US As Crisis Grows, All of New York’s Migrant Plans Are Met With Outrage - For Mr. Adams, the new arrivals have opened a fresh front in the public relations crisis over migrants, as public school parents led a series of protests over the use of school gyms this week.

As Crisis Grows, All of New York’s Migrant Plans Are Met With Outrage
The New York Times (archive.ph)
By Liam Stack and Jeffery C. Mays
2023-05-18 17:18:22GMT

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Parents and students protest outside of a school in Brooklyn where the Adams administration planned to house migrants in the gym.Credit...Brittainy Newman for The New York Times

Since tens of thousands of migrants began arriving in New York City last year, the administration of Mayor Eric Adams has searched for one place after another to house them: hotels, parking lots, a cruise ship terminal and a pair of giant tents on Randall’s Island among them. Almost every idea has caused an uproar.

Now, the daily stream of migrants feeding the crisis has doubled in size in recent weeks, city officials say. As many as 700 migrants are arriving each day in the city — up from less than half that number since the expiration last Thursday of Title 42, a Trump-era policy that allowed immigration officials to expel some border crossers back to Mexico.

With no clear solutions at hand, the city turned to shelter some migrants in public school gyms starting last week. That plan, like many others before it, was almost immediately met with outrage — not only from activists and human rights groups, but also from public school parents and the ranks of everyday New Yorkers.

On Wednesday, the city began to distance itself from that proposal, too.

More than 67,000 migrants have arrived in New York City since the crisis began. Of those, 41,500 people are currently being cared for by the city, Anne Williams-Isom, the deputy mayor for health and human services, said at a news conference on Wednesday. She said 4,300 people had arrived in just the past week.

That new influx of arrivals has forced the Adams administration to contend with new layers of what was already a humanitarian and economic crisis that the city had spent $1 billion addressing so far, and may cost as much as $4.3 billion through June 2024, according to Ms. Williams-Isom. It has strained Mr. Adams’s relationship with not only New Yorkers but with President Biden.

Last week, thousands of migrants converged on the border ahead of Title 42’s end, but crossings have been significantly down in the past week. Border officials are still processing migrants who have been in custody for days; as of Wednesday, the Border Patrol was holding migrants in custody for about four-and-a-half days, on average. More than 3,800 migrants were released on Wednesday with an immigration court summons.

Mr. Biden has been criticized over his response to immigration by Republicans and Democrats alike in recent weeks, including by Mr. Adams, who said last month that the president had “failed” the city. The Biden administration has moved to restrict the flow of migrants, with new limits on who can apply for asylum in the United States. That would make it all but impossible for many people to qualify if they hadn’t applied for asylum elsewhere.

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On Wednesday, Mayor Eric Adams asked people who have criticized his plans to house migrants, “Where would you like for me to house them?”Credit...Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times

The main destination for many people who are crossing continues to be New York City. One shelter in Laredo, Texas, was filled last week with Venezuelans, who have made up a significant number of the people coming to the city since last year. Some said they were attracted to the city because they had friends or relatives there.

A few were also aware that the city would guarantee them shelter. (Unlike other large cities, New York is required to give anyone who asks for shelter a place to stay, a guarantee based on decades of court cases.)

For Mr. Adams, the new arrivals have opened a fresh front in the public relations crisis over migrants, as public school parents led a series of protests over the use of school gyms this week. By Wednesday evening, migrants were moved out of a handful of gyms where they had been staying, mostly located in Brooklyn, though the city said that the plan to use about 20 gyms could be revived as needed for temporary overflow.

But Mr. Adams also threw up his hands at the seemingly endless merry-go-round of proposals, outcries and pivots. “Whomever is telling us not to go somewhere, I have one question for you: You tell me where we should go,” Mr. Adams said on Wednesday.

“The number one question I’m asking everyone now,” the mayor continued, “Did you go to Washington to get us more money? What have you done for the migrants? And where would you like for me to house them?”

Ms. Williams-Isom, the deputy mayor, told reporters that the city was facing a serious humanitarian crisis and needed New Yorkers to come together in a spirit of cooperation and problem solving, not armchair quarterbacking.

“We have seen too many criticisms couched in half truths,” she said. “We are looking for constructive, real suggestions, not idle talking points.”

She said that the city was running out of options and that its shelter capacity was full, which had forced it to turn to temporary options like gyms and “large open spaces.”

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The latest plan for housing migrants in New York City involved setting up cots in public school gyms. Credit...Brittainy Newman for The New York Times

On Tuesday, protesters gathered outside P.S. 172 in Brooklyn, one of the schools whose gym was designated as emergency housing for migrants. Some protesters arrived as early as 3 a.m., when they believed migrants might begin to arrive.

Gabriela Vizhnag, 50, the mother of a third grader, said she was “not racist or anti-immigrant” because she herself immigrated from Mexico. But she opposed the plan to house people in a school gym with no available showers and only two bathrooms.

“It is not good for the children and it is not humane for the migrants,” she said.

A group of migrants from Venezuela watched the protest from a shelter across the street. One, María Briseño, 38, said she understood why parents were upset.

“Schools should be for children and the city should make an effort to house migrants in other places,” said Ms. Briseño, who came to the United States seven months ago with her husband and two children, who now attend another nearby public school.

Ms. Williams-Isom said the city had requested assistance from mayors and county executives across the state, but when asked by reporters about specific proposals or which municipalities the city had asked for help, she declined to provide details. Instead, she repeatedly said that the city was at the end of its rope. The city applied for $350 million in federal aid, but will receive about $30 million, city officials have said.

“What I want New Yorkers to really understand in this moment is that we are in an emergency and we are at a breaking point in the system,” she said, when asked if the city would house migrants in vacant office spaces.

Activists and legal groups have called on the city to focus on helping people find permanent housing, but New York is in the grip of a long-running housing crisis, and its voucher program has been plagued with troubles.

On Wednesday, the Brooklyn borough president, Antonio Reynoso, called on the mayor, the New York City Council and Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Democrat, to take legal action to make thousands of unlisted vacant apartments available for New Yorkers living in shelters, a move he said would free up shelter space for migrants.

Speaking in Harlem on Wednesday, Mr. Adams appeared exasperated by having to explain to New Yorkers that the influx of migrants had created a crisis in the city. He said the city had, in some ways, been a victim of its own success.

“One of the biggest impediments to resolving this issue is that people have not really accepted the fact that this is a crisis,” the mayor said. “Because we have managed it well, people have the belief, ‘Well it can’t be that bad.’ No, it’s bad.”

The mayor said the city was expecting 13 to 15 busloads of migrants in the next several days, and many migrants are also coming via airplane.

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The city’s deputy mayor for health and human services, Anne Williams-Isom, said 4,300 newcomers had arrived in just the past week.Credit...Kirsten Luce for The New York Times

Mr. Adams said that housing migrants at hotels had broader implications for the city, beyond just the cost of putting them up.

“Instead of monies coming from people who are visiting us and spending in our tourism, in our Broadway plays, instead of them using those hotels, we’re using those hotels,” Mr. Adams said.

He then tried to emphasize the seriousness of the situation by explaining that half the hotels in the city were occupied by asylum seekers, a figure that turned out to be inaccurate. The Hotel and Gaming Trades Council, which represents workers at hotels with 70 percent of the city’s rooms, said about 3,500 rooms were currently being used to house asylum seekers. There are between 125,000 and 130,000 hotel rooms in the city, it said.

City officials later clarified that 40 percent of the hotels suitable to house migrants had been booked. Advocates have said that means that hotels should still be an option.

“I’m worried they want to use temporary circumstances that will garner public outcry as a way of nudging Washington,” said Shelly Nortz, deputy executive director for policy for the Coalition for the Homeless. “It wouldn’t be the first time public officials made shelter an unattractive option to send a message to other officials or the migrants themselves.”

Most migrants have said that they were coming, eager to find work; they can become eligible to work legally if they apply for asylum. The process can take a long time, however, so many are finding jobs to support themselves in the underground economy instead.

Marisol Moreno, 55, came to New York six months ago, and has been living in the Holiday Inn in the Financial District for two months. She said she felt “so grateful that this city has supported me and allowed me to stay here.”

She said she also empathized with exasperated city officials and even those who might be unhappy with the arrival of migrants, because her native country, Ecuador, had struggled to provide for migrants fleeing Venezuela.

“I get it. It’s terribly hard for a country or a state to admit thousands of immigrants. It’s a heavy burden,” Ms. Moreno said. “But I believe in us as well, as immigrants. I believe that if we put our heads together, work hard, we can create something worthy here in the United States.”
 
Yet they will continue to be sanctuary cities and load themselves up with more poor people while building hideous glass towers for billionaires.

You mean they will continue to bitch and moan and cry about how unfair it is that Texas is busing their migrants to NYC and other points northerly, right?

Insert a picture of me eating popcorn with an amused grin here.
 
We need to step up the shipment of illegals to NY/CA, it seems to be working. They need to be the ones suffering the consequences for their actions and it's hilarious to see when it happens.
They really need to be shipped to DC. States don't have enough pressure they can put on the President or Congress. But you dump 2000 illegals on the Capitol steps, they'll notice.

Granted the Dems will get 1 day of "OMG I care so much, here's my photo op helping out this poor LatinX family with my own money". But they won't be doing that days 2-200.

As an added bonus, if they settle in DC they don't get to vote in national elections.
 
As the migrants pile up into whatever shelter they can provide them, it wouldn't be surprising if they just found other places to bus them out to. Maybe they'll use all the other towns in the state as a dumping ground like they used to do with the homeless. I think that's happening now, albeit slowly.
 
They're not doing this out of the kindness of their heart. They're doing this to serve themselves and inconvenience you. Since they voted for this and dismissed concern as bigoted, they're reaping what they sow. Only thing I can say is "those poor children. "
In other words:

 
Parents and students protest outside of a school in Brooklyn where the Adams administration planned to house migrants in the gym.
Lol get fucked. If Montana and Idaho get shitskins and muzzies flown in by Biden to fuck up their quality of life, you will embrace the beaners you oh-so champion.
I hope they rape your kids.

“Whomever is telling us not to go somewhere, I have one question for you: You tell me where we should go,” Mr. Adams said on Wednesday.
I can't believe I'm saying this but, follow Israel's example with their border and deportation standards.
Anyone who criticizes this can be sued for antisemitism.

Gabriela Vizhnag, 50, the mother of a third grader, said she was “not racist or anti-immigrant” because she herself immigrated from Mexico.
LMAO typical beaner wanting to deprive others of the opportunity she stole first.

“I get it. It’s terribly hard for a country or a state to admit thousands of immigrants. It’s a heavy burden,” Ms. Moreno said. “But I believe in us as well, as immigrants. I believe that if we put our heads together, work hard, we can create something worthy here in the United States.”
Not something worthy for the United States, just something worthy from the United States.
Yes, we are here to pillage you. Fuck you gonna do about it?
 
Last edited:
Eric Adams

@ericadamsfornyc

"We should protect our immigrants." Period. Yes, New York City will remain a sanctuary city under an Adams administration. #EricOnNBC


7:30 PM · Oct 20, 2021
Eric Adams

@ericadamsfornyc

New York City is, and has always been, a City of immigrants. We are a destination for diversity and a place where people from every nation seek refuge, raise families, and enrich our communities. Under my administration, our government will reflect that.


5:33 PM · Jun 3, 2021
:story:
LOL.
LMAO even.

People should just spam retweet those quotes at him every day.
 
They really need to be shipped to DC. States don't have enough pressure they can put on the President or Congress. But you dump 2000 illegals on the Capitol steps, they'll notice.

Granted the Dems will get 1 day of "OMG I care so much, here's my photo op helping out this poor LatinX family with my own money". But they won't be doing that days 2-200.

As an added bonus, if they settle in DC they don't get to vote in national elections.
They tried that in Martha's Vineyard, where all the rich people did. The residents did photo ops with the migrants then shipped them all of the island that night. Desantis stopped shipping migrants there because he has to balance a fine line of shipping migrants to places that officially will take them in. I think some did get shipped to DC, or at least to the streets of key Democratic politicians

But honestly, at what point do these people realize that the best thing to do is to restrict the people coming into the country illegally? That just doesn't seem to be cluing in for them, or is it that conceding the obvious would make them eat so much crow that their arteries calcify
 
you left out dominicans and pakistanis.
To powerlevel I was the only anglo in building full of Dominicans for a while. They were honestly okay, maybe excepting their shitty taste in music. Even the barbershop on the first floor that was pretty blatantly selling drugs was at least quiet about it.

Personally, I'd substitute Haitians for Dominicans. To my mind they're lower than gypsies. Never met a Haitian that wasn't a slimy PoS. And also an absolute moron in the mix.
 
As the migrants pile up into whatever shelter they can provide them, it wouldn't be surprising if they just found other places to bus them out to. Maybe they'll use all the other towns in the state as a dumping ground like they used to do with the homeless. I think that's happening now, albeit slowly.

If we can just get the trains working, we can deal with our migrant problem by just shipping trainloads of them from one city to the next, in perpetuity. The trains become like illegal alien limbo... Once you enter, you just live on one train or another for the rest of your life.

... Now why does using trains to solve a surplus population problem seem familiar...
 
They tried that in Martha's Vineyard, where all the rich people did. The residents did photo ops with the migrants then shipped them all of the island that night. Desantis stopped shipping migrants there because he has to balance a fine line of shipping migrants to places that officially will take them in. I think some did get shipped to DC, or at least to the streets of key Democratic politicians

But honestly, at what point do these people realize that the best thing to do is to restrict the people coming into the country illegally? That just doesn't seem to be cluing in for them, or is it that conceding the obvious would make them eat so much crow that their arteries calcify
At this point can they? A lot of the laws they enacted and judges the Democrats appointed to own Trump and Bush II have become golems that act against them. Biden can executive order the border is closed, we aren't taking migrants, etc. Then some judge will say "nah-ah!" and rule against it.

It's like what Eric Adams is dealing with. The laws and rules regarding "Sanctuary City" status were just symbolic proclamations to virtue signal against Trump. Nobody actually thought 100,000 migrants were going to flood the city, nor that the laws requiring the city to shelter the homeless would be applied to illegal immigrants. But now he can't override them.
 
It's like what Eric Adams is dealing with. The laws and rules regarding "Sanctuary City" status were just symbolic proclamations to virtue signal against Trump. Nobody actually thought 100,000 migrants were going to flood the city, nor that the laws requiring the city to shelter the homeless would be applied to illegal immigrants.

I feel like, except for in California where they're all fucked in the head anyway, that's what most of the "santuary city" proclamations were. They never expected to seriously deal with the repercussions, it was just performative virtue signalling and political theatrics.
 
I feel like, except for in California where they're all fucked in the head anyway, that's what most of the "santuary city" proclamations were. They never expected to seriously deal with the repercussions, it was just performative virtue signalling and political theatrics.
It literally was:

WHEREAS on March 6, 2017, United States President Donald J. Trump issued Executive Order
13780 revoking and replacing Executive Order 13769, entitled “Protecting the Nation From
Foreign Terrorist Entry Into the United States;”

WHEREAS Executive Order 13780 made significant changes to the policies and procedures by
which individuals who are not citizens, legal permanent residents, or valid visa-holders may enter
the United States, including imposing a 90-day suspension of entry of persons from Iran, Libya,
Somalia, Sudan, Syria, or Yemen;

WHEREAS on December 7, 2015 during his presidential campaign, United States President
Donald J. Trump admitted that if elected, he would enact a “Muslim ban;”

WHEREAS, United States President Donald J. Trump also signed Executive Order 13768,
entitled, “Enhancing Public Safety in the Interior of the United States,” threatening to withhold
federal funding from so-called “sanctuary cities;”
It was just to moralizing against Trump and try to force him to open the border back up so Aztlan States would keep getting flooded with beaners. A few would make it to NYC, but not 60k in a few months.
 
It literally was:








It was just to moralizing against Trump and try to force him to open the border back up so Aztlan States would keep getting flooded with beaners. A few would make it to NYC, but not 60k in a few months.
Well play stupid games get stupid prizes. Now that entire families are there, there relatives will want to come to NYC as well. The beatings will continue until morale improves. Let the busses flow until they learn the joys of unchecked immigration
 
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More than 67,000 migrants have arrived in New York City since the crisis began. Of those, 41,500 people are currently being cared for by the city, Anne Williams-Isom, the deputy mayor for health and human services, said at a news conference on Wednesday. She said 4,300 people had arrived in just the past week.

To attach a little context to these numbers:

The full number of homeless in NYC who are in the city's shelters at any given time is around 60,000 on an average night.

There are approximately 100,000 hotel rooms in the entire city of New York (several tourism-based US cities, including Las Vegas and Orlando, have more hotel rooms despite their much smaller populations).

There is no solution possible to house this order of magnitude of people entering NYC all at once. This is a large enough influx to completely engulf all "flex" capacity a city has for sheltering temporary passers-through of all types.
 
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