as you mentioned. immigration officials have been asking for funding, they know it s not ideal conditions for these children. dr. nicole, they re obviously clear health concerns for the children prayed also just on the journey, talk a little bit about all that nicole: the abstract comments about concentration caps are missing the point about what s going on. there is a crisis at our border. i spent several years in the county hospital in arizona. i took care of many patients who came across the board of. i have a vivid memory of this 19-year-old pregnant girl who was dropped unconscious at our emergency room doors after she had traveled the desert. she was a drug mule. they did what they wanted with her and dropped her off. two intensive weeks in the icu, she and her baby died. that s an extreme case. but those happen every single day. we see them every single day. looking at those pictures, it is it makes your stomach upset and it makes you want to cry. but that s the reality of w
unaccompanied children from within 20 days. for those traveling with family units. you have a hearing within 20 days, they have to be released into the country. lest you can be swayed by the media reports that the children are housed in concentration caps or cages, the truth is the u.s. tax paper is spending a lot on the care of these children. nearly $35,000 per year per child. they have a higher standard of living within the 13 million american children today currently living below the poverty line. it s about 24,000 per household. as for the conditions of the facilities that the immigrant children are housed in, they live a lot better than some inner-city kids are say the 11,472 homeless veterans living here in california. anything we ve seen, the government has provided. it doesn t feel like we are in
for those traveling with family units. unless you have a hearing within 20 days, they have to be released into the country. lest you can be swayed by the media reports that the children are housed in concentration caps or cages, the truth is the u.s. tax paper is spending a lot on the care of these children. nearly $35,000 per year per child. they have a higher standard of living within the 13 million american children today currently living below the poverty line. it s about 24,000 per household. as for the conditions of the facilities that the immigrant children are housed in, they live a lot better than some inner-city kids are say the 11,472 homeless veterans living here in california. anything we ve seen, the government has provided. it doesn t feel like we are in the united states. department of health and human services invited us inside because they wanted to show us