Two years ago, U.S. Border Patrol agents encountered 1,500 illegal immigrants every day in the El Paso sector alone — now, they’re seeing roughly 80 per day amid President Donald J. Trump’s unprecedented effort to secure the homeland.
Now, organizations that once facilitated the invasion of illegal immigrants are finding out that sheltering them is no longer necessary: “It’s because migrants are not coming across the border right now,” one local reporter said.
- Catholic Charities says they see only “zero to three families” at their McAllen, Texas, shelter and cut staff in Dallas due to the lack of need.
- A Brownsville, Texas, facility shut its doors due to the “sudden decrease in asylum seekers” over the past month.
- A migrant shelter network in El Paso, Texas, says just one or two of its 20 shelters will remain open.
- Pima County, Arizona, shut down two migrant shelters due to the lack of demand in the aftermath of President Trump’s inauguration.
- In San Diego, California, a shelter “has not had a single migrant walk through its doors since President Trump took office” and has since closed altogether.
- In New York City, a network of shelters that once housed thousands of illegal immigrants have been closed.
- In northern Mexico, local news reports the flow of illegal immigrants seeking to enter the United States has “decreased enormously” — with facilities that once held thousands of illegals now seeing just a tiny fraction.
February 21, 2025 Washington, DC
Souirces: WH.gov, Midtown Tribune