Feds fly immigrant minors to Hawaii on taxpayer dime
WAIKIKI: This is a primo destination many visitors to Hawaii enjoy.
by Malia Zimmerman, Watchdog.org, July 31, 2014
HONOLULU — Although 2,500 miles from the continental United States, Hawaii has joined the list of states temporarily housing unaccompanied minors from Central America who have illegally crossed into America through the Southwest border.
Who’s paying the freight? You, the taxpayer.
Some 60,000 Central American youths fleeing their home countries have come to the United States in the past few months. That number could reach 90,000 by the end of the year. Politicians, border agents and social service workers call the migration a “humanitarian crisis.”
Kenneth Wolfe, a spokesman the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, told Watchdog.org that “between January 1 and July 7, a total of eight minors were discharged from the unaccompanied alien children program to sponsors in Hawaii.”
Wolfe couldn’t offer any details on the ages and countries of origin of the children, where the children are now living, or who is sponsoring them in Hawaii. However, he added the sponsors are “mostly family members of the child. In fact, more than half are parents of the minor.”
Federal taxpayers cover the cost of transportation and housing for the refugee children, including airfare to Hawaii, Wolfe said.
Federal taxpayers also pay sponsors’ costs of transportation, Wolfe said.
FREE RIDE: Former U.S. Rep. Charles Djou, R-Hawaii, doesn’t think immigrant children from Central American should be flown to Hawaii on the taxpayers’ dime.
Former U.S. Rep. Charles Djou, R-Hawaii, said while he feels for the children and is sympathetic to their plight, he doesn’t believe taxpayers should be covering their airline tickets to Hawaii.
Djou said if children in Central America hear that they could get an all-expense trip paid to Hawaii from the American government, more might cross the border illegally.
“What an incentive,” Djou said.
The average length of stay in the program is now less than 30 days, Wolfe dsof.
However, Hawaii immigration attorney Clare Hanusz said the children could be here much longer, depending on the immigration court calendar.
Compared with other states, Hawaii’s federal immigration court isn’t busy, she said, and cases can move quickly. However, cases that have special circumstances and require witnesses or experts can take five to six months, she said.
Some Hawaii residents have reached out to Hanusz, a well-known immigration attorney with the law firm of Damon Key, to offer the children accommodations and money — and even to adopt them. However, Hanusz said unless the children or their sponsors come forward, no one will know who they are or where they are living.
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