CONCORD — The boy at the Homestead, Fla., detention center floods Melissa Hinebauch’s mind whenever she closes in on presidential candidates.
She thought of him last Friday as she protested off Concord’s Main Street, cars flying by, sometimes honking at the sight of her “Stop Separating Families” sign. She guessed the boy, who had no choice but to stay in the southern Florida detention facility, was about her son’s age — 16.
As she protested downtown, she recalled her visit to Homestead, when he waved at her with one hand, then two as she stood on a ladder and peered over a tarped chain-link fence detaining him and some 1,700 other children. How could she forget him?
“I just can’t sleep at night knowing that these children are basically lost and hidden from view,” Hinebauch said.
That restlessness has stirred Hinebauch, of Concord, to action. She’s part of the Kent Street Coalition, an advocacy group that is working to shut down the nation’s largest detention center for immigrant children in Homestead, and they’re using the nation’s first primary to do it.
“Our main goal is to support the children who don’t have a voice, all the children who are incarcerated and detained at detention centers like Homestead across the country,” said Hinebauch, who has visited Homestead twice. “Our second goal is to tell as many people as possible about it, specifically, to challenge and bird dog all of the presidential candidates who are coming through N.H.”
As presidential hopefuls tour New Hampshire, Kent Street activists join their crowds, wait for an opportunity — a microphone at a town hall or a moment to chat with a candidate — and strike.
“Every time we go to an event, we ask a question: will you go to visit Homestead in person?” Hinebauch said.
It’s worked. So far, eight candidates have promised to visit Homestead: Biden, de Blasio, Gabbard, Gillibrand, O’Rourke, Swalwell, Warren and Williamson. Four of those pledges came in New Hampshire, while Warren and O’Rourke committed elsewhere. Most are following through. Swalwell visited on Monday, de Blasio, Gillibrand and O’Rourke plan to go on Thursday and Williamson, Buttigieg, Castro and Harris will be there on Friday. Warren and Klobuchar planned to visit the center on Wednesday and Gillibrand plans to visit later, campaign staffers told the Concord Monitor. Biden’s campaign did not respond to questions about his plans.
The visits will bring cameras to Homestead and more attention to the migrant child detention crisis, which dominated headlines last Monday when Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez called centers like Homestead “concentration camps.” More controversy followed last Tuesday when the Trump administration argued in federal court that the government didn’t need to give detained children basic hygiene items, like soap and toothpaste.
A few feet down from two child-sized mannequins placed behind a cage at Friday’s demonstration with two dozen activists, Hinebauch said she wants all migrant child detention centers closed. Her group, however, is leveraging its access to New Hampshire politics to shut down and target the one in Homestead. That’s because it’s the only migrant child detention center that is for-profit, Hinebauch said.
“Caliburn and Comprehensive Health Services are charging $750 a day per kid, so there is a financial incentive for them to have more kids at Homestead and to keep them longer,” Hinebauch said.
As of June 16, about 2,500 children ages 13 to 17 lived at the detention center. Its capacity has doubled this year. According to the Associated Press, the average length of stay at Homestead was 67 days as of last December. The Flores settlement, which the federal government agreed to in 1997, sets a 20-day maximum on the detention of migrant children, Hinebauch said.
Dennis Jakubowski, of Loudon, who’s been demonstrating with Hinebauch for three months, visited Homestead in late April. What he saw horrified him.
“I am a father, and I’m a grandfather. There’s no feeling like standing on that ladder, and looking at thousands of children that could be your children, that are being treated like criminals,” Jakubowski said. “This is a prison.”
At an early June town hall, Sen. Amy Klobuchar looked to the crowd filling the lobby of Shaheen & Gordon Law Firm after finishing a 20-minute stump speech. It was question time. She unsuspectingly pointed to Hinebauch, who wasted no time, immediately proposing a trip to Homestead.
“I’m asking you to visit during the Democratic debates in Miami on Wednesday. It’s 29 miles down the road. I’ve been there twice this year. It is brutal,” Hinebauch said.
“Yes, yes. I’ve heard this,” Klobuchar interrupted, failing to share her solicitor’s zeal.
“It is heartbreaking,” Hinebauch continued.
“OK, OK,” Klobuchar said, waiting for Hinebauch to finish before going on to criticize the Trump administration’s immigration policy and politely deflecting the invitation. “I don’t know what our schedule is right now.”
Klobuchar wasn’t Hinebauch’s first. The tactic of pinning down a candidate on a specific issue, known as bird-dogging, can be effective. It’s worked with Booker, Warren, Gillibrand and Harris, Hinebauch said. The other day, she got Marianne Williamson at the Statehouse.
“I literally bumped into her,” Hinebauch said. “I went around the corner and bumped right into her. And then I bird-dogged her.”
Kent Street uses email, postal mail, tweets and calls too, Hinebauch said, and when she can’t get to an event herself, she puts a call out to her bird-dogging team.
“We’re persistent. And we’re relentless. And we’re doing this all for the kids,” she said.
