EL PASO โ Thousands of migrants have crossed from Mexico to Eagle Pass and El Paso in the past few days, with both cities struggling to find shelter for the new arrivals as immigration officials process and release many of them into the border cities.
In Eagle Pass, Mayor Rolando Salinas Jr.,ย signed an emergency declarationย on Tuesday night to allow the city of about 30,000 to get state resources and funding to handle the number of migrants being released by immigration officials. He told The New York Times that on Wednesday as many as 2,500 migrants crossed into Eagle Pass.
โWe need the extra help, the funding,โ Salinas told the Times. โWe are losing. Every day the bridge is closed we are losing money.โ
In July federal agents encountered an average of 817 migrants each day in the Del Rio sector, which includes Eagle Pass, according to government data.
On Wednesday, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, which processes people and vehicular traffic at ports of entry, said in a statement that it temporarily closed one of the three international bridges to traffic so agents could help Border Patrol process hundreds of migrants, many of whom were being held under one of the bridges connecting Eagle Pass and Mexico.
โIn response to this influx in encounters, we will continue to surge all available resources to expeditiously and safely process migrants,โ the statement said. โWe will maximize consequences against those without a legal basis to remain in the United States. CBP will continue to prioritize our border security mission as necessary in response to this evolving situation.โ
Chris Olivarez, a spokesperson for the Texas Department of Public Safety, said in a social media post Wednesday night that the mayor has once again allowed police officers, including state troopers, to arrest migrants crossing the river into the cityโs Shelby Park.
โDue to the unprecedented influx of illegal immigrants crossing between the ports of entry, DPS Troopers & @TXMilitary will regain control, support local, county, & federal authorities, & maintain an enforcement posture,โย Olivarez wrote.
The mayor in June declared the park private property to allow state troopers to arrest migrants for trespassing. But that decision came under intense criticism after a DPS medic told his superiors that troopers had been ordered toย push migrants back into the riverย and deny them water, and that the razor wire installed along the riverbank by the state had seriously injured migrants.
The mayor joined the rest of the city council in voting to rescind that decision in July. Salinas Jr. didnโt respond to a request for comment by the Tribune on Thursday.
In the months after the emergency health order known as Title 42, which immigration officials used to turn away many migrants at the border, expired on May 11, the number of migrant apprehensions dramatically dropped. But in the past few weeks, the number has skyrocketed.
According toย CBS News, which cited unpublished federal government data, immigration officials on average made 6,900 apprehensions per day along the southern border in the first 20 days of September โ a 60% increase from the daily average in July.
The scenes at the border this week are reminiscent of a similar influx of migrantsย two years agoย in Del Rio, where immigration officials struggled to process 15,000 migrants, many of them Haitian. It took officials nearly a week to process or deport most of the migrants, who were held under an international bridge for days.
In El Paso, city officials have opened anย emergency overflow shelterย to prepare for a rapid increase of asylum seekers being released into the city by federal agents. The city is also looking to buy a vacant middle school building to use it as a shelter.
Many of the migrants rode cargo trains from Mexico City or Chihuahua to the border.
Earlier this week, Ferromex, Mexicoโs largest rail operator, temporarily suspended 60 train runs in northern Mexico because migrants were getting injured as they tried to climb aboard the freight cars. Ferromex said about six injuries have been reported this week.