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.”
 
Over 100 migrants told to leave NYC shelters under new 60-day rule so far, city says
New York Daily News (archive.ph)
By Tim Balk
2023-07-26 21:45:00GMT

Over 100 migrants in the New York City shelter system have received notices requiring them to reapply for shelter under a program that limits stays to 60 days for single men, city officials said Wednesday.

The city has said migrants who have been in the shelter system the longest would be the first to receive the 60-day notices.

The policy, effective this week to make room for families with children, comes with city shelters buckling under historic stress due to waves of migration that began last year. Migrants who’ve received a notice will be forced to leave a shelter unit by September.

All told, more than 107,000 people, including 56,000 asylum seekers, were in the city shelter system at the start of this week, said Anne Williams-Isom, deputy mayor for health and human services.

About 50,000 people overall were in the system the same time last year, before migrants fleeing political upheaval in Central and South America arrived in droves. Last week alone, nearly 3,000 asylum seekers entered the shelter system, Williams-Isom said.

“We’re trying to do the best that we can,” Williams-Isom said in a Wednesday news briefing, reiterating City Hall’s steady calls for more federal support. “We can get through this. But we can’t get through it on our own.”

Mayor Adams has presented the 60-day rule as the product of “difficult choices” posed by the migrant influx. Asylum seekers have been disappointed and frustrated by the shift.

The move has been paired with neon yellow flyers encouraging migrants to travel elsewhere. “There is no guarantee we will be able to provide shelter and services to new arrivals,” says the English-language version of the flyers.

Dr. Ted Long, senior vice president at NYC Health + Hospitals, which is managing emergency housing, said Wednesday that migrants who have received the 60-day notices so far have not been surprised.

“They’re coming to us with questions — things they need help with,” Long said in the news briefing. “They need help navigating how to travel. They need help even with specific types of legal services.”

He added that the city has been working to “put plans in place to meet them where they are” and to support them “so they can take the next step forward in their journey.”

The program could push more migrants to leave the city. City officials, who have helped asylum seekers travel to the Canadian border and other places, have been locked in litigation with upstate communities over a controversial city-run busing program.

Last month, the city sued more than 30 localities over efforts to block migrants from relocating.

In the five boroughs, the city has opened more than 192 emergency sites, according to the Adams administration. The latest, set to open on a state-owned parking lot outside the Creedmoor Psychiatric Center in Queens Village, Queens, will serve up to 1,000 adult men, officials said.

New York State, which operates the psychiatric center, has promised to reimburse the city for costs, according to Gov. Hochul’s office. “The State will continue to partner closely with the City to provide resources,” Hochul’s office said in a statement.

Williams-Isom said the city is “very grateful to the state” and that the site would offer “some relief and some space for children with families.”

New York City has spent more than $1.5 billion on the migrant influx so far, and projects its costs to climb to over $4 billion by next June, she added.

“We need help because we cannot do this on our own,” Williams-Isom said, returning to the city’s calls for migrants’ work papers to be expedited. “Allowing people to work would really help us and give some relief to these folks who have come here for the American dream.”
 
Migrants Will Sleep Outdoors Because ‘There Is No More Room,’ Adams Says
The New York Times (archive.ph)
By Emma G. Fitzsimmons and Jay Root
2023-08-01 03:09:00GMT

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Mayor Eric Adams said that the city has run out of indoor space to house asylum seekers, and that scenes of migrants sleeping outside would become more common.Credit...David Dee Delgado for The New York Times

The images outside the Roosevelt Hotel in Midtown Manhattan early Monday were stark: Scores of migrants huddled in a line stretching more than a block, some still sleeping as they waited to be processed in New York City’s intake center.

Hours later, Mayor Eric Adams declared that the city had entered a new phase in its migrant crisis, and that the scene outside the Roosevelt Hotel could become more common and widespread.

As the Adams administration struggles to respond to an influx of 90,000 migrants from the southern border, the mayor, a Democrat, said that the city had run out of indoor space to house people and that the situation was only going to deteriorate.

“It’s not going to get any better,” he said at a news conference at City Hall on Monday. “From this moment on, it’s downhill. There is no more room.”

Mr. Adams said that he wanted to “localize this madness” so that people sleeping outdoors were contained to certain parts of the city, without identifying the potential locations or making it clear if people would be sleeping on sidewalks or in tents.

“Our next phase of the strategy now that we have run out of room, we have to figure out how we’re going to localize the inevitable that there’s no more room indoors,” he said at an unrelated news conference on public safety.

But Mr. Adams warned that migrants would not be allowed to sleep wherever they want: “I can assure you that this city is not going to look like other cities where there are tents up and down every street.”

The mayor’s comments came a day after The New York Times revealed that the city gave a medical services firm a no-bid $432 million contract to assist with its migrant crisis. The firm, DocGo, has bused hundreds of asylum seekers upstate to cities including Albany, but many of the migrants there said that they felt misled and abandoned, and that local security guards hired by DocGo had repeatedly threatened them.

DocGo, which provided Covid testing and vaccination services during the pandemic, is also involved in running the city’s “arrival center” for migrants at the Roosevelt Hotel. Over the weekend, people were seen sleeping outside the hotel with blankets, and vans were provided so that people could cool off on a hot summer day.

The Roosevelt, a sprawling 1,000-room hotel on East 45th Street near Grand Central Terminal, had been closed for nearly three years when Mr. Adams announced in May that it would serve as an arrival center. Staff members from DocGo help with the intake process and provide medical services, according to city officials.

Mr. Adams defended DocGo at the news conference on Monday, saying that it had done good work responding to the pandemic and the migrant crisis. The mayor said he still had confidence in the firm while vowing to correct any deficiencies.

“We’re going to scrutinize them,” Mr. Adams said. “We’re going to make sure — here’s your contract, here are the services, if you do something wrong we’re going to bring you in, and say you have to correct it. But they’ve done a herculean job of this humanitarian crisis that we’re facing.”

Mr. Adams suggested that any problems associated with DocGo in Albany appeared to be limited to a few workers.

“When you have thousands of employees, are you going to find one or two that’s going to do something wrong?” he said. “Yes, you are.”

DocGo officials said on Monday night that the “subcontractor employees in question are no longer employed at the emergency sites,” adding that the firm will begin to evaluate new security vendors for its sites upstate.

Local officials in areas where DocGo has sent busloads of asylum seekers have expressed frustration with the company’s performance, and migrant advocates say DocGo has spread misinformation about migrants’ ability to work in New York.

Mayor Kathy Sheehan of Albany said she was frustrated with a lack of communication from DocGo and found it “troubling” that representatives of the contractor had provided documents to asylum seekers claiming they were “eligible for employment” as independent contractors.

“We’re talking about millions and millions and millions of dollars that are being provided to fund this work,” Ms. Sheehan said. “And I want to understand who’s responsible for auditing this, overseeing it, verifying what’s being done and ensuring that these taxpayer dollars that are being spent on these efforts are actually doing good as opposed to causing harm.”

At the news conference, Mr. Adams’s main message on the migrant crisis was focused on its impact on New York City. The mayor has criticized the Biden administration for not doing more to help, and Mr. Adams called again on Monday for federal changes allowing migrants to work legally.

The Legal Aid Society and the Coalition for the Homeless criticized the mayor's handling of the crisis and said that allowing migrants to sleep on the streets was “heartbreaking and maddening.”

“Denying new arrivals placement and forcing people to languish on local streets is cruel and runs afoul of a range of court orders and local laws,” the groups said in a joint statement.
 
Migrants Sleep on the Sidewalk, the Face of a Failing Shelter System
The New York Times (archive.ph)
By Andy Newman
2023-08-02 00:02:59GMT

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Migrants lined up outside of the Roosevelt Hotel in New York City, hoping to be placed in shelter, even as the city says it has nowhere left to put them.Credit...Jeenah Moon for The New York Times

They came from Colombia and Chad, from Burundi, Peru, Venezuela, Madagascar. In New York they had heard there was a haven for immigrants, a place to live and get back on their feet.

When they arrived, they found out that they had heard wrong.

Two, three, four days later, they were still lined up outside the city’s migrant intake center at the Roosevelt Hotel, around the corner from Grand Central Terminal — close to 200 people, nearly all men. Sleeping on the sidewalk. Heads resting on book bags, trash bags of belongings by their sides: the visible faces of a system that has officially broken down.

For over a year, record numbers of asylum seekers have arrived in New York from across the globe, nearly doubling the city’s homeless population in one huge spasm: More than 100,000 people now live in shelters in the city.

Unlike other American cities, especially in the West, where thousands live in the streets for lack of other options, New York City is legally required to give anyone shelter who asks for it.

But now the shelters are full. As the migrants have continued to arrive, the city has built tents, cobbled together a vast portfolio of hotels and office buildings turned into housing and given migrants tickets to go elsewhere. It has not been enough. The mayor has called for state and federal help, saying the city is overwhelmed. And officials have also, increasingly, pushed back against the city’s legal obligations to shelter homeless people.

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Some migrants who recently arrived in the city have waited for days in front of the Roosevelt Hotel to be processed.Credit...Jeenah Moon for The New York Times
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Since last year, the city’s homeless shelter population has surged past 100,000 people. Credit...David Dee Delgado for The New York Times

Mohammadou Sidiya, 20, from Mauritania in West Africa, stood beside a friend on Tuesday morning. They had traveled for more than a month to get here.

They came looking for safety, Mr. Sidiya said in Arabic, through a digital translation. They failed, he added.

Twenty feet away, a cheerful sign taunted them. “Bienvenidos al arrival center!” it read. “We are currently at capacity.”

New York City’s descent from a place that was managing to keep up, just barely, with a ceaseless flow of asylum seekers to a place that had declared defeat was sudden.

Last week, there were still enough beds to allow the city to honor its legal obligation to offer shelter to every person who wanted it.

Sometime over the weekend, that stopped being the case.

No explanation was offered. Mayor Eric Adams simply said on Monday, “There is no more room.” He also said, “From this moment on, it’s downhill.”

Josh Goldfein, a staff lawyer at the Legal Aid Society, which filed the litigation that led to the right to shelter more than 40 years ago, said he believed that the people sleeping outside the Roosevelt were there in part because the mayor was trying to pressure Washington to send more aid and trying to discourage more migrants from coming.

“There are many ways the city could shelter everyone who is on that sidewalk if that is what they wanted to do,” he said.

Fabien Levy, a spokesman for the mayor, said on Tuesday that the 194 locations the city has opened to shelter asylum seekers are at capacity.

“Our teams run out of space every single day, and we do our best to offer placements where we have space available,” he said. He added that the city is adding two more big humanitarian relief centers in the coming weeks, including a mega-tent big enough for 1,000 people in the parking lot of a state psychiatric hospital in Queens. The city has estimated that the migrants will cost more than $4 billion over two years.

Mr. Levy said that Sunday was the first night that the Roosevelt was unable to offer all migrants a place to stay indoors, even if on a chair. He said that on other nights, some had been sent to another hotel where they could stay on a cot, and that any migrants who slept on the sidewalk did so by choice. He also noted that migrants had access to air-conditioned buses.

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The Roosevelt Hotel, near Grand Central Terminal, is among nearly 200 facilities the city is using to help and house new arrivals seeking shelter.Credit...Jeenah Moon for The New York Times
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Erick Marcano came from Venezuela and said he had waited for three days outside the Roosevelt Hotel. Credit...Jeenah Moon for The New York Times

Behind Mr. Sidiya in the line was Erick Marcano, a laborer from Venezuela. He said he had taken his place on the line on Saturday and in the ensuing three days had progressed a total of one block, from the corner of 46th Street to the corner of 45th. He had used the time to fashion an effective sun hat by jamming a piece of a cardboard box with a skull-shaped hole cut into it onto the brim of his baseball cap.

Mr. Marcano had crossed the border a few days before that and received help from an immigrant advocacy group. “They asked us in Texas where we wanted to go in the U.S. and that they would pay for the ticket, and we told them we wanted to come here, to New York,” he said.

Outside the Roosevelt, he said, “they just tell me to have patience and wait.” Down the block, at the entrance to the hotel, families with young children flowed in and out. The city has prioritized providing shelter to them, so that only adults are left outside.

Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas, a Republican, has chartered some of the buses that have brought people to New York City, as a way to put political pressure on Democratic leaders, though the vast majority of migrants have come in other ways.

On Tuesday, the Legal Aid Society threatened to take the city back to court. Mr. Goldfein said that Gov. Kathy Hochul also needed to do more to provide resources and aid to get people housed quickly.

“We are hopeful that the state will step up and meet its obligations and also that the city will make some changes to what they’re doing in order to get people off the street,” he said, “but if they don’t, then we will have to take any appropriate action to protect our clients.”

A 30-year-old migrant from Chad who gave only his first name, Abdelkerim, said he was surprised to find himself forced to sleep on the street in New York. “I’d at least think we’d have a place to stay,” he said.

The migrants have been provided with food while they wait. On Tuesday, workers with carts went down the line handing out egg sandwiches, bottled water, bananas and popcorn. Just past the end of the line was Uncle Paul’s pizzeria. The owner, Dino Redzic, said that he had given out 10 pizzas the night before and was letting the migrants use his bathroom. “They stay there half an hour and they wash themselves,” he said.

Mr. Redzic, 50, himself a refugee from the Bosnian war who came here 30 years ago, said he was disturbed by the scene unfolding beside his store. “Why is this happening?” he said. “Where are the churches? Where are the mosques? Where are the people supposed to take care of them?”

As the afternoon wore on, Ariana Diaz, 34, freshly arrived from Venezuela via Baja California, took her place at the back of the line. She had paid for her own plane ticket from the West Coast, counting on a warmer welcome here.

Where would she stay tonight, Ms. Diaz was asked.

“I don’t even know where I’m standing right now,” she said.

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Migrants outside the Roosevelt Hotel. The city says it will be soon be adding more shelters. Credit...Jeenah Moon for The New York Times
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Migrants sleep outside Roosevelt Hotel in Midtown
New York Daily News (archive.ph)
By Joanna Tavares
2023-08-01 14:25:00GMT

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Hundreds of migrants sleep in line early on Aug. 1, 2023, for placement at the Roosevelt Hotel intake center in New York. (TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP via Getty Images)
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Hundreds of migrants are seen sleeping outside the Roosevelt Hotel in Midtown Manhattan early Monday, July 31, 2023. Asylum seekers are camping outside the Roosevelt Hotel as the Manhattan relief center is at capacity. (Luiz C. Ribeiro for New York Daily News)
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Food is distributed to hundreds of recently arrived migrants to New York City wait outside of the Roosevelt Hotel, which has been made into a reception center, as they try to secure temporary housing on July 31, 2023, in New York City. The migrants, many from Central America and Africa, have been sleeping on the streets or at other shelters as the city continues to struggle with the influx of migrants whose numbers have surged this spring and summer. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
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Hundreds of migrants are seen sleeping outside the Roosevelt Hotel in Midtown Manhattan early Monday, July 31, 2023. Asylum seekers are camping outside the Roosevelt Hotel as the Manhattan relief center is at capacity. (Luiz C. Ribeiro for New York Daily News)
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Migrants sleep outside the Roosevelt Hotel in midtown Manhattan, New York City, on July 31, 2023. (KENA BETANCUR/AFP via Getty Images)
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Migrants sleep outside the Roosevelt Hotel as they wait for placement at the hotel in New York on Aug. 1, 2023. (TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP via Getty Images)
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Migrants sleep outside the Roosevelt Hotel as they wait for placement at the hotel in New York on Aug. 1, 2023. Many newly arrived migrants have been waiting outside the Roosevelt Hotel, which has been turned into a migrant reception center, to try to secure temporary housing. (TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP via Getty Images)
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Hundreds of migrants line up early on Aug. 1, 2023, for placement at the Roosevelt Hotel intake center in New York. (TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP via Getty Images)
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Hundreds of migrants are seen sleeping outside the Roosevelt Hotel in Midtown Manhattan early Monday, July 31, 2023. Asylum seekers are camping outside the Roosevelt Hotel as the Manhattan relief center is at capacity. (Luiz C. Ribeiro for New York Daily News)
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Hundreds of migrants line up early on Aug. 1, 2023, for placement at the Roosevelt Hotel intake center in New York. (TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP via Getty Images)
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Hundreds of migrants sleep in line early on Aug. 1, 2023, for placement at the Roosevelt Hotel intake center in New York. (TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP via Getty Images)
 
NYC Migrant Crisis Hits Breaking Point in Midtown Manhattan
Bloomberg (archive.ph)
By Guillermo Molero and Laura Nahmias
2023-08-02 16:00:05GMT

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Migrants sleep in line outside the Roosevelt Hotel in New York City on August 1. Photographer: Timothy A. Clary/AFP/Getty Images

The migrant crisis is spilling out onto the streets of New York, with hundreds of people sleeping and waiting for help on the sidewalks outside the Roosevelt Hotel in Midtown Manhattan.

A block away from JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s headquarters, dozens of people, mostly men, waited for a chance at shelter behind a row of metal fences, marking a new phase in the city’s scramble to house and care for the more than 93,000 people who’ve arrived in the past 18 months. In interviews on Tuesday, a handful said they’d been waiting for days.

New York City Mayor Eric Adams has been warning that the city’s shelter system was on the verge of collapse for months due to its legal requirement to provide housing for anyone who asks for it. He has been pleading for federal intervention and a “decompression strategy” to manage the influx of people.

A year after Texas began busing migrants from its border towns to New York, the inflection point has been reached, said Adams, and New Yorkers may see more people sleeping on the streets as a result. The crisis has become more visible to New Yorkers as employees increasingly return to offices, and those working in the area aren’t sure how to feel about being directly exposed to the hardships

“We need help,” Adams said Monday. “And it’s not going to get any better. From this moment on it’s downhill. There is no more room.”

The Legal Aid Society and Coalition for the Homeless issued a joint statement on Monday saying the city has a legal duty to shelter anyone who needs it without long delays. “Denying new arrivals placement and forcing people to languish on local streets is cruel and runs afoul of a range of court orders and laws,” they said.

Some of the migrants, like Giancarlo Vazquez, expressed frustration with what they perceived as inaction by city officials. Vazquez said he and other migrants came to New York City hoping to find work and shelter, unlike other parts of the country where they feared being rejected.

The 42-year-old Venezuelan was among many who were given paper tickets to mark their place in line for a room at the hotel. But others said the system was not enforced and that they had been turned away at other shelters.

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Migrants in line outside of the Roosevelt Hotel on Monday.Photographer: John Minchillo/AP Photo

“I think they just gave us the tickets to calm us down, to give us the illusion that something is happening” Vazquez said. “We’re supposed to hear an update today, but I don’t know if anything will come of it.”

Some of the office workers at the Metlife Building at 200 Park Avenue — home to its namesake life insurer, law firm Gibson Dunn & Crutcher and others — have appeared reluctant to spend too much time outside the office, according to a security guard working there, who declined to give his name because he’s not authorized to speak for his company. Commuters have expressed concern for their safety amid the growing crowd, the guard said.

Law enforcement didn’t immediately answer a request for information about whether they’ve responded to any complaints at the address.

Adams and members of New York City’s congressional delegation met last week with Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas in Washington, D.C., to discuss the migrant crisis, and Mayorkas promised he would appoint a liaison to work with the administration on the issue.

The city has struggled to find enough space to house the migrants, contracting with hotels, converting office buildings and even transforming hotel ballrooms into emergency shelters.

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A migrant holds a small paper ticket authorities gave him to mark his place in line for shelter outside the Roosevelt Hotel on Tuesday.Photographer: Guillermo Molero/Bloomberg

Last week, the city announced plans to convert a long-abandoned psychiatric care facility in Queens into a humanitarian relief center for migrants. The administration has also been sending some migrants out of the city on buses to other parts of the state, sparking lawsuits and emergency orders from other counties.

As the city’s shelter system buckles under the strain of the incoming migrants, Adams has sought to roll back the city’s right-to-shelter law, which was established by a court ruling. He has also announced a new 60-day limit on shelter stays and a campaign to discourage migrants from coming to New York, including handing out fliers at the border.
 
Advocates accuse New York City of using migrants as 'props' in bid for federal money
Associated Press (archive.ph)
By Bobby Caina Calvan
2023-08-03 01:04:43GMT

NEW YORK (AP) — For days now, newly arrived international immigrants have waited night and day outside New York City’s Roosevelt Hotel, sleeping shoulder-to-shoulder on the sidewalk in hopes of a bed in the city’s shelter system. And for weeks, Mayor Eric Adams has said the city is out of room and sought to dissuade more migrants from arriving.

The scene outside the former hotel — now a migrant shelter and intake center — has underscored the extreme overcrowding in a homeless housing system filled to record levels. City officials and activists alike call it heartbreaking.

But some critics accuse New York City officials of exploiting the lines outside the Roosevelt as part of a campaign to pressure state and federal officials to come up with more money to tackle the crisis and discourage more migrants from entering the U.S. from Mexico.

“Mayor Adams should not be using asylum seekers as props to get the attention of the Biden administration or discourage asylum seekers from coming to New York,” said Murad Awawdeh, the executive director of the New York Immigration Coalition.

He added the city should work harder to free up space in shelters and keep migrants off the streets. “It’s hard to imagine that there are not enough beds to actually accommodate the people that the Adams administration is leaving out on the street,” he told The Associated Press in a statement.

At a briefing Thursday, one of the mayor’s deputies pushed back.

“I don’t think I or any person in this administration would use people to do any type of a stunt,” said Deputy Mayor Anne Williams-Isom.

She said the city has conducted itself “with humanity and with compassion,” adding the shelter system is at a “breaking point.”

City officials say the number of migrants arriving in New York since the spring of 2022 is approaching 100,000, overwhelming a shelter system designed to hold tens of thousands fewer people.

New York City has a unique court-ordered obligation to provide emergency shelter to anyone who asks for it, but officials have said in recent weeks that the influx of migrants seeking asylum in the U.S. had made it increasingly difficult to fulfill that duty.

While the number of migrants crossing the border has fallen in recent months, busloads still arrive nearly every day. City officials said that some 2,300 more migrants came to the city seeking shelter last week alone.

Adams last month dispatched emissaries to the border to hand out fliers, informing migrants that shelter space in his city is no longer guaranteed and that housing and food in New York City is expensive. It urged them to consider other U.S. cities.

Outside the Roosevelt hotel recently, migrant Miguel Jaramillo talked about sleeping in the street while waiting for a bed, saying he was willing to “endure the process.”

“We came here for a future,” he said.

On another day, security guards ordered migrants not to speak to journalists. During one interview, a migrant was told by a guard to stop speaking — first putting his finger on his pursed lips then dragging it across his throat like a knife.

The migrant, who had been speaking about his arduous passage to the U.S. and his hopes for a better life, immediately stopped talking.

“That’s pretty plainly a threat,” said Joshua Goldfein, an attorney for the Legal Aid Society in New York.

“There’s no question that the city could provide additional spaces for the folks who are on the sidewalk,” he said, though he added state and federal governments should do more, too.

Adams, a Democrat, has insisted the city is doing everything it can, including leasing entire hotels for migrants and opening multiple new shelters.

In a frantic search for more housing, city officials are considering building a tent city on an island in the East River, even though it closed a similar facility nearly a year ago just weeks after it opened. And soon a new shelter will open in the parking lot of a psychiatric hospital in Queens, providing about 1,000 beds for single men, who comprise the majority of arriving migrants.

Adams’ tough rhetoric, though, has implied more migrants would find themselves sleeping outdoors.

“It’s not going to get any better. From this moment on it’s downhill. There is no more room,” he said Monday while quickly vowing he wouldn’t let sidewalk encampments become a citywide problem. “I can assure you that this city is not going to look like other cities where there are tents up and down every street.”

Goldfein and others accused the mayor and city of shifting their tone from “we’re going to treat people with dignity and respect to we’re going to treat people very badly to send a message.”

Williams-Isom, the deputy mayor, countered that the city would remain compassionate.

“We are trying to say that if less people were coming through the front door, maybe we could catch up a little bit,” she said.
 
Mayor Adams’ admin wants permission to house migrants in notorious NYC jail where Jeffrey Epstein died
New York Daily News (archive.ph)
By Chris Sommerfeldt and Molly Crane-Newman
2023-08-17 18:38:00GMT

Mayor Adams’ administration wants permission from the feds to house migrants in Manhattan’s Metropolitan Correctional Center, the infamous jail that closed down in 2021 following years of complaints over dangerous conditions.

Daniel Perez, a top lawyer for Adams, expressed City Hall’s interest in using the defunct downtown Manhattan lockup in a letter sent to Gov. Hochul’s administration last week that listed off various sites the city believes it could use for housing migrants amid severe overcrowding in city-run shelters.

Perez’s letter, a copy of which was obtained by the Daily News through a Freedom of Information Law request, specifically says the administration would like the federal government to give either the city or the state authority to place migrants in “closed correctional and transitional sites such as Metropolitan Correctional Center.”

The federal Bureau of Prisons, which runs the facility, said Thursday it could not provide any comment “concerning governmental correspondence” with the Adams administration about the downtown Manhattan jail.

A spokeswoman for Adams said she did not immediately have information on any contact with the feds about the matter.

Before shuttering, the jail, commonly known as the MCC, was for years marred by reports of deteriorating conditions, including sewage floods, vermin infestations, COVID-19 outbreaks and egregious security breaches.

Two years before its closure, the MCC saw one of its worst security breaches, when authorities say hedge fund manager Jeffrey Epstein killed himself in his cell while awaiting trial on charges that he sexually trafficked children.

After Epstein’s death, two MCC correctional officers admitted to neglecting their duties the night of the convicted sex offender’s death, leaving him unattended for hours even though he had been placed on suicide watch.

Other high-profile inmates who have been held at the MCC include Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzmán, the Mexican drug lord serving life in prison, and Bernie Madoff, the late financier who pulled off the largest Ponzi scheme in history.

Andrew Laufer, a civil rights attorney who has represented several former MCC inmates in litigation against the U.S. government over conditions at the jail, was aghast that the Adams administration would even entertain the possibility of housing migrants there.

“It is obscene. It’s offensive,” said Laufer, who has spent time inside the facility.

“Putting innocent immigrants in there,” he continued, “you’re treating them worse than prisoners are treated now because that place was shuttered because the conditions were too egregious for accused criminals.”

Recounting complaints listed by former clients, Laufer said, “You get sewage flooding into cells, you get vermin, all types of insects, you get rodents, you get inadequate heating, inadequate cooling, inadequate light.”

“How are they actually gonna oversee the proper supervision of these migrants?” he added. “Are they just gonna stuff them all in there and close the door?”

It’s unclear if the federal government will ever reopen the facility as a jail.

Upon announcing its closure in 2021, the feds said it would remain closed “at least temporarily” to make way for renovations.

Bureau of Prisons spokesman Donald Murphy said Thursday that “long-term plans” for the MCC “have not been finalized.”

Word of the Adams administration’s push for using the MCC as a shelter comes as the city’s scrambling to accommodate the tens of thousands of mostly Latin American migrants who have arrived since last spring.

According to the latest data from Adams’ office, there are more than 58,000 migrants in city shelters and emergency housing facilities.

The influx has led to severe overcrowding in the city’s traditional homeless shelters, prompting the Adams administration to open emergency migrant housing facilities in a variety of unconventional spaces.

The administration is already using the Lincoln Correctional Facility, a shuttered state prison in Harlem, to house migrants. This spring, The News reported that the administration was also considering placing migrants in a closed down jail on Rikers Island.

At an unrelated press conference in Manhattan on Thursday morning, Adams reiterated that the reason his administration is opting to keep opening shelters in suboptimal places is because the city isn’t getting enough financial and logistical assistance from the state and federal governments.

“All I can say is I’m hoping people can imagine what it’s like to every week come up with housing from 25 to almost 3,000 people,” he said. “The flow is not sustainable.”
 
NYC considers shipping containers and pre-fab units in streets as housing for migrants
New York Daily News (archive.ph)
By Michael Gartland
2023-08-17 20:31:00GMT

The Adams’ administration is considering housing migrants in pre-fab housing and shipping containers on city streets, using Fort Dix in New Jersey, the Citi Field parking lot and renting out several defunct hospitals and psychiatric facilities upstate and on Long Island, according to a source with direct knowledge of the proposals.

The ideas — which have never been revealed to the public before — are part of the “throwing-spaghetti-at-the-wall” process that’s yielded thousands of potential stop gaps, according to the source, who would only speak to the Daily News under condition of anonymity so they can speak freely about the suggested ideas.

“These are ideas. These have not been fleshed out,” the source said. “A lot of these probably won’t come to fruition.”

The city’s working list of potential shelter solutions has been evolving for months and now includes about 3,000 possibilities, the source added.

Among those that could be used within city limits are the Park Slope Armory, Medgar Evers College, York College, the parking lots at Citi Field and Aqueduct Racetrack, Flushing Meadows Corona Park and even city streets, which would be closed off to traffic and potentially filled with pre-fabricated housing, tents or converted shipping containers.

“Being on the street bed would provide access to water, sewer and electricity and could then support trailers or modular homes,” the source said, adding that the city isn’t considering any specific streets for this presently.

Using trailers, pre-fabs and converted containers is also being considered for use in parking lots at Citi Field and Aqueduct.

Options for outside the city include currently out-of-use facilities at the Pilgrim and Kings Park Psychiatric Centers on Long Island, the Rockland Psychiatric Center, medical facilities in Buffalo, as well as Fort Dix in New Jersey.

Using a federally-run location like Fort Dix would likely cost the city — unless a federal state of emergency is declared. If an emergency declaration were to go into effect, the federal government would almost certainly foot the bill there.

Some of the sites that appear on the list and have already been put into use include an airport hangar at JFK Airport and New York City public school gymnasiums. According to the source, using cruise ships — an idea that’s already been floated publicly by the administration — is also still in play.

When asked about the proposals, Kayla Mamelak, a spokeswoman for Mayor Adams, didn’t deny that they’re being considered and repeated what’s become a common refrain for the administration.

“Everything is on the table,” she said.

The formulation of the administration’s list comes against the backdrop of a crisis that’s been expanding steadily in New York City and which has forced the city to scour and pay for housing and services for the approximately 100,000 migrants who’ve streamed into the five boroughs over the past year.

The situation has grown so severe, that about 200 migrants were forced to sleep on the street earlier this summer and the city petitioned a state court judge in May to suspend the right to shelter law, which has applied to the city for decades and mandates the city provide shelter for anyone who requests it within a set time frame.

That legal demand led the court to order the city to produce a list of needs that it wants the state to fulfill, which in turn resulted in a response from the state that became public Wednesday.

In its response to the court, the state’s attorney, Faith Gay, condemned aspects of the Adams administration’s handling of the migrant crisis, contending that the administration has been slow to provide reimbursement documentation and sloppy in its handling of state funds.

The ideas on the city’s list of proposed options drew criticisms as well, but also some praise. Some of the ideas, like the possibility of sheltering migrants in housing erected on city streets, generally received a harsh rebuke.

“That is the most ridiculous idea I have ever heard,” said Christine Quinn, director of the homeless services provider, Women in Need. “It has been challenging to have sidewalk cafés in the street. We’re going to put people in the street? That is just asinine, and quite frankly, it’s one of those things that people put on a list so people like me will get enraged about it, and then they’ll slip something else bad in — but that isn’t quite as bad.”

She also ruled out places like the Park Slope Armory because using it would likely lead to barracks-like sleeping arrangements, which have proven problematic from a safety perspective in the past.

But Quinn, who previously served as the City Council Speaker, said there could be merit in some of the other proposals under consideration, such as using places that were once psychiatric facilities on Long Island or in Rockland County.

“There is a possibility for anything that is indoor, not congregate,” she said. “If it’s a former psychiatric facility, you have to kind of strip it of anything that makes it feel like they’re being committed.”

Councilwoman Diana Ayala, who chairs the Council’s general welfare committee, also ruled out using converted containers on city streets, saying that “there is absolutely no way in hell that I could support putting people in shipping containers.” But she appeared open to putting tents in parks and parking lots.

“Parking lots and locations like that offer a lot of square footage, so I could see how they would be attractive for tents,” she said. “I would reserve judgement until until I see exactly where because I think the location is really key. I know we’re at a place where tents cannot be disqualified and pushed aside as an alternative means of housing because it’s better than being on the street.”

Ayala also said that at least one idea she’s been floating has fallen on deaf ears from Team Adams.

“We have a whole building on Wards Island,” she said. “I keep asking about it, and I get crickets.”

Others are critical of the administration’s approach as a whole, though, and said the list of options it’s now working from illustrates why it continues to struggle so much. The better alternative from their view is moving the migrants — as well as homeless native New Yorkers — out of temporary housing and into permanent, affordable housing.

“The bottom line for us is they should be focusing on actually moving people out and creating space that way. Then they would have a lot less need for these kinds of places,” said Josh Goldfein, an attorney with the Legal Aid Society’s Homeless Rights Project. “If they were moving people out, instead of accepting that there’s tens of thousands of New Yorkers in shelter all the time, they’d have a lot more room for migrants.”

Murad Awawdeh, executive director of the New York Immigration Coalition, agreed.

“We’ve seen the increase of folks coming to New York for over a year at this point,” he said. “We need to really work on moving away from this emergency mentality and to a medium- and long-term plan.”
 
  • Thunk-Provoking
Reactions: Coo Coo Bird
These people act like city officials owe them something when they're here as "migrants". Bitch, you aren't a citizen, if you want something from your government then GO HOME.

I find it funny that jail and shipping containers (that can be welded shut) are now being considered. Weren't mass graves being dug in early 2020 to deal with the massive amounts of death that was expected to happen due to covid or was that just a photo op?

I hope the buses continue to run to "sanctuary cities" all over the country.
 
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