US New York City Tells Migrants There’s ‘No Guarantee’ of Finding Help Here - Mayor Eric Adams announced new shelter rules for some asylum seekers, and will begin discouraging migrants at the southern border from coming to New York City.

New York City Tells Migrants There’s ‘No Guarantee’ of Finding Help Here
The New York Times (archive.ph)
By Jeffery C. Mays
2023-07-20 02:16:47GMT

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More than 90,000 migrants have arrived in New York City since the spring of 2022, and close to 55,000 are still in the city’s care.Credit...Juan Arredondo for The New York Times

New York City will immediately begin discouraging asylum seekers from seeking refuge here, distributing fliers at the southern border that warn migrants there is “no guarantee” they will receive shelter or services, Mayor Eric Adams announced on Wednesday.

The city’s move is a sharp and somewhat unexpected departure from its long-held status as a sanctuary city, and as a place that guarantees a right to shelter.

“We have no more room in the city,” Mr. Adams said during a news conference at City Hall.

As part of the city’s shift in strategy, it will now require single adult migrants to reapply for shelter after 60 days, a move that the mayor said was designed to make room for families with children. Mr. Adams said the city would intensify efforts to help the migrants connect with family, friends or outside networks in order to find alternative housing arrangements.

If alternative housing arrangements are not available, single adult asylum seekers will have to return to the intake center and reapply for housing. It is unclear what would happen if there is not housing available at the intake centers.

Immigrant and housing advocates questioned whether the changes were legal and would lead to increased street homelessness.

“I have worked with thousands of people over the years whose lives were saved because of the right to shelter,” said Craig Hughes, a social worker with Mobilization for Justice, a nonprofit legal services group. “The idea that there’s some imaginary place that people are going to go off to besides city streets is just false.”

More than 90,000 migrants have arrived in the city since the spring of 2022 and close to 55,000 are still in the city’s care. Combined with the city’s existing homeless population, more than 105,800 people are being sheltered by the city, a record.

The city has opened more than 188 sites to house migrants, including 18 humanitarian relief centers. From July 10-16, 2,800 new migrants arrived, according to Anne Williams-Isom, the deputy mayor for health and human services.

Our compassion is infinite,” said Dr. Ted Long, senior vice president at NYC Health + Hospitals, the agency that operates much of the emergency housing for migrants. “Our space is not.”

The fliers, however, do not convey much compassion. Available in English and Spanish, they describe New York City’s high cost of housing, food and transportation. An accompanying illustration shows arrows pointing north from the border to South Dakota, Vermont, Wisconsin and three other states — but not New York.

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Brad Lander, the city comptroller, said the announcement undermined the right to shelter and “the defining role of New York as a beacon of promise inscribed at the base of the Statue of Liberty.”Credit...NYC Mayor’s Office

“There is no guarantee we will be able to provide shelter and services to new arrivals,” the flier reads. “Please consider another city as you make your decision about where to settle in the U.S.,” it concludes.

The city, however, remains under a decades-old court order that requires it to provide shelter to anyone who needs a bed.

Brad Lander, the city comptroller, said the announcement undermined the right to shelter and “the defining role of New York as a beacon of promise inscribed at the base of the Statue of Liberty.”

Advocates have called on city officials to make room in the shelter system by more quickly moving those experiencing homelessness from shelter to permanent housing. Mr. Adams and the City Council recently sparred over legislation that would eliminate a rule requiring a 90-day stay in shelter before becoming eligible for a city housing voucher.

The mayor vetoed a package of legislation and temporarily revoked the 90-day rule. The City Council easily overrode the mayor’s veto last week.

“I think that the real solution here is not continuously doing half measures and short cuts,” said Murad Awawdeh, the executive director of the New York Immigration Coalition. “It’s actually doing the work of getting people out of the shelter system and into permanent housing.”

The mayor and city officials continued to criticize the federal government for not providing expedited work authorizations and for not forcing other jurisdictions to help absorb the influx of migrants. The city has estimated that it would spend $4 billion through the next fiscal year to house and feed the asylum seekers.

Mr. Adams said the city has had to shift its strategy as the number of migrants overwhelms the city’s ability to house them.

One strategy has involved sending migrants outside the city, which has sued municipalities that have tried to block those efforts. Mr. Adams also asked a judge to relieve the city of its unique right to shelter obligations.

Hildalyn Colón Hernández, deputy director of New Immigrant Community Empowerment, a nonprofit that supports immigrant workers, said she understood the pressure the city was facing, but that the challenge of finding housing would be extraordinarily difficult for new arrivals who are struggling to learn English, find work and obtain basic documents needed to attain housing.

“Even regular New Yorkers that have been here and have jobs have not been able to get affordable housing,” Ms. Colón Hernández said. “One hundred percent of the migrants who come here will tell you that their priority is to get a job and get out of shelter.”
 
Suffer, New Yorkers. You deserve all of it.
What about all of those office buildings that are standing empty and whose landlords refuse to sell them because it would reveal their true value? Why not house the migrants in those?
I agree. Crowd them all in, and then set the buildings on fire.
 
They voted for this shit, keep filling up the city. Fuck every faggot in Jew York City.

Also note that they are not trying to actually reduce the migrants coming to the city, they just want families with young kids to indoctrinate.
Yeah, good observation. They are not just coming after your children but the migrants children too. Oh how I hate New York so much. Volcano mine system at the border when?
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Nah, keep sending them to NYC. Fill the parks and museums and theaters. Sink the damn city under migrants until they get the fucking point.

Then send more.
Greg Abbot was asked to comment on this plan to overfill NYC and he had this to say: "Why contain them? Let the migrants pile up in the schools and the churches. In the end, they'll beg us to save them."
 
I'm all for dumping economic migrants™ on sanctuary cities, but please don't dump them in California. They always spill over into Vegas and I'm really fucking tired of tripping over bean goblins everytime I go to home depot.
Bro you live in the southwest, give it 20 years and those bean goblins are going to be the majority population
 
I propose changing the inscription on the Statue of Liberty from "Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses..." to "Fuck off we're full".
We just need to eliminate social welfare and move more towards private charity, similar to how it was done when the Statue of Liberty was gifted to us.

Anyways, the only reason this is not being challenged is because Biden is in office.


See how important a fucking poem was when Trump is in office but when the city where the Statue resides basically casts off those in need, not a fucking peep for these faggot journos.

Many would fucking lynch the news anchor and the journalist asking questions with the only thing stopping them being the legal consequence.
 
We just need to eliminate social welfare and move more towards private charity, similar to how it was done when the Statue of Liberty was gifted to us.
That's so MEAN and HEARTLESS.

On the plus side, pack enough 3rd worlders into the country, and we'll be too poor to keep giving them all better lives than they had at home.
 
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Optimistically, I hope these human piss stains do enough harm to force the slime in government to stop fucking around and close the goddamn border.

Realistically, I know this is just part of the whining crisis and nothing satisfactory will get done. Torn between wanting New York to rot until the diseased limbs fester and fall off and hoping a wake up call happens before more local kids get screwed out of their schools, playgrounds, and neighborhoods. Or diddled, considering they've been housing single men on elementary school property.
 
Migrants in NYC Say They’ve Been Turned Away, Despite Shelter Mandate
Bloomberg (archive.ph)
Kriston Capps, Maria Paula Mijares Torres, and Sarah Holder
2023-07-21 20:55:29GMT

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Asylum-seekers stand outside the Roosevelt Hotel, where they are seeking shelter after arriving from the US-Mexico border. Photographer: Maria Paula Mijares Torres

New York City staffers are turning away newly arrived migrants seeking shelter, despite a longstanding rule for the city to provide housing for anyone seeking it.

The actions come as Mayor Eric Adams takes a more aggressive stance on migrants coming through the US-Mexico border, launching a messaging campaign on Wednesday to discourage asylum-seekers from traveling to the city. At a press conference, Adams warned migrants that they could be turned away. "We're giving them notice that we have no room. We need you to come back at a different time so that we can see if we can process you.”

The mayor also announced new limits on the duration of shelter stays, as the city proceeds with court action to suspend the right-to-shelter mandate that guarantees shelter within 24 hours, leaving arriving migrants in legal limbo.

A Venezuelan migrant walked out of the migrant intake center at the Roosevelt Hotel Wednesday clutching a paper that read: “We currently do not have a placement for you. We are working to find additional placement and we do not know how long that will take.” It offered help buying a ticket out of New York, and advertised non-housing services during business hours, but its central message was clear: “We cannot provide you with housing at this time.”

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A paper handed out at the central intake center at the Roosevelt Hotel on Wednesday.Photographer: Maria Paula Mijares Torres

The city did not respond to a request for comment by Bloomberg CityLab about the flier. But when the Legal Aid Society sent a picture of the notice to the city on Wednesday evening to ask where it came from, the city responded that it had been distributed in error and that they would remove it from circulation, according to Joshua Goldfein, staff attorney with the Legal Aid Society’s Homeless Rights Project.

“We were concerned that the message they were giving is: We do not have any placements for you and we will not shelter you,” Goldfein said.

The city also informed Legal Aid Society that it had found placements for all of the people at the Roosevelt Hotel arrival center by the end of Wednesday night.

A Bloomberg CityLab reporter who returned to the Roosevelt Hotel on Thursday did not observe any more of the notices, but asylum-seekers at the intake center said that they were nevertheless being turned away.

When asked at the press conference where migrants turned away should go, Adams said they “just have to wait.”

Since the mayor declared a state of emergency in September, his administration has opened 188 emergency shelters in city-owned buildings, hotels and even jails. At current levels the administration estimates the cost of feeding and housing migrants will exceed $4 billion by next year. Now the city is mounting a multi-pronged strategy to turn back the tide of immigration, even taking steps into legal limbo.

Adams shrugged off the legal risk of the city’s approach on Wednesday. “The court system is going to do what the court system is going to do,” he said. “Everyone that tells me that, 'Eric, you shouldn't do it this way or that way.' I give them one sentence: 'Tell me where to put the people,' because we're open.”

‘Come Back Tomorrow’
Judith Díaz, a Venezuelan migrant who showed up at the Roosevelt Hotel at 6 a.m. on Thursday, said she was told that the intake center could not take her.

“They didn’t even bother to write my name down or check any of my documents, they just told me they can’t accept anyone else because they’re full,” she said. “They told me to come back tomorrow.”

Lenin, a migrant from Ecuador who preferred not to disclose his last name due to his asylum status, said that he was told that the city doesn’t have capacity for him. “They didn’t bother answering my questions, they just gave me the flyer and kept telling me they have no more space,” he said. Lenin said he was thinking of spending the night in the streets next to the hotel if he didn’t receive shelter.

Goldfein said the city did the right thing by being honest about its lack of available spaces. “But they should understand that that means they’re admitting liability,” he said.

Goldfein said staff communication to migrants violates the city’s legal obligations when it is “misleading them into thinking that they are not entitled to a place to be sheltered.”

“They do acknowledge that they have a legal obligation to provide people with the placement,” said Goldfein. “Parallel to that they are working very hard to communicate to people that they should go somewhere else.”

The city began court proceedings this week to roll back New York’s longstanding right-to-shelter mandate, the result of a 1981 court decision that requires the city to provide shelter to people seeking assistance. The mayor also announced on July 19 that the city would limit shelter stays for some migrants to 60 days.

A spokesperson for the city’s Department of Homeless Services said that the 60-day cap on shelter stays will start at the city’s Humanitarian Emergency Response and Relief Centers (HERRCs), which the mayor first launched in September 2022 and where the city has channeled single adults.

Angely Palencia and Andrés Camacho, Venezuelan migrants with two children who have stayed for two weeks in a shelter in a hotel in Yonkers, New York, were outside the Roosevelt Hotel with Palencia’s brother on Thursday. “My brother arrived at the border with us, but he was retained longer because he was a single male adult,” Palencia said. Like many other migrants, he was also denied entry.

Stays in New York shelters usually last much longer than 60 days. Across facilities administered by the city’s Department of Homeless Services, families with children stayed on average for a year (367 days), according to the city’s most recent data from May. The average stay for single adults was about the same (370 days). For adult families (no children under the age of 18), the average stay was nearly twice as long (667 days). New York’s data do not account for asylum status, so it’s difficult to tell how long migrants are staying in shelters.

Lengthy stays reflect constraints on housing supply, supportive services, rental subsidies and other resources to help people find homes. Undocumented immigrants are not typically eligible for federal Housing Choice Vouchers (known as Section 8) and many other forms of rental subsidies and supportive housing — the kinds of services that help low-income families exit shelters.

The mayor has said given the influx of migrants and underlying constraints, the city is running out of ways to expand shelter capacity to meet the growing need. Goldfein argues they can serve more people even without adding more beds.

“They could have vacancies to place people in, if they move people out. And they have not invested enough resources in moving people out,” he said, through services like case management that might be able to help some people find jobs, shelter and other resources. Part of the solution lies with the federal government, which has the power to grant immediate work authorization for asylum-seekers, Goldfein said; city and county leaders have also been calling on the state for help.

In a joint statement from the Legal Aid Society and the Coalition for the Homeless, the advocacy organizations laid out other alternatives the city could pursue besides limiting shelter stays for individuals who need it, including dedicating more resources to rent subsidy and housing voucher programs that move eligible people into permanent housing.

Yet other housing advocates, including the mayor’s allies, say that the inflexibility of the court mandate prevents the city from investing more in the solutions that would help to alleviate pressure on the city’s shelters.

A migrant woman from Ecuador who preferred not to give her name because she is still going through the asylum process was surprised to learn about the Adams’ announcement that shelter stays could be limited to 60 days.

“I have been here for seven months and I don’t know what this means for my family. Are they going to take us out of the shelter?” said the migrant, who was at the Roosevelt Hotel to give clothes to her niece, who had just recently arrived in New York.

“We would like to have more time to save enough to be able to rent an apartment,” she said. “I am not able to work here because I don’t have the permit yet and I am taking care of my children. My husband works in construction jobs, but they are not very stable positions — one day he might have a work opportunity, the next he might not.”
 
"We're a proud sanctuary city welcoming ALL migrants in need just as our state did a hundred-odd years ago!"
....
"This sanctuary city is really really expensive and if you can't afford it you shouldn't take refuge here."

I would rather die than be a New Yorker. Went there earlier this year on business, it was like a zoo with all the animals let loose on the streets.
 
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