In the eyes of human rights advocates, the federal government is embarking on a dangerous path by once again locking up immigrant women and children in family detention centers, a system they say has failed in the past.
The groups have been adamantly against the expansion of family detention facilities after a growing number of children and parents caught along the U.S. border strained government resources to capacity. At the start of the summer, only one small facility in Pennsylvania was catered toward immigrant mothers and children. Since then, two more facilities have been converted into detention centers, with plans for a third, massive facility likely on the way.
“We are very concerned to see the continued expansion of family detention, which we know does not work,” said Katharina Obser of the human rights group Women’s Refugee Commission.
After touring facilities this week at the Karnes County Residential Center in Texas, one of three operating detention centers, groups on Thursday raised concerns that families aren’t being given necessary access to legal services and that conditions are beginning to take a toll on detained children.
“We heard directly from mothers who told us stories that show that their children’s health is being harmed,” Adriana Piñon, senior staff attorney for the ACLU of Texas, told reporters. “Their children have been slowly losing weight since their detention began.”
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) spokesperson Carl Rusnok said that the detention centers for women and children are an “effective and humane alternative to maintain family unity.” Karnes provides play rooms, access to social workers and a computer lab for families. Teachers from a nearby charter school come to the facilities to provide lessons for the kids.
“Reports of children losing weight are unsubstantiated,” Rusnok said in a statement. “Children are provided three meals per day, and health snacks are available 24/7.”
According to Obser, it is not a lack of food at the facilities that is leading mothers to believe their children are losing weight — many simply do not want to eat food they are unaccustomed to.
Advocates have warned for months that a heightened focus on detention was not an appropriate response to coping with the surge of families who have crossed the southwestern border. According to U.S. Customs and Border Protection, more than 66,000 family units have entered the country in the last fiscal year, many of whom human rights groups argue may have legitimate claims to seek asylum or humanitarian relief in the states.








