'I?nitrd $tatrs .%rnatt WASHINGTON, DC 20510 June 7, 2018 President Trump The White House 1600 Avenue NW Washington, DC 20500 Dear President Trump: We are writing to ask that you reverse course on your Administration?s inhumane decision to separate children from their parents at the border. This policy has traumatized children who are ?eeing extreme violence. Our government has a humanitarian duty to the children and families seeking asylum in the United States to end this policy immediately. Your Administration?s decision to separate children from their parents at the border is cruel, unnecessary, and goes against our values as Americans. Furthermore, reports that the Administration is considering measures that would make it more dif?cult for parents and relatives to sponsor children in Of?ce of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) custodyl also raise serious concerns. Many of the children and families arriving at our Southwest border have escaped horrific violence and persecution in their home countries. The decision to use this separation tactic as a ?deterrent? is not only frighteningly callous, but demonstrates willful ignorance of the violence and unlivable circumstances many families are risking their lives to escape. Separating a child from his or her parents has lasting, harmful, and traumatizing impacts. These separations have been shown to increase anxiety and depression among children that have already experienced signi?cant trauma in their home countries and along their journey to the United States.2 As the President of the American Academy for Pediatrics stated, ?highly stressful experiences, like family separation, can cause irreparable harm, disrupting a child?s brain architecture and affecting his or her short? and long-term health. This type of prolonged exposure to serious stress - known as toxic stress - can carry lifelong consequences for children?? In recognition of the trauma associated with removing children from their parents and the adverse effects of unnecessary institutionalization, our national foster care policies have moved in a direction that prioritizes keeping families together and decreasing the use of congregate care. Foley, E. Planas, R. (May 25, 2018). Trump?s crackdown on immigrant parents puts more kids in an already strained system. The Huf?ngton Post. Available: 2 Suarez-Orozco, 0, Bang, H. Kim, H. Y. (2011). I felt like my heart was staying behind: implications of family separations reuni?cations for immigrant youth. Journal of A dolescent Research, 26(2), 222-257. 3 Kraft, C. (May 8, 2018). AAP Statement Opposing separation of children and parents at the border. Available: Best practices in child welfare promote keeping children and their parents safely together unless removal is in the child?s best interest. Unnecessarily separating more children from their parents will further exacerbate the lack of family-based foster care placements available and increase the use of large-capacity institutional settings, such as abandoned military bases, to house these children. White House Chief of Staff, John Kelly, recently remarked that children separated from their parents can be placed in ?foster care or whatever.?4 This comment fails to recognize the best interest of children as well as the lack of resources our country currently allocates to support quality child welfare services. There is no legitimate reason why these children need to be separated from their parents. Community-based alternatives to detention programs, like intensive case management and referrals to social services and legal resources, have been shown to increase the likelihood that immigrants appear at court proceedings. These methods are signi?cantly more cost-effective and allow families to stay together while their cases are being processed. The Vera Institute of Justice - Appearance Assistance Program (AAP) operated in New York City from February 1997 to March 2000. It found that at the end of the project, over 90% of participants had attended all required court hearings, and that supervision was 55% less expensive than detention for asylum seekers and 15% less expensive for lawful permanent residents with criminal records.5 These are clearly more humane and effective methods than family separation or family detention. We ask that your Administration rescind this unethical, ineffective, and inhumane policy and instead prioritize approaches that align with our humanitarian and American values. Sincerely, RON MURRAYO United States Senator United States Senator . 0? FEINSTEIN United States Senator CHRIS VAN HOLL United States Senator 4 NPR Morning Edition (May 29, 2018). Available: 5 Detention Watch Network (August 2010). Policy Brief: Community based alternatives to immigration detention. Available: page/l new TOM UDALL United States Senator THOMAS R. CARPERV United States Senator 72?5012- TINA SMITH United States Senator RISTOPHER A. COONS United States Senator ANGUS 5. KING JR United States Senator United Sta eS Senator EDWARD J. United States Senator RICHARD United States Senator 741/4; TIM KAINE United States Senator BERNARD SANDERS United States Senator KIRSTEN GILLIBRAND Unifd States Senator WTOPHER S. MURPHY United States Senator KAMLA D. HARRIS United States Senator MARGARET WOOD HASSAN United States Senator 725a. ALDWIN United States Senator ROBERT P. CASEY, 9? United States Senator A. JEFF A. ERKLEY United States Senator MM WHITEHOUSE United States Senator BILL NELSON United States Senator Tia} PATRICK J. LEAHY United States Senator ?aw/ado MARIA CANTWELL United States Senator MICHAEL F. BENNET United States Senator MAZIE HIRONO United States Senator (74:1; CORY A. BOOKER United States Senator 47m MASTO United States Senator CHARDJ DURBIN United States Senator 04.31,. CHARLES E. SCHUMER United States Senator M?m BROWN United States Senator MARTIN HEINRICH United States Senator 44M 42%, @1911. MARK R. WARNER L. CARDIN United States Senator United States Senator JEANNE BRIAN SCHATZ United States Senator United States Senator