Immigrant children separated from their family are housed at a former Job Corps site in Florida

Immigrant children separated from their family are housed at a former Job Corps site in Florida Wilfredo Lee/AP

Defense Contractors Are Helping Care for Detained Migrant Children

General Dynamics is helping to ensure the needs of unaccompanied children are met, but has no role in the family separation policy or construction of detention facilities.

General Dynamics is one of the largest defense contractors in the country, a massive conglomerate that builds jets, tanks, bullets and submarines at facilities around the United States. It is also caring for the detained migrant children that the government has separated from their parents.

President Trump’s decision to separate families who are apprehended illegally crossing the U.S. border has led to a huge influx of children into the government’s custody. His chief of staff, John Kelly, has promised that “the children will be taken care of—put into foster care or whatever.” With thousands of these children now calling for their parents from converted Wal-Marts and warehouses, the administration is under pressure to come up with “whatever” very fast.

General Dynamics also specializes in outsourcing bureaucracy. Since 2000, it has worked for the Health and Human Services Department’s Office of Refugee Resettlement. This entails “casework support services to help ensure special needs of unaccompanied children are met, including medical requirements, and to facilitate family reunification, only after children are under the care of Health and Human Services,” according to a statement provided by General Dynamics Information Technology spokesperson Jay Hauck.

The statement stresses that “General Dynamics Information Technology has no role in the family separation policy, nor a role in the construction or operation of detention facilities.”

With so many new children in the system, General Dynamics has begun advertising for jobs to help process all of the tiny prisoners—bilingual caseworkersdata entry clerks, someone to review files and redact information. (Turnover is going to be a problem.)

These very specific help-wanted ads have attracted notice from reporters and from activist groups Sleeping Giant and Grab Your Wallet, who have begun contacting General Dynamics and another contractor, MVM Inc., to let them “know how they feel about making money on locking children in cages.” MVM is a privately-held former CIA contractor with a checkered history that works with ORR to manage emergency shelters.

In 2017, General Dynamics made more than $4 billion on IT contracts like these, including some administering Medicare. The company would not comment on how much money it was making on its current contract, which began in 2015, or how much it might stand to make if the program expands. Reuters previously reported that the company was awarded $13 million in contracts between 2010 and 2014.

The company has also been popular on Wall Street, and a fixture in the S&P 500—which means it is also found in many people’s 401(k)s. Today, under an onslaught of bad publicity, its stock has fallen more than 2 percent.

The company may not have a role in border policy, but it does have influence in Washington. General Dynamics CEO Phebe Novakovic, who made $21 million in total compensation last year, is a former CIA officer, and the company spent more than $11 million last year lobbying lawmakers and executive agencies.