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What Title 42鈥檚 end means for California

Migrants wait in line while California border activists organize the group to enter the U.S. and seek asylum through the Chaparral entryway in Tijuana, Mexico Dec. 22, 2022.
Carlos A. Moreno
/
CalMatters
Migrants wait in line while California border activists organize the group to enter the U.S. and seek asylum through the Chaparral entryway in Tijuana, Mexico Dec. 22, 2022.

A pandemic-era public health policy , used to turn away asylum seekers at the U.S. southern border, is coming to an end just before midnight tonight, prompting concerns about unprecedented migration flows.

Meanwhile, hundreds of migrants have been waiting outside between border walls in San Ysidro for days, sometimes with nothing more to eat all day than a single granola bar handed out by Border Patrol officers.

Federal, state and local officials have had more than two years to prepare for this moment. But officials running migrant shelters on both sides of the border say they have very little information about how to handle the anticipated increase in asylum seekers trying to cross from Mexico into California and other states.

鈥淩eally, it is very much a touch-and-go situation, where we鈥檙e responding to needs in our community as they happen,鈥 said Patrick Giuliani, policy analyst with Hope Border Institute, a Texas-based nonprofit that provides humanitarian aid.

  • Giuliani: 鈥淎 lot of this work of reception is falling on nonprofits and church communities locally, without the information on how many numbers of people are we seeing? What are the plans? What type of financial support is there?鈥 

Texas and Arizona have been readying their state鈥檚 National Guard troops to go to the border, but California officials have taken less of a hard-line approach.

  • Gov. Gavin Newsom, in a statement: 鈥淲hile the federal government is responsible for immigration policy and processing, California has served as a model of partnership for a safe and welcoming border, undertaking humanitarian efforts in border communities to support arriving migrants once they have been鈥痳eleased by the federal government.鈥 

The state supports three migrant shelters, two in San Diego and one in Imperial County; two travel staging sites, one in Imperial and one in San Diego; and six temporary sheltering sites in Riverside County, Newsom鈥檚 office said. California also has invested $1 billion since 2019 and supported 350,000 migrants since April 2021 with temporary services and onward travel coordination, his office added.

Newsom鈥檚 office did not respond to questions about whether there are any additional funds or new plans in place to deal with federal policy changes this week.

Wednesday, the Biden administration published the of a new rule imposing what advocates say is a near-total ban on asylum at the U.S. southern border. It鈥檚 unclear how it will impact the expected increases in people trying to cross the border.

The Department of Homeland Security said the new policy will disqualify people from asylum in the U.S. if they did not first apply for it in countries they passed through. The Trump administration tried similar regulations but they were struck down by the courts.

San Diego County Supervisor Jim Desmond, a Republican, said he plans to tour the border this morning. 鈥淪eeing the recent images of thousands of people making their way through Central America and Mexico is alarming, and I鈥檓 concerned the federal government is ill-prepared and has not put the resources in place to adequately protect San Diegans and the asylum-seeking migrants,鈥 he said.

 is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics.