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The Department of Homeland Security has concluded the detention center in the Everglades is too expensive to keep operating

                            

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The Department of Homeland Security has concluded the detention center in the Everglades is too expensive to keep operating

https://www.orlandosentinel.com/2026/05/07/federal-and-state-officials-consider-closing-floridas-alligator-alcatraz/?share=ieosntn0lsswfddncaof.

Florida is in talks with the Trump administration to shut down a high-profile immigration detention center that opened last summer in the Everglades and has cost the state hundreds of millions of dollars to operate, according to a federal official, a former Immigration and Customs Enforcement official, and a person close to the administration of Gov. Ron DeSantis.

The shutdown talks are preliminary, the people said. But officials at the Department of Homeland Security have concluded that it is too expensive to keep operating the center, known as Alligator Alcatraz. Homeland Security officials have also come to consider the center ineffective, the federal official said. All three people spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal talks.

The DeSantis administration has been spending more than $1 million a day to run the center, which is in a swampy, isolated area between Miami and Naples. Some private vendors hired by the state to operate it have been struggling to front costs, according to the person close to the DeSantis administration.

The Department of Homeland Security did not respond to a request for comment. Neither did the Florida Division of Emergency Management, which operates the center, nor DeSantis’ office.

DeSantis, a Republican, has repeatedly called the Everglades detention center a success, saying it has helped the Trump administration by providing more beds to house federal detainees. He has also said that the facility was intended to be temporary.

But the center’s shutdown would be hailed by immigration lawyers, activists and many detainees and their families as a huge win. Critics have denounced what they describe as unsanitary and inhumane conditions at the center since it opened 10 months ago; state officials have consistently dismissed such descriptions as false.

As of last month, the center held nearly 1,400 detainees, all of them men, according to ICE data. The agency classified about two-thirds of the detainees in the center, which it calls the Florida Soft-Sided Facility South, as noncriminal.

DeSantis has said from the start that the federal government would pay back the state for operating the center. But Florida has yet to receive the $608 million federal reimbursement it requested to run the center for about a year. The money was held up in part by the partial shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security that ended last Thursday. It is unclear why the reimbursement continues to be delayed.

The center became the nation’s first state-run facility to hold federal immigration detainees last July, as Florida pushed the boundaries of aggressive enforcement under President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown. Its remote location and brazen name gained it international notoriety before any detainees arrived.

At the time, Trump and Kristi Noem, then the homeland security secretary, toured the center with DeSantis and Florida’s attorney general, James Uthmeier. Other states later opened immigrant detention centers of their own, though the one in the Everglades stood out as particularly unforgiving given that the site essentially consisted of tents.

Uthmeier, a Republican and DeSantis’ former chief of staff, had pushed to build the center at an old training airport, despite the lack of existing infrastructure. Both men argued that it was crucial for the center to be in a remote location, saying that the inhospitable conditions would prompt immigrants to think twice about staying in the United States illegally and risking arrest.

But the location made it much more expensive to build and run. Vendors had to truck in things like tents, power generators and trailers for staff members to live in. They also had to constantly truck out sewage and other waste.

A lawyer for two detainees said in a federal court filing last month that guards beat and pepper-sprayed the men after detainees protested that their access to a phone inside the center had been cut off. As part of the sworn declaration, the lawyer submitted a photo of one of the detainees with a black eye.

Also last month, a federal appeals court upheld an earlier decision to block a lower court’s order that the center dismantle operations because it had not conducted an environmental review required under federal law. A panel from the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals found that the center was not under federal control, and thus was not subject to the environmental review.

A landing strip allows flights to arrive at and take off from the Everglades center, though it is unclear how frequently detainees have been moved in or out. At least some of the center’s detainees have been flown to larger federal detention centers in Louisiana and Texas, often as a final stop before they are deported.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

ORLANDO SENTINEL


Trumpworld Unnerved as Damning Leaks Expose His Worst War Blunders Yet

                           

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TNR Daily logo
 

Today: "Podcast: Trumpworld Unnerved as Damning Leaks Expose His Worst War Blunders Yet" Plus, John Roberts is trying to defend the indefensible; Trump suffers two brutal court losses in less than 24 hours; and more...

 
 

John Roberts Is Trying to Defend the Indefensible

The chief justice insists he and his colleagues are not political actors, but can’t explain what an overtly politicized right-wing court would do differently from the one he leads.

By Matt Ford

 

The New American Homeless

Housing insecurity in the nation’s richest cities is far worse than the government claims. Just ask the Goodmans.

By Brian Goldstone

 

The inspiration for Brian Goldstone’s 2026 Pulitzer Prize–winning book, There Is No Place for Uscan be traced back to this 2019 TNR feature about an Atlanta woman, Cokethia Goodman, whose family became homeless even as she worked full-time.

 

In the story of the Goodman family, the intimate, novelistic attention that distinguishes Goldstone’s work is on full display—as is an uncompromising indictment of the structural forces to blame for their suffering.

Read now
 

Democrats Have a Joe Biden Problem. Again.

The former president is reentering politics at the worst possible time.

By Alex Shephard

 
IMHO:
MUST READ!
THIS BUFFOON BRAGS ABOUT FIRING FEDERAL EMPLOYEES - 
GOVERNMENT NO LONGER WORKS! 
TRY TO GET ANYTHING DONE - YOU CANT! 
THIS MINDLESS BOOB FIRED PEOPLE WHO GOT THINGS 
DONE! 

 

It’s No Longer Safe for Civil Servants to Be Good at Their Job

If you’re an effective federal worker, don’t let Trump find out—you might not be one for much longer.

By Timothy Noah

excerpt: 
Indeed, Trump doesn’t seem to want civil servants at all. Last year he either fired or harassed into quitting 317,000 of them, and this year he’s poised to reclassify 50,000 more as “at will” employees with no civil service protection. White House budget director Russell “Project 2025” Vought famously said in a 2024 speech, “We want the bureaucrats to be traumatically affected. When they wake up in the morning, we want them to not want to go to work because they are increasingly viewed as the villains.” The only reason Vought would ever show up at a Sammies ceremony would be to scribble down license plate numbers like a police detective at a Mafia funeral.


 

How Is Tucker Carlson More Antiwar Than Leading Democrats?

The party is ceding the issue to Trump’s critics on the right, inviting disaster in the 2028 presidential election.

By Liza Featherstone

 

Less Noted, Just as Radical: The High Court’s Rightward Economic Shift

The Supreme Court and other federal courts have moved dramatically to the right on economic policy as well as social and democracy policy. It’s time to take on that fight too.

By Hannah Garden-Monheit

 

The Ex-MAGA Influencer Who Now Hates All Things MAGA—and Herself Too

Ashley St. Clair used to hang with Erika Kirk. And she bore Romulus, the zillionth child of Elon Musk. She’s now turned her back on MAGA—and wants to tell you all about it.

By Virginia Heffernan

Read now








 



T​he Trans Idahoans Fighting an Extreme Bathroom Ban

A new legal challenge aims to prevent ​a​ punitive anti-trans law in the state from going into effect—and stave off a future where transgender people are at worst criminalized and at best objects of routine suspicion.

By Melissa Gira Grant

 

Trump Gives Least Reassuring Answer Possible on Hantavirus Spread

Is the Trump administration prepared to respond to the hantavirus outbreak?

By Hafiz Rashid
excerpt:

Trump’s answer didn’t inspire a lot of confidence, especially considering how badly he handled the Covid-19 pandemic in the last year of his first term as president. His Secretary of Health and Human Services, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., happens to have laid off all of the cruise ship inspectors in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Vessel Sanitation Program last year. The Trump administration also cut funding to study the hantavirus last year.


Trump has not given any detailed information on how he’s going to handle the recent outbreak. Let’s hope that this virus somehow gets contained, because if it spreads in the U.S., we’ll have an even worse pandemic.



 

Trump Suffers Two Brutal Court Losses in Less Than 24 Hours

The courts have delivered major blows to two of Trump’s signature policies: tariffs and the "anti-woke" crusade.

By Malcolm Ferguson

 

"Panic Mode": Kash Patel Is in Full Meltdown Over Leaks to Reporters

Patel has ordered at least two dozen staffers to take polygraph tests.

By Edith Olmsted

 

Podcast: Trumpworld Unnerved as Damning Leaks Expose His Worst War Blunders Yet

The Daily Blast With Greg Sargent

Officials have leaked word to The Washington Post that they believe Iran can survive Donald Trump’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz for three to four months without experiencing severe economic pain. Also, Iran has kept far more of its missiles and drones than previously known. Those are surely Trump’s worst screw-ups yet, given that he’s repeatedly insisted both that the regime is in terminal collapse and that Iran’s military has been entirely obliterated. This comes as The Wall Street Journal reports that Trump’s advisers are increasingly unnerved by the political price Republicans will pay over the closed strait. Those are related: The new revelations suggest the war could go on longer than expected, which is exactly what his advisers fear will worsen the GOP’s political mess. We talked to New Republic staff writer Tim Noah, who’s been writing well about Trump’s failures. We discuss why the war’s political fallout could last many months, how Trump voters are facing a perfect storm of disastrous policies, and what to expect in the midterms.

 

Indiana Primary Results Prove It: The GOP Is Still a Trump Cult

A few state senators bucked Trump on mid-decade gerrymandering. He endorsed their opponents. And Trump’s candidates won. But there is a silver lining here.

By Perry Bacon

Read now

 

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