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Biden鈥檚 Plan To Reopen The Homestead Detention Center, Sewage Problems, And Alligator Wrestling

DANIEL A. VARELA
/
Miami Herald
Moms, activists, community leaders and children march during a Mother's Day protest to shut down the country's largest child detention facility outside the Homestead Detention Center in Homestead, Florida, on Sunday, May 12, 2019.

The Biden administration is considering reopening a controversial migrant detention center. SA国际传谋's investigation into South Florida's sewage crisis. And we hear from a Seminole Alligator wrestler.

On this Thursday, Feb. 25, episode of Sundial:

Biden鈥檚 Plan To Reopen The Homestead Detention Center

The Biden Administration is planning to reopen the Homestead detention center for unaccompanied migrant teens.

The facility, which is now known as the Biscayne Influx Care Facility, was abruptly shut down in 2019 after a Miami Herald report found .

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followed. And it was later revealed that employees caring for the kids were not vetted specifically for prior child abuse records.

鈥淲e spoke with some folks in the Department of Homeland Security who are not authorized to speak publicly on this matter and there鈥檚 also some additional evidence out there showing that the facility is ramping for potential operations,鈥 said Alex Daugherty, the Miami Herald鈥檚 Washington correspondent.

The found documents that show the federal government has hosted virtual meetings for prospective contractors 鈥渇or three upcoming temporary influx shelters under the Unaccompanied Alien Children鈥檚 Program.鈥

There was also a recent Miami job posting by a contractor for an 鈥渆xciting new career opportunity supporting direct care services and supervision at Biscayne Influx Facility!鈥

The facility was used as a photo-op for presidential hopefuls during their campaign.

Vice President Kamala Harris was among those who visited and used it to criticize the Trump administration鈥檚 immigration policies.

Biden鈥檚 Plan To Reopen The Homestead Detention Center

South Florida Sewage Problems

South Florida is continuing to develop at a rapid pace; the state is seeing, on average, 1,000 new residents each day. But the new condos sprouting up in Miami, Fort Lauderdale and West Palm Beach are sitting on top of old, rusted pipes down below. And nowhere has the crisis facing our sewage infrastructure been more pronounced than in Fort Lauderdale.

In December 2019, the city was dealing with the worst sewage breaks Florida has ever seen. The amount of raw sewage in Fort Lauderdale streets exceeded the total amount released during the massive BP oil spill 鈥 more than 211 million gallons.

Residents are very worried about the impact of sewage spills on the environment, public health and how long it will take the city to revamp a system that's more than 50 years old.

SA国际传谋 reporters Caitie Switalski Mu帽oz and Jenny Staletovich spent the past year investigating sewage woes in South Florida and found tourism and development are pushing the system to its limits. Find the full investigation here.

Sewage Problems
A sewage spill at George English Park in Fort Lauderdale.

Alligator Wrestling

For the month of February, in the Sundial Book Club, we鈥檝e been reading 鈥楽wamplandia!鈥 by Karen Russell.

The setting of the story takes place in a fictitious theme park in the middle of the Everglades. A family, pretending to be Native American, is trying to attract visitors, especially with their alligator shows.

Alligator performances, like gator wrestling, have been around for decades in Florida.

The Seminole Tribe has a long history of the practice and much of it is focused on developing a relationship with the animal. Alligator wrestling has been a large money-maker for Seminole Tribes dependent upon tourism but in recent years it鈥檚 also seen as .

Alligator Wrestling

We recently spoke with Billy Barefoot Walker, a Seminole alligator wrestler. You can read the New Yorker investigation and watch the short documentary film by Native American filmmakers Adam Khalil and Adam Piron below.

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Leslie Ovalle Atkinson is the former lead producer behind Sundial. As a multimedia producer, she also worked on visual and digital storytelling.
Chris knew he wanted to work in public radio beginning in middle school, as WHYY played in his car rides to and from school in New Jersey. He鈥檚 freelanced for All Things Considered and was a desk associate for CBS Radio News in New York City. Most recently, he was producing for Capital Public Radio鈥檚 Insight booking guests, conducting research and leading special projects at Sacramento鈥檚 NPR affiliate.