Report: Mass Deportation May Separate Millions of Families

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Up to 2.7 million American children may lose both parents and thousands could enter foster care, new report says.

By Kate Scanlon, OSV News

WASHINGTON (OSV News) — Millions of U.S. citizen children are at risk of being left with no parents in their home under a mass deportation scenario, a new study by the Center for Migration Studies in New York estimated.

The May 1 study estimating the potential effects of a mass deportation program estimated that 3.8 percent of all U.S. citizen children — about 2.7 million in total — face the potential of being left without either parent in their home as a result of such a program, while 4.71 million — 6.7% of all citizen children — are at risk of losing from their household one parent who is in the U.S. without documents.

Matthew Lisiecki, senior research and policy analyst at CMS, said in a statement that as the Trump administration directs “substantial government resources to try to enact its mass deportation agenda,” these U.S. citizen children “are at risk of being left with no parents” in their home.

“This would be a devastating outcome for the millions of American children who only have undocumented parents in their home, and risks overwhelming the child welfare system,” Lisiecki said.

Thousands of U.S. citizen children could enter foster care

The study further estimated that even if only a small share of those children had no other relative to take them in if their parents were deported, a mass deportation campaign could result in 66,000 children entering the foster care system, at an annual cost to taxpayers exceeding $400 million.

This influx, the report said, would increase the number of children in foster care in the U.S. by about 18%.

“The child welfare system is neither required nor well-equipped to handle a large influx of American children who are separated from their parents due to immigration enforcement,” the report said.

Catholic social teaching on immigration seeks to balance three interrelated principles: the right of persons to migrate in order to sustain their lives and those of their families, the right of a country to regulate its borders and immigration, and a nation’s duty to do so with justice and mercy.

Featured image: A migrant from Mexico’s Chiapas state looks through his family’s immigration paperwork at Casa Alitas in Tucson, Arizona, March 15, 2024. A federal judge in Texas Nov. 7 struck down a Biden administration program that gave a pathway to legal status and citizenship for U.S. citizens’ spouses in the country without authorization and the couples’ children. (OSV News/Rebecca Noble, Reuters)

 

 

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OSV News is a national and international wire service reporting on Catholic issues and issues that affect Catholics. It is a part of OSV Publishing, a division of OSV, the largest English-language Catholic publishing company in the United States. OSV, based in Huntington, Indiana, was founded in 1912.