The U.S. Border Patrol‘s apprehensions of migrants at the border with Mexico hit their highest level in more than a decade in May and officials warned they don’t have the money and resources to care for the surge of parents and children entering the country.
Agents made 132,887 apprehensions in May, the first time that apprehensions have topped 100,000 since April 2007. It set a record with 84,542 adults and children apprehended. Another 11,507 were children travelling alone, and 36,838 were single adults.
Those numbers underpin the problems across the border. Photos of families waiting in jam-packed cells and in outdoor enclosures have sparked outrage. Six children have died in the last year after being detained by border agents.
Government inspectors last week announced they found one 125-person facility in El Paso, Texas, to have had 700 people one day and 900 another day. They were packed in so tightly that some resorted to standing on toilets.
WATCH: Border agents apprehend a record-setting number of migrants at the southern border in El Paso
Most border crossers are from Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador, countries wracked by gangs, violence, and poverty. Many are expected to eventually request asylum. Border Patrol facilities are not designed to hold families with children as young as newborns, like the people who enter the U.S. daily.
Children are routinely detained for longer than the 72 hours allowed by federal law and U.S. Customs and Border Protection guidelines. The agency cites long-term detention facilities for parents and children that are at or above capacity.
“We are bursting at the seams,” said Randy Howe, CBP’s executive director of operations. “This can’t continue.”
President Donald Trump has asked for $4.5 billion to address the influx of migrants, but Congress has yet to approve it.
He’s also threatened to impose a 5 per cent tariff on Mexican products if authorities there don’t curb migration from Central America. Mexican officials went to Washington this week to lobby the Trump administration not to comply with its threat.
WATCH: Video shows thousands crossing U.S.-Mexico border illegally before being apprehended
Mexico has offered more options to Central Americans to stay in the country legally and allowed the U.S. to return thousands of migrants who have asylum cases pending under a Trump administration initiative currently being challenged in court.
Around 200 Mexican police and immigration agents blocked the advance of about 1,000 Central American migrants on a southern highway Wednesday.
But the Border Patrol says agents in El Paso, Texas, encountered more than 1,000 people crossed into the U.S. in a single group just last week. Agents made 38,630 apprehensions in and around El Paso in May.
WATCH: Trump threatens Mexico with tariffs on imports
Officials say they’re not counting on the hotter summer weather leading to a seasonal downturn in migration as it usually does. Already, agents have apprehended large groups of migrants in the first days of June.
“We’re not seeing any signs of anything dropping off,” said Brian Hastings, the Border Patrol’s chief of law enforcement operations.