July 22, 2019 - Issue: Vol. 165, No. 123 — Daily Edition116th Congress (2019 - 2020) - 1st Session
BORDER SECURITY; Congressional Record Vol. 165, No. 123
(Senate - July 22, 2019)
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[Pages S4958-S4959] From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov] BORDER SECURITY Mr. CORNYN. Madam President, over a week ago, I traveled to the Texas-Mexico border with the Vice President, as well as the Presiding Officer and other Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee. We visited McAllen, which is located in the heart of the Rio Grande Valley, which is a beautiful region with a thriving economy, but folks in the region continue to struggle to manage the growing humanitarian crisis caused by the massive influx of migrants arriving at our southern border. The Rio Grande Valley has been disproportionally impacted by this migrant crisis, with 46 percent of all apprehensions last month occurring in that sector. It has taken a toll, as you might expect, on the Border Patrol, the Department of Health and Human Services, local communities, and the nongovernmental organizations working to provide care for these migrants. Our trip provided the opportunity for the Vice President and members of the Judiciary Committee to meet with the men and women who are on the frontlines of this crisis and hear about the challenges they face every day. We also discussed what Congress needs to do to help them address this crisis. Chairman Lindsey Graham invited all the members of the Judiciary Committee, both Republicans and Democrats, to go on the trip, but unfortunately none of our Democratic colleagues accepted that invitation. Instead of going on a bipartisan basis, Senate Democrats chose to wait a week and go on what was clearly a partisan messaging mission. The minority leader said the purpose of the trip was to ``investigate, inspect and evaluate conditions for migrants at facilities on the border.'' They traveled to McAllen--exactly where we were 1 week before--and they had a very similar itinerary, but they had a very different mission. Our mission was to find out what Congress needed to do to help fix the problem; theirs was to shine a light in a partisan fashion on conditions of migrants, which are largely of Congress's own making as a result of congressional inaction on dealing with the underlying causes. We both met with Chief Patrol Agent Rudy Karisch, toured the Donna holding facility, heard from Border Patrol agents, and had the chance to speak to the migrants themselves, but our takeaways from these nearly identical trips were quite different. This was like ships passing in the night. I left that trip feeling immense gratitude for our professional Border Patrol agents, whom we met, working tirelessly to fulfill their duties with the utmost professionalism and compassion. As this crisis has grown, they have been asked to do more and more with less and less. They go to work each morning not knowing exactly what the day will bring. Will they encounter a group of hundreds of migrants? Will they find abandoned children left for dead by smugglers? Will they rescue a drowning family from the Rio Grande or, worse, find the remains of those who have succumbed due to the dangerous journey in very hot weather? This growing crisis is not the fault of our professional law enforcement officials working along the border, and despite what our colleagues across the aisle claim, it is not a side effect of the 2016 Presidential election either. This migrant crisis has been bubbling up for years. We got a glimpse of how bad it could be in 2014 when then- President Obama announced there was a ``humanitarian and security crisis''--his words--on the southern border. In May of 2014--the height of apprehensions that year--nearly 69,000 people were detained at the southern border. In May of this year, that number more than doubled to 144,000 in 1 month alone. So President Obama called it a ``humanitarian and security crisis'' in 2014, and the problem has roughly doubled since that time. If there is one thing I hope our colleagues found on their trip, as the minority leader said, to investigate, inspect, and evaluate, I hope it is this: I hope their investigation confirmed what they have reflexively denied for months on end--that there is, in fact, a crisis at the border. I hope their inspection revealed that the problem isn't with the administration's policies or with the actions of our Border Patrol; it is our broken immigration system. And I hope they evaluated that without some type of action--real action--by Congress, the situation along the border will only continue to get worse. As this senseless partisanship over border security carries on, people living and working along the border are also hurting. When we were in McAllen a week and a half ago, we heard from one Border Patrol agent, Oscar Escamilla, who talked about the role Border Patrol plays at the centralized processing centers. He said: We wear different hats. Sometimes we're fathers, sometimes we're mothers, brothers, sisters, play pals, and even counselors. We do this because we care. We do this because there is a real need. There is certainly a need. Last month, we passed bipartisan legislation to send much needed humanitarian relief, which will provide some temporary help. That bill also included funding for the departments and agencies that have depleted their resources trying to manage this crisis the best they can, and it made $30 million available for impacted communities to apply for reimbursement from the Federal Government. In other words, they have had to pay out of their own pockets for something that is the Federal Government's responsibility, and I am glad that at least we provided $30 million for reimbursement. This was a long-overdue and important step to support those who have been working day in and day out, hour [[Page S4959]] by hour, minute by minute, to manage this crisis, but, as the folks we talked about in McAllen reiterated, the underlying problem still exists. In other words, you can treat the symptoms, or you can treat the cause. But we shouldn't be confused. We have been maybe addressing some of the symptoms; we have done nothing to address the underlying cause. These officers and agents work incredibly hard to enforce our laws and provide compassionate care for those in their custody, but without meaningful action from Congress, we are sending them into a losing battle. Without fixing the loopholes and repairing the broken system that facilitated this humanitarian crisis in the first place, we will find ourselves experiencing deja vu every few months. If you think $4.5 billion was needed for this emergency just a couple of weeks ago, wait for 6 more months, when there will be another $4.5 billion required and thereafter and thereafter and thereafter. Well, what is the answer to the underlying root cause? What does Congress need to do in order to fix it and to staunch this flow of humanity across our border? Well, there is only one bill out there with bipartisan support--with support both in the House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate--that would provide relief along the border, and that is the HUMANE Act. It is an honest, nonpartisan attempt to fix the problem--no poison pills, no radical proposals, just reasonable policy designed to solve the problem. This bill would close what has become known as the Flores loophole, which is often exploited by human smugglers as a way to gain entry into the United States. This is an effective way to stem the flow of those trying to game--to game--our immigration system without inhibiting legitimate trade or travel. In addition, the HUMANE Act would improve the way we process individuals entering into our country. We got the recommendation for the legislation from the bipartisan Homeland Security Advisory Committee. It would, for example, establish regional processing centers, which would have personnel on hand from across the government to assist, including medical personnel and asylum officers right there at the border in regional processing centers. Finally, it would improve standards of care for individuals in our custody--something we all want to see happen. It would require the Department of Homeland Security to keep families together during court proceedings and ensure that migrants have timely access to medical assistance, as well as recreational activities, educational services, and even legal counsel. The HUMANE Act also requires additional training for Customs and Border Protection and ICE officers, otherwise known as Immigration and Customs Enforcement--in other words, everyone who deals with children. The HUMANE Act is the only bipartisan bill currently proposed, and I would urge all of our colleagues to give it serious consideration. I can only hope that this trip our Democratic colleagues took convinced them that it is time to quit playing games and get serious about finding a solution to the humanitarian crisis on our southern border. I yield the floor. ____________________