DANIA BEACH, Florida — As immigration remains a hotly contested priority for the Trump administration after playing a decisive role in the deeply polarized election, the Border Patrol agents tasked with enforcing many of its laws are wrestling with growing challenges on and off the job.
More are training to become chaplains to help their peers as they tackle security threats, including the powerful cartels that control much of the border dynamic, and witness growing suffering among migrants — all while policies in Washington keep shifting and public outrage targets them from all sides.
''The hardest thing is, people … don't know what we do, and we've been called terrible names,'' said Brandon Fredrick, a Buffalo, New York-based agent some of whose family members have resorted to name-calling.
Earlier this month, he served as a training academy instructor for Border Patrol chaplains, whose numbers have almost doubled in the last four years. It's an effort to help agents motivated by the desire to keep the U.S. borders safe cope with mounting distress before it leads to family dysfunction, addiction, even suicide.
Chaplains academy trains agents to tackle emotional distress
During the latest academy, held at a Border Patrol station near Miami, Fredrick evaluated pairs of chaplains-in-training as they role-played checking on a fellow agent who hadn't reported for work.
They discovered he'd been drowning in alcohol his angst at being deployed away from his family for the holidays at one of the border's hotspots. The training scenario was achingly real for the South Florida-based agent role-playing the distressed one — he had struggled when relocated for 18 months to Del Rio, Texas, away from his two children — and also for Fredrick, who overcame alcoholism before becoming a chaplain.
Interacting with chaplains can reduce the agents' reluctance to express their emotional trials, Fredrick said.