Standing outside the Greyhound bus depot on Wednesday, May 28 at 9 p.m., a woman leans against the railing, takes a deep breath and looks across the parking lot at the I-10 traffic.
A break from the noise and activity inside, where about 20 other women and their children, more than 10 children—crying, laughing, playing and waiting for buses to come and take them to other parts of the country. I hear someone mention Florida, another Tennessee and someone else Chicago.
This woman from Honduras, is one of hundreds of women, most with children, from Central America, being dropped off at the bus station all hours by Immigration and Customs Enforcement in vans from the airport and from the U.S. Border Patrol detention off Golf Links. The same is happening in Phoenix.
Casa Mariposa volunteers helping the families say it’s not a new occurrence, but the past seven months the numbers being dropped off at the bus station—without funds to purchase tickets, without food or toiletries, and without a means to call family or friends for help—has tripled.
It was noticeable this past Memorial Day weekend when more than 100 women and children arrived at the bus depot and volunteers went into action, which included a press release explaining that something unusual was occurring. Casa Mariposa, a faith-based community that works with detained immigrants and others released from detention, provide shelter and necessities.
Volunteer Laurie Melrood, helping translate, says working with those released at the bus depot has meant maintaining a good relationship with Greyhound employees and management, who’ve been in touch with ICE to see if the agency is willing to better coordinate drop-offs. When drop-offs have occurred in the past, Melrood say Greyhound employees call to let them know their help is needed.
Melrood says those being dropped off have been given deportation dates and ordered to check in with ICE wherever they go next, but they are not given funds or tickets. Volunteers help the women make calls to family and friends in other parts of the country to ask if they can buy tickets and meet them at the stations; those catching buses the next day are given shelter and those waiting at the station are given toiletries, food, clothing and toys for the children.
It was reported that a large number of those being dropped off were flown in from Texas—which has experienced a large volume of border crossers. ICE Texas detention is at capacity. However, the woman I talked to outside the bus depot wasn’t one of them—she was apprehended by Border Patrol with her five-year-old son walking around the desert for two hours after climbing the wall near Naco.
She left her mother and father in Honduras with her second child with the idea that she’d be able to get a job to help support them—Honduras she says is violent and they live in poverty. It’s not an unusual immigrant story, but as she explains the details, that it took 8 months to get from Honduras to Mexico City riding the top of a train with her son, and then three tries to get over the border.
Her son is crying between the waiting area and ticketing, shouting “Mama, mama.” She brings him into her arms. He hold tight, leans his face into her shoulder, drying his face with her T-shirt sleeve. “God has kept us safe. God has given me strength.”
The immigration experience on the other side continues—South Tucson at Southside Presbyterian Church where Daniel Neyoy Ruiz has spent more than 20 days with his son and wife in sanctuary to prevent his deportation.
The church community and his attorney, Margo Cowen, are working to put national pressure on the White House and Department of Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson through phone calls, emails, faxes and a petition on Groundswell that went from a little more than 100 to more than a 1,000 signatures in less than a week—in an effort to stay Neyoy Ruiz deportation.
Supporters say Neyoy Ruiz fits the category of individuals the administration has said should not be deported because of adverse family and community effects—his deportation would separate him from his wife and teenage son.
In a May 27 letter Cowen sent to Secretary Johnson on Neyoy Ruiz’s request for administrative closure, she wrote “Today … cases exactly like that of Mr. Neyoy are regularly being administratively closed by the Immigration Court …
On May 13 Daniel Neyoy and his family sought the protection of sanctuary at the Southside Presbyterian Church in Tucson, Arizona, birthplace of the Sanctuary Movement of the early 1980s where safe haven was provided to thousands of Central Americans fleeing the unspeakable atrocities of war. Daniel and his family remain in sanctuary at Southside…essentially waiting for our government to do the right thing.”
This article appears in May 29 – Jun 4, 2014.

So if we had protected the border like we are supposed to none of this would be happening?
Wait, what? They are detained for illegally crossing the border in Texas and are flown to a bus station in Arizona so that they can get a bus to wherever they were going illegally in the first place?
Wouldn’t it be quicker to just drive them back across the border? Or if we’ve thrown in the towel and decided that the whole world can move here if they feel like it, why not just take them to the Greyhound station in Texas and PAY for bus fare since it’s way cheaper than flying them somewhere, especially at the rates the feds probably pay.
This is bizarro world.
I guess the bus does not go south to the border.
The immigrant debate aside, this is appalling! As I understand it, these are refugees from Central America mostly Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala. They evidently presented themselves at the border in Texas claiming asylum as refugees from the violence in their home countries (the murder rate in all three countries is high). So the feds detain these folks, fly them to Phoenix and Tucson and dump them at bus stations! No money, no food, no water, 100+ degree heat, they don’t speak the language. Now in the mind of this dumb civil engineer, if they are criminals, then incarcerate them, if they are refugees put them in a refugee camp but don’t just dump them and hope for the best! Don’t transfer a federal problem on to the backs of the good folks in Phoenix and Tucson. Don’t rely on the charity of Churches and groups like Casa Mariposa, it’s a federal problem take care of it! I think all of us on both sides of the issue need to write our congressional representatives and express our outrage at this latest antic by our federal government
Kind of like when Los Angeles ships its bums (homeless) out of town before the Superbowl.