LOS ANGELES — Damian Zermeño, 15, sensed something was wrong the moment he got home from school.
His aunt sat at the dining table, sobbing. His father, who’d walked him to the bus stop that morning and promised to take him to dinner when he got back, wasn’t there.
Saúl Zermeño, a 45-year-old single dad, had gone to a routine check-in appointment at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement office that morning, a requirement he’d complied with for years. The father had deferred action that allowed him to stay and work in the U.S., according to his attorney. But that day, Oct. 3, officers deported him to Mexico, where he hadn’t lived since he was 9 years old. Zermeño had been Damian’s sole caregiver since he was a baby because his mother chose not to be involved in the boy’s life, the family said.
Suddenly, Damian, who was born in the U.S., found himself separated from his father by thousands of miles and a heavily guarded border. The previously cheerful 10th grader, who doesn’t have a driver’s license and can make a few basic dishes but isn’t used to cooking for himself, faced navigating his teenage years alone, his dad’s presence reduced to a two-dimensional image on his phone.
“I thought it wasn’t true,” Damian said. “I just went to my room. I didn’t want to leave. I didn’t even want to eat.”
Damian is among an estimated hundreds of thousands of children, most of them U.S. citizens, separated from a parent by the Trump administration’s deportation policies. Their mothers and fathers have been deported or locked for months inside detention centers, often miles away from where their families live. These children are separated, sometimes violently, from the adults they depend on. Parents have been arrested while dropping kids off at school, inside their homes, and at immigration check-ins with their children present. Most people detained have no criminal conviction. (Being in the U.S. without authorization is typically a civil offense). With their parents gone, kids’ lives are plunged into fear and uncertainty.
As a result, a generation of children from immigrant families are exhibiting mental health problems that could affect them for years.
Los Angeles Unified School District will ban classroom screen time before second grade and has enacted limited use for older students, under a pioneering policy approved Tuesday by the school board that reflects growing backlash from parents and educators who are concerned about an over-reliance on computers and technology in K-12 learning. (Sequeira, 6/23)
Citing a series of violent crimes that followed criminal defendants being spared of convictions due to diagnosed mental illnesses, state lawmakers have pushed forward legislation backed by California prosecutors to limit who can qualify. (Queally, 6/18)
The Imperial County Board of Supervisors approved the submission of the Imperial County Behavioral Health Services (BHS) Integrated Plan on Tuesday, June 16, to the California Department of Health Care Services to be eligible for dedicated state funding to address behavioral health service needs. (Guerrero, 6/23)
San Francisco Supervisor Jackie Fielder will return to office on June 29 after taking a three-month leave of absence due to a mental health challenge. (Johnson, 6/23)
A gunman who entered a library in Northern California and opened fire Monday night was hoping to commit a massacre akin to the Columbine High School shooting, Chico police officials said. (Harter and Lin, 6/22)
An 18-year-old Chico man was arrested Tuesday morning on suspicion of two counts of murder after two people were shot dead Monday afternoon at the Chico library. (Wolcott, 6/23)
Bradley Scott Sayer’s father said he saw “zero” warning signs before the Chico library shooting that killed two adults and injured a child. (Vaziri and Vainshtein, 6/23)
Sharp Coronado Hospital is the first emergency department in California to earn the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) Level 2 Emergency Department Accreditation. (6/19)
Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital is poised to buy a new “Mammovan,” its mobile clinic that brings breast-cancer services into city neighborhoods. (Salazar, 6/18)
There are growing questions over what politicians should be involved in healthcare for the county’s poorest residents through CalOptima. (Biesiada, 6/18)
The appellate court granted a preliminary injunction blocking enforcement of a law that bars school employees from disclosing a student’s gender identity, sexual orientation or expression to parents without the student's consent. (Sharp, 6/22)
Dozens of immigrants at the Otay Mesa Detention Center have described deteriorating health or inadequate medical care in court records. (Mejias-Pascoe and Kincaid, 6/15)
San Francisco supervisors are working to extend an exemption allowing The City’s Department of Homelessness and Supportive Housing to solicit donations from the private sector to support shelter expansion and other services. (Salazar, 6/23)
Toxic air has covered the San Gabriel Valley and beyond at times, as the fire continues to burn and the wind shifts the pall in different directions. (Briscoe, McNair and Baysinger, 6/23)
A person infected with measles flew on a transpacific flight and passed through Los Angeles International Airport last week, potentially exposing other passengers to the highly contagious disease. (Lin II, 6/19)
It's designed to curb the population of mosquitoes that spread viruses like West Nile, Dengue and Chikungunya and are scheduled to occur over several agricultural areas in the region this week. (Bowden, 6/23)
Parents, educators and researchers say that inclusive early education improves outcomes for students with disabilities and reduces the need for more intensive — and costly — special education services in older grades. (Gallegos, 6/23)
San Diego cracked down Monday on illegal cannabis delivery services by creating new permit requirements, increasing penalties and allowing legal dispensaries to sue illegal operators and recover damages. (Garrick, 6/22)
The U.S. will begin to test kratom for its potential to treat opioid disorder. In California, a complaint targets a business accused of violating kratom restrictions. (Garcia, 6/19)
UC San Diego is getting a Goop Kitchen at the center of campus. (Popescu, 6/22)
This Week's 'KFF Health News Minute'
New rules that require millions of Americans to work to access Medicaid are stricter than many expected. Plus, the federal Family and Medical Leave Act protects many people’s jobs — but there’s a big catch.
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