Florida and Trump administration officials are discussing whether to close the Everglades immigration detention center known as “Alligator Alcatraz”
The Facts
- Florida and federal officials are in early or preliminary talks about closing the immigration detention center in the Everglades known as “Alligator Alcatraz.”
- The facility opened last summer in the Florida Everglades.
- Reports on the closure talks say the facility has been expensive to operate, with costs described as hundreds of millions of dollars overall and about $1 million a day.
- Gov. Ron DeSantis said the detention center was always meant to be temporary and would be broken down once it was no longer needed or if federal authorities could house detainees elsewhere.
- DeSantis said the facility has processed and deported about 22,000 detainees since it opened.
- The center has faced opposition and legal challenges from environmental, tribal, and activist groups since it opened.
- No final closure decision has been announced, and the future of the facility remains unsettled.
How left and right are reading this
- Both agree
- The facility’s temporary status and high operating cost make its continued use contingent on a clear need, a premise both framings accept even as they stress different burdens created by keeping it open.
- They split on
- Whether the story is about taxpayers and affected communities bearing the cost of a contested detention site, or about ending a temporary facility once its detention and deportation function can be handled elsewhere.
Context
Why are officials considering closing the facility?
Reports say Department of Homeland Security officials concluded the detention center is too expensive to keep operating, and the New York Times also reported that some homeland security officials viewed it as ineffective NYT,Newser.
What has Ron DeSantis said about the center’s future?
DeSantis said the site was always intended as a temporary facility and that Florida would dismantle it once the federal government had enough capacity to hold detainees elsewhere Owensboro Messenger…,U.S. News & World R….
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