- Mar 11, 2015
- 89,450
- 63,362
- 3,645
How long and how many lies are we going to allow Trump to tell us? Sees that Trump supporters are not concerned with democracy, the rule of law, the constitution or anything else American. They want one thing and it's apparent. These people would rather see America die than to accept inevitable change.
ICE said the Family Case Management Program, which cost the government $36 dollars a day, was too expensive compared to other monitoring methods.
In the wake of the 2014 migrant crisis that saw the Obama administration suffer its own backlash for the way it detained parents and children, Immigration and Customs Enforcement came up with a new way to handle families seeking asylum in the United States.
The Family Case Management Program, launched as a pilot in early 2016, aimed to keep asylum seeking kin together, out of detention, and complying with immigration laws. It was praised by immigration advocates for both its high rate of compliance and its ability to help migrants thrive in a new country — right up until the Trump administration shuttered it almost exactly a year ago.
As President Donald Trump tells the nation he must crack down on people who cross the border illegally while defending his administration's decision to separate thousands of children from their parents in the name of border security, advocates point to this program as a success story that was eliminated abruptly by a president more keen on deportation and detention.
This Obama-era program kept migrant families together. Trump ended it.
ICE said the Family Case Management Program, which cost the government $36 dollars a day, was too expensive compared to other monitoring methods.
In the wake of the 2014 migrant crisis that saw the Obama administration suffer its own backlash for the way it detained parents and children, Immigration and Customs Enforcement came up with a new way to handle families seeking asylum in the United States.
The Family Case Management Program, launched as a pilot in early 2016, aimed to keep asylum seeking kin together, out of detention, and complying with immigration laws. It was praised by immigration advocates for both its high rate of compliance and its ability to help migrants thrive in a new country — right up until the Trump administration shuttered it almost exactly a year ago.
As President Donald Trump tells the nation he must crack down on people who cross the border illegally while defending his administration's decision to separate thousands of children from their parents in the name of border security, advocates point to this program as a success story that was eliminated abruptly by a president more keen on deportation and detention.
This Obama-era program kept migrant families together. Trump ended it.