Under the current U.S. immigrant detention system, many detainees are denied adequate medical care, face cruel and inhumane conditions and have fallen out of touch with their families.

It’s this kind of widespread treatment of detainees that has led the head of U.S. immigration enforcement to announce plans for a major overhaul of the government’s controversial detention system, the Arizona Republic reports.

The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), is addressing oversight, medical care and tracking of detainees at facilities.

In some cases, detainees are denied basic fairness including upon their arrival at a new detention center without having been served a notice of why they were being held.

Last year, the Obama administration vowed to overhaul immigration detention, a hodgepodge system of privately run jails, federal centers and county cells where the government holds noncitizens while it tries to deport them.

Here are some of takeaways from the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement overhaul plan:

  • Hire 50 federal employees to oversee the largest detention facilities, which now are largely run by contractors.
  • Assign regional case managers to keep tabs on detainees with significant medical problems to ensure they are getting proper care.
  • Launch an online immigrant-detainee locator so family members can easily find their relatives when they are in custody awaiting possible deportation.

 Relate Resources:

You Don’t Have To Solve This on Your Own – Get a Lawyer’s Help

Civil Rights

Block on Trump’s Asylum Ban Upheld by Supreme Court

Criminal

Judges Can Release Secret Grand Jury Records

Politicians Can’t Block Voters on Facebook, Court Rules