The Department of Health  and Human Services, responsible for their care after they are taken into  custody, announced the move on Monday, saying it has been able to find  other types of locations for the some of tens of thousands of the  children who have come from Central America.
"We are able to take this  step because we have proactively expanded capacity to care for children  in standard shelters, which are significantly less costly facilities.  At the same time, we have seen a decrease in the number of children  crossing the Southwest border," Ken Wolfe, a spokesman for the  department, said in a statement.
The temporary shelters  were set up with the cooperation of the Defense Department in May and  early June as the nation saw a major spike in the numbers of these  children -- mostly from El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras -- crossing  into the United States through Mexico.
The three facilities were  at Joint Base San Antonio-Lacklan
d in Texas, Fort Sill Army Base in  Oklahoma and Naval Base Ventura County-Port Hueneme in California.
Officials said they  expect the children at Fort Sill to be moved by Friday and that the  other two facilities to end operations in the next two to eight weeks.
HHS said about 7,700 children were placed at the three bases.
It is possible, HHS said, it would reopen the three military facilities if there is another surge.
Internal Homeland  Security Department figures showed more than 62,000 children had  illegally come into the United States as of the end of last week during  the past 10 months, according to a U.S. official.
HHS' Administration for  Children and Families is given responsibility for these kids after they  are detained at the border. Right now, HHS said it will house the  children both in standard as well as special surge facilities.
The ultimate aim is to  release the kids to sponsors -- often times family members if they have  some living in the United States -- while their cases make it through  the immigration system. That can take several years.






 
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