Texas Latina Is Demonstrating How To Take Care Of The Refugee Children

Mamie Salazar-Harper
For the past month, the El Paso, Texas businesswoman, Mamie Salazar-Harperhas has poured her time, energy and money into a venture that could prove incredibly meaningful: building a home for undocumented migrant children.
According to El Paso Inc., the home is Salazar-Harper’s response to what President Barack Obama calls an “urgent humanitarian situation” at the U.S.-Mexico border. Since October 2013, over 57,000 unaccompanied minors from Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador have been detained crossing into Texas and Arizona.
The house is described as “a squat, white building” located off Montana Avenue in East El Paso and was formerly an abandoned correctional facility.  But in the hands of Salazar-Harper and her husband, attorney Thomas Randolph Rey, it has completely transformed. Today, it features a room painted with images of “princesses and anthropomorphic cars,” with toys and giant stuffed animals covering the floor. It also houses a TV, multiple couches, a fully stocked kitchen and 76 beds with “a neatly folded towel” at the foot of each.
All told, the home cost about $20,000 to renovate and furnish, and the couple hopes to have it up and running as a non-profit in the next two weeks.
“Our community has been able to come together and mobilize very quickly to provide a real and viable solution to the problem,” she told El Paso Inc.
Salazar-Harper owns M Rentals Inc., which maintains defense contracts and does work on military posts across the country. But she also served on the Texas State Family and Protective Services Council from 2005-2011, so it’s unsurprising that the issue of unaccompanied children would be close to her heart.
Her galvanizing moment came when she saw images of the detained youth sleeping on cramped cots and concrete floors in the U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s overwhelmed holding cells.  “Mamie is like that,” Maria Rizzo, general manager of a yogurt shop that Salazar-Harper also owns, told El Paso Inc. “She has a vision and overnight we are going to do it.”
For full story and more photos  of children in the detention centers: photos http://mic.com/articles/94652/a-texas-businesswoman-is-doing-what-the-government-won-t-for-refugee-children?utm_source=policymicFB&utm_medium=main&utm_campaign=social

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