El Paso Mayor Declares Disaster over Migrant Border Surge, End of Title 42

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Migrants walk across the Rio Grande to surrender to US Border Patrol agents in El Paso, Texas, as seen from Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua state, Mexico, on December 13, 2022. (Photo by Herika Martinez / AFP) (Photo by HERIKA MARTINEZ/AFP via Getty Images)

The mayor of El Paso declared a disaster “due to a humanitarian, security, and economic crisis resulting from a mass migration” through the city. The declaration comes as thousands of migrants continue to cross from Mexico into the city in advance of the end of the Title 42 protocol expected on Wednesday.

Freezing temperatures in the city of El Paso are in the forecast for the coming week while hundreds of migrants camp out on the streets. The surge of migrant crossings, only expected to increase following the termination of the Title 42 migrant removal protocol on Wednesday, led El Paso Mayor Oscar Lesser to declare a state of disaster.

“The reason why we’re doing it is because I said from the beginning that I would call it when I felt that either our asylum seekers or our community was not safe,” Mayor Leeser told reporters during a Saturday night press conference. “And I really believe that today our asylum seekers are not safe, as we have hundreds and hundreds on the streets. And that’s not the way we want to treat people.”

In a four-page disaster declaration, the mayor laid out the causes for the emergency declaration. Those include, in part:

  • Thousands of migrants gathered at or near the U.S.-Mexico border,
  • The expected end of Title 42 due to a court order,
  • The release of migrants by Border Patrol officials onto the streets of El Paso “with little to no resources,
  • The lack of city resources for transportation and housing,
  • The arrival in December of approximately 6,000 migrants weekly,
  • The lack of resources at local NGOs to care for migrants,
  • The release of more than 40000 migrants by Border Patrol to NGO and city streets.

The mayor cited concerns for an imminent threat of widespread injury or loss of life resulting from the migrant surge as temperatures drop below freezing and the increased demand on local shelters that are already above capacity.

Democrat State Senator Cesar Blanco (D-El Paso) tweeted a statement of support for the mayor’s disaster declaration.

The senator also cited the end of the Title 42 program as a cause for an increase in services.

Mayor Leeser previously resisted the issuance of an emergency declaration, the El Paso Times reported.

Mayor Leeser said he expects an “incredible” increase in migrant crossing that could be as high as 6,000 per day.

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