{"id":932,"date":"2025-07-01T18:42:50","date_gmt":"2025-07-01T18:42:50","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/logicalware.net\/?p=932"},"modified":"2025-07-01T19:18:36","modified_gmt":"2025-07-01T19:18:36","slug":"trump-visits-alligator-alcatraz-what-to-know-about-floridas-migrant-detention-facility","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/logicalware.net\/index.php\/2025\/07\/01\/trump-visits-alligator-alcatraz-what-to-know-about-floridas-migrant-detention-facility\/","title":{"rendered":"Trump visits 'Alligator Alcatraz': What to know about Florida's migrant detention facility"},"content":{"rendered":"
The Trump administration and Florida leaders partnered together to build a detention facility<\/a> on a remote site nestled in the state’s swampy Everglades to hold migrants awaiting deportation.<\/p>\n The site, dubbed “Alligator Alcatraz,”<\/a> opened Tuesday with soft-sided holding units for hundreds of detainees in the coming days through a partnership in which the federal government will provide funding and the Florida Division of Emergency Management (FDEM) will oversee the build-out and management. Additional holding units will be added through next month, under the agreement.<\/p>\n President Trump, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) and Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Kristi Noem attended the site’s opening<\/a>. The leaders also held a roundtable discussion<\/a> on the facility, which is projected to cost about $450 million a year. Those funds will come from the Federal Emergency Management Agency\u2019s (FEMA) Shelter and Services Program, which was used to house asylum-seekers<\/a> during the Biden administration.<\/p>\n Trump, before heading to Florida on Tuesday, advised anyone who tried to escape from the migrant detention facility<\/a> to zigzag when trying to evade alligators and other animals lurking in the Everglades. <\/p>\n \u201cDon\u2019t run in a straight line; run like this,\u201d the president said to reporters, waving his hand from side-to-side.<\/p>\n The DHS-approved site<\/a> in Ochopee, Fla., will hold immigrants arrested in the Sunshine State, as well as transfers from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).<\/p>\n The Florida state flag waves along with the USA flag. (Getty Images) DeSantis’s administration pitched the partnership<\/a> to the federal government in a 37-page “Immigration Enforcement Operations Plan” earlier this year outlining the state’s requests for reimbursements and looser restrictions on addressing unauthorized immigration.<\/p>\n “Governor DeSantis has insisted that the state of Florida, under his leadership, will facilitate the federal government in enforcing immigration law,” the governor’s office said in a statement to The Hill. “Utilizing this space and\/or others around the state, Florida will continue to lead in immigration enforcement.”<\/p>\n In the partnership proposal, Florida officials noted that the state’s “geographic position, ambient culture, and the confluence of three major interstate highways (I-10, I-75 and I-95) have made it attractive to criminal organizations smuggling everything from aliens to drugs to guns and money.”<\/p>\n A July 2024 Pew Research Center report<\/a> on the “unauthorized immigrant population” in the U.S. found that Florida’s communities swelled by at least 400,000 people from 2019 to 2022 \u2014 more than any other state in the country \u2014 and estimate its total population of immigrants lacking permanent legal status at about 1.2 million.<\/p>\n The Florida proposal argued “the nature and vast scope of the illegal alien presence deserves a rethinking of detention processes and standards” and urged the Trump administration to waive some ICE detention standards<\/a>.<\/p>\n Isolated Everglades airfield outside Miami that Florida officials said an immigration detention facility dubbed “Alligator Alcatraz” is just days away from being operational. (Courtesy of the Office of Attorney General James Uthmeier via AP)<\/em><\/p>\n The Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport, located in Ochopee \u2014 about 36 miles south of Miami \u2014 is owned by the Miami-Dade County government.<\/p>\n The nearly 40-square-mile site was first developed in the late 1960s with plans to become a major hub, but the project fizzled because of environmental concerns, leaving just a single strip that has been used as a training site and for rare general aviation needs.<\/p>\n Florida officials touted the strip as a benefit because it will allow migrants to be flown in to and out of the holding facility without much disruption.<\/p>\n In a video coining the site a potential “Alligator Alcatraz,” Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier (R) highlighted its remote location as a bonus.<\/p>\n “People get out, there\u2019s not much waiting for them other than alligators and pythons \u2014nowhere to go, nowhere to hide,\u201d Uthmeier said last month in a video<\/a> shared on social platform X. “Within just 30 to 60 days after we begin construction, it could be up and running and could house as many as 1,000 criminal aliens.”<\/p>\n Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier speaks at the Florida Capitol in Tallahassee, Fla., on March 5, 2025.<\/em><\/p>\n The FDEM initially offered to buy the Dade-Collier Airport from Miami-Dade County, but DeSantis’s administration couldn’t reach an agreement with local leaders on the price, so the state instead moved to take it over, using the governor’s emergency authority.<\/p>\n FDEM Executive Director Kevin Guthrie wrote in a letter to Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava (D) on Monday that the agency would “begin immediate utilization of the improved area of the site, as I now deem it necessary to meet the Division\u2019s current “Time is of the essence,” Guthrie wrote. “We must act swiftly to ensure readiness and continuity in our statewide operations to assist the federal government with immigration enforcement.”<\/p>\n The director added that the state would maintain control of the site as long as DeSantis’s state emergency declaration over immigration remains in effect.<\/p>\n DeSantis’s initial declaration was issued in June 2023<\/a>, citing “mass migration of unauthorized aliens, including the associated abandonment of vessels, without appropriate support from the federal government, [that] has created an unmanageable strain on local resources and will continue to overburden the capabilities of local governments throughout the state.”<\/p>\n<\/figure>\n
<\/em><\/p>\nWhy Florida?<\/h2>\n
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Why this location?<\/h2>\n
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State takeover<\/h2>\n
operational demands in coping with the emergency.”<\/p>\n