the U.S. Dept. of Homeland Security announced a process to address individuals in Mexico under its Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP). It went into effect on Feb. 19. Previously, on Biden's first full day in office, his administration had announced it would stop new enrollments under the Remain in Mexico policy. (MPP and Remain in Mexico referred to the same policy.) The Texas Tribune also spoke with Ruben Garcia, the director of the Annunciation House shelter network. Garcia confirmed that MPP arrivals are tested for COVID-19 before entering. According to reporting from Telemundo, NBC News, and The Texas Tribune, the 108 migrants who tested positive for COVID-19 in Brownsville were not MPP arrivals. Instead, they had been apprehended by the Border Patrol after crossing over the border. Following protocols that CBP described as consistent with longstanding CBP procedures for preventing the spread of communicable diseases, the 108 migrants were released. After that, they were tested, purportedly for the first time, by local officials at a bus station in Brownsville. It was there that some of them boarded buses for their final destinations, only after being offered a shelter or hotel and being advised to quarantine and social distance, per CDC and Texas DSHS guidelines. A variety of factors were at play. First, there was a flurry of combative and contradictory statements between Biden and Abbott. We were unable to find a source that corroborated Abbott's claim that hundreds of migrants with COVID-19 were released. Moreover, his characterization of their release from federal custody as reckless and callous was entirely subjective, unsupported by evidence of negligence or harm. Also at play were larger immigration policy disagreements and debates over federal vs. local funding of COVID-19 testing for migrants. For these and other reasons, including the lack of clarification from Abbott's office, we have rated this claim as Unproven. (en)
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