As President Joe Biden and his administration continue to downplay the surge of illegal aliens, many of them unaccompanied minors, at the U.S.-Mexico border, Americans across the nation are grappling with the changes and effects the Democrat’s disastrous border crisis is having in their communities.
While the number of migrant children crossing the border continues to rise, the number of available beds and holding space provided by the federal government keeps shrinking, forcing the Department of Health and Human Services, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, and other government agencies to manage the influx of crossings by opening more facilities, investing in hotel rooms to house migrants, and engaging the help of nongovernmental organizations.
Last week, a family located in a suburb of Seattle, more than 1,000 miles from the southern U.S. border, was asked to vacate the home they used to foster approximately 20 children over the last seven years because the nonprofit that provided it to them has “chosen to pursue a different strategic vision” and is beginning to “provide a different scope of services in support of unaccompanied youth.”