Duckworth fears migrant kids at shelter are hungry and scared
Source: Daily Herald
U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth raised concerns about an organization that cares for migrant children separated from their parents Monday, saying she worried they were hungry and stressed.
Heartland Alliance runs a number of shelters in the Chicago area, primarily for unaccompanied minors -- children who arrive in the U.S. from other countries without an adult. Heartland also looks after migrant children separated from their parents after crossing the border under a controversial government policy that was was reversed in June.
Some children told her "they were not getting enough to eat," and "all the time were scared," Duckworth said. "A 6-year-old boy raised his hand and said, 'I'm scared at night ... somebody knocks on the walls and it's really scary.'"
Heartland officials said 99 migrant children separated from their parents were placed at its shelters this spring and summer and 89 have been reunited with a family member.
"Our staff are doing all that we can to ensure that children are reunited with parents or sponsors as quickly as possible, and that children are safe and well cared for while in our shelters," Heartland spokeswoman Mailee Garcia said. "Only the U.S. Office of Refugee Resettlement has the authority to approve the release of children. Heartland Alliance stands alongside children and their families seeking safety in the U.S., and we fervently believe that families should be together."
Des Plaines-based Maryville also cared for four migrant children, but those have been reunited with their families.
Duckworth said she is asking Heartland to provide a care plan for the migrant children and has asked U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to investigate.
The White House this spring instituted a "zero tolerance" policy for people entering the U.S. illegally, resulting in parents' being arrested and separated from their children.
Officials said it was to deter illegal immigration, but President Donald Trump reversed the policy after protests.
By: Marni Pyke
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