HOMESTEAD, Fla. ― Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) on Wednesday traveled to the controversial for-profit Homestead shelter for unaccompanied migrant kids in anticipation of the primary debates in Miami this week. Warren was not allowed in. She said her team put in a request, but it was denied. But before she spoke Wednesday, she stood on a small ladder and looked over the gate, occasionally waving at the children on the other side. Warren said she saw kids walking single-file from one temporary shelter to another, flanked by guards.
“There weren’t children playing. There weren’t children laughing the way children usually do when they’re moving from one place to another,” Warren told reporters afterward. “These children were being marched like little soldiers ― like little prisoners ― from one place to another. This is not what we should be doing as a country.”
Throughout the morning, demonstrators chanted “Shut it down” and “Homes instead.” They also yelled, “Los Queremos” (we love you) and “Estamos con ustedes” (we are with you) at the children inside the facility. Some children walking in sweltering heat waved back at Warren and the demonstrators. Others did not.
“We’re trying to show the kids that yes, people do care about them,m and we welcome them, and they should be treated like human beings,” said Ken Barnes, 70, a semi-retired civil rights lawyer who has made multiple trips to Homestead from his home state of New Hampshire.
Warren joins several Democratic presidential candidates who have committed to visiting the shelter following pressure from immigrant rights activists. Former Rep. Beto O’Rourke (D-Texas); Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.), Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (D-Hawaii), New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio and South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg have all said they will visit. Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.) went to the facility Monday and joined those who call it a “prison.” Soon after Warren left, Jane Sanders, the wife of Senator. Bernie Sanders also visited the facility.
Homestead houses approximately 2,300 unaccompanied 13- to 17-year-olds who were apprehended at the border and then placed in the care of the Department of Health and Human Services. In most cases, they did not have their parents at the border.
The conditions at Homestead do not meet basic child welfare standards, according to immigration lawyers who recently interviewed teenagers at the facility. The teens complained about being put in isolation for up to eight days, and they said they were deprived of physical touch. Others talked about sobbing every day after being stuck in Homestead for months and not knowing when they’d be released to their sponsors.
According to a court settlement, children are supposed to leave the facility “as expeditiously as possible. “However, lawyers said increased sponsor vetting and case management inefficiencies have led to some kids being detained for more than six months. These extended stays are troubling because Homestead is a temporary facility, meaning it is not licensed or required to follow Florida’s childcare standards.
“What is happening at Homestead to children, what is happening as the direct result of the activities of the United States government, is wrong. It is a stain on our country,” Warren said into a megaphone. “We will stay here at Homestead until this facility releases these children and closes down.”
The complex, located on federal land beside an Air Reserve Base, is surrounded by a chain-link fence with guards stationed at every entrance. The 17-year-olds sleep in tightly packed rooms that fit up to 250 people, and the younger teens sleep in rooms of 12. All the children go to school in large tents and complain they can’t hear the teachers because of the noise between them.
The Obama administration opened the Homestead in 2016 and stayed open for ten months. The Trump administration began using it again in 2018 and has more than doubled the shelters’ capacity.