Shelter For Migrant Children In Long Beach Set To Close By August

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LONG BEACH (CNS) - The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services plans to shut down an emergency shelter set up at the Long Beach Convention Center to house migrant children by August.

Temporary shelters were set up at various locations in California and beyond for children who arrived unaccompanied at the U.S.-Mexico border. The children were taken to the so-called intake centers until they could be reunited with family or placed with sponsors.

Long Beach Mayor Robert Garcia wrote on Twitter that nearly 1,000 children who were housed at the Long Beach Convention Center have been reunited with relatives and sponsors in the United States, and officials are expected to close the intake center within two months.

Garcia wrote Monday that “916 children from the Long Beach emergency intake shelter have now been reunited with relatives and sponsors in the United States. Thank you to everyone working to unify families, care for these kids, and provide critical immigration & legal services.''

He added that there are currently 690 children at the shelter, which will be “closing in just over a month.''

A DHHS official said during a court hearing about custody conditions for migrant children Tuesday that four of the shelters will be closing by August, including two in California. A center at the San Diego Convention Center is expected to close in mid-July.

Another shelter at the Pomona Fairplex is still operating. A total of 715 children who crossed the U.S.-Mexico border alone and were placed at the Fairplex were reunified with families or other sponsors as of June 18, according to DHHS.

The Pomona Fairplex site began welcoming migrant children at the beginning of May. The site can hold as many as 2,500 children.

The Long Beach site opened a week prior to the Pomona location. It has the capacity to hold about 1,000 children.

Copyright 2021, City News Service, Inc.


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