US Frustration about park space for migrants boils over in 29th Ward: ‘I have compassion but I can only go so far’ - Chicago is going to explode by next summer. At some points throughout the meeting, the crowd chanted in unison “you work for us” and “what about kids?”

Frustration about park space for migrants boils over in 29th Ward: ‘I have compassion but I can only go so far’
Chicago Tribune (archive.ph)
By Caroline Kubzansky
2023-10-04 04:10:00GMT

Anger erupted at the Amundsen Park field house Tuesday night as Northwest Side residents shouted their frustration at officials tasked with explaining the city’s move to open a shelter for newly arrived migrants in the neighborhood’s Park District.

About 300 residents drowned out a panel of city officials representing several agencies, including Mayor Brandon Johnson’s office, police and the Park District. They filled the field house gym at 6200 W. Bloomingdale Ave., lined up to vent their outrage at officials.

Outside, a crowd of people gathered at the door as police watched from inside, saying the building had reached its capacity for fire hazards.

Those who spoke did so amid yells of “send (migrants) to Bucktown” and “where’s the f------ mayor?”

At some points throughout the meeting, the crowd chanted in unison “you work for us” and “what about kids?” Two groups of football players who use the park to practice filed into the meeting to stand before city representatives, some getting on the stage with officials, as attendees jumped onto chairs to film on their cellphones, cheering.

The meeting was the second the city has held in as many days as officials sprint to house and administer a mounting number of asylum-seekers arriving from the southern border.

At previous meetings, city representatives have presented about how the shelters will be operated and gone through frequently asked questions. On Tuesday, most of the officials on the panel were not able to speak because the crowd was shouting back at them.

Deputy Mayor Beatriz Ponce De León’s comment that “the people that we’re talking about are human beings just like you” was met with enough shouting that the second part of her statement was not audible.

Ald. Chris Taliaferro, 29th, asked many times for people to allow city representatives to speak and received loud boos and shoutsas he expressed support for Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administration’s work to house and administer to migrants.

Later, the crowd responded with stomping and cheers when he repeated his opposition to the use of Amundsen Park as a shelter.

“We cannot take resources from the Black community, a community that has already for decades been disinvested in,” Taliaferro said to applause.

Neighbors shared many fears and frustrations that have also characterized preceding meetings, including the short notice on which the city intended to open the shelter, expressed fears about public safety and anger at how the city has historically allocated resources to predominantly Black and Brown communities.

Linda Johnson, 69, told the panel of city officials that “how we got here is not our problem.”

“This is our park and we have a right to say so,” she said. “You need to stop the buses, stop sanctuary city right now and get to the root of the problem.”

James Frazier, 75, said the panel of city officials at the gym should tell city leadership that the neighborhood did not want to see a migrant shelter open in the park.

“I have compassion, but I can only go so far,” he continued to applause.

City chief operating officer John Roberson said the panelists would take what they had heard back to City Hall.

Outside the field house, 25th District Police Council Member Angelica Green said she didn’t feel the meeting had gone well: “It was just a yelling match.

Green said she wished residents who pay taxes to maintain the park had been given more notice and input on the plan to turn the site into a migrant shelter, though she also saw how the effort to house migrants created tense situations for host neighborhoods and the city.

“Nobody wants to feel unwanted,” she said. “But nobody wants to feel put out either.”


 
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Judge ‘horribly disturbed’ by charges that man opened fire on migrants at police station, including woman holding her young son
Chicago Sun-Times (archive.ph)
By Matthew Hendrickson
2023-10-13 23:22:54GMT

chi01.jpg
Asylum-seekers, mostly from Venezuela, camp outside the Grand Crossing police station at 7040 S. Cottage Grove Ave. Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Time

A judge said Friday he was “horribly disturbed” by accusations that a man opened fire at a group of migrants outside a South Side police station, wounding a man from Colombia and a Venezuelan woman holding her child.

Anthony Evans, 25, then led police on a high-speed chase that ended in a crash with serious injuries to an officer that may require amputation, according to prosecutors.

Judge Joseph Gump ordered Evans held in jail while awaiting trial on counts of aggravated battery with a firearm, aggravated driving under the influence and unlawful use of weapon.

Prosecutors did not say what prompted Evans to open fire into a crowd of migrants last Saturday outside the Grand Crossing District police station at 7040 S. Cottage Grove Ave.

One of the wounded, Yerlianny Romero, 28, told a television station she was holding her young son in her arms when shots rang out. A 24-year-old man also was wounded.

Prosecutors said both victims had been living at or outside the police station, which has served as a temporary shelter for the hundreds of migrants brought to Chicago in the past year as they seek asylum in the United States.

Around 2 p.m. on the day of the shooting, Evans picked up three friends in his 2008 Jeep Grand Cherokee to get food before stopping at a liquor store on the way, prosecutors said. Witnesses in the car said Evans had been drinking earlier in the day and continued drinking from a tequila bottle as they drove around, prosecutors said.

About an hour and a half later, Evans allegedly drove past the front of the station where a crowd of migrants had been gathered by volunteers to discuss plans to potentially relocate them.

A witness inside the Jeep said she saw Evans open fire with a tan handgun and saw shell casings eject from the weapon as he fired at the group, prosecutors said.

Evans sped away, disregarding traffic signals as he tried to evade pursuing officers, prosecutors said. As a police vehicle headed toward him in the opposite lanes of traffic, Evans allegedly crossed the center line and collided with the squad car in the 5400 block of South State Street.

His three passengers were able to get out of the Jeep and were taken into custody but later released without charges. Evans had lost consciousness in the crash and had to be removed as the Jeep “began smoldering,” prosecutors said.

A tan Glock 9 mm handgun was recovered from the floor of the Jeep in front of the driver’s seat. The gun was modified with a switch that allowed it to fire automatically, prosecutors said.

A second gun recovered by officers belonged to one of Evans’ passengers, who had a valid firearm owners identification card and a concealed carry permit. It was not used in the shooting, prosecutors said.

Evans’ hands allegedly tested positive for gunshot residue.

One of the officers in the squad car suffered broken bones and had lost six pints of blood by the time he was freed from the wreckage and brought to the hospital, prosecutors said. Prosecutors said it was unclear if injuries to his leg would require amputation. Other officers suffered concussions and fractured bones.

Evans worked full time as an HVAC technician and part-time for Amazon and supports three children, defense attorney David Geiger told the judge. Evans also suffered serious injuries in the crash and will likely require physical therapy, Geiger said in asking that his client be released on electronic monitoring.

Gump approved prosecutor’s petition to detain Evans and set his next court date for Oct. 26.
 
*Joker voice* You get what you fucking deserve!"

Seriously. first they say "come to us!" and when that offer is taken on they say "Not this way! Stay in Texas retards!"

Don't forget that these people are also literally walking gold.. Such a boon to us that society couldn't survive with the floodgates not open. Except now for some reason.

It's perverse how they still try to compare mass immigration of the past with it in modern times.. Now with expensive safety nets and so much red tape and education requirements, that they will never not need it, or be able to put more into than they and their families take out. Add in the effects on real wages and you have a disaster on your hands. For everybody but a few shareholders, the markets and global elites.


Judge ‘horribly disturbed’ by charges that man opened fire on migrants at police station

It begins. Things are going to get wild.

Can't wait for Mexico (and maybe other SA nations) to start bitching about guns again. As if their current suit against a bunch of American gun makers wasn't bad enough.
 
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The real fun is going to begin when the economy continues to go the way of 2008 and jobs become scarce. Half these parasites aren't going to have a job and will be getting $9,000 a month while the other half will be working jobs that the blacks used to do and still getting their $9,000.

Won't it be funny if Chiraq's violent crime rate goes down?
It won't, however the number of dismembered body parts found on overpasses will mysteriously go up.
 
The real fun is going to begin when the economy continues to go the way of 2008 and jobs become scarce. Half these parasites aren't going to have a job and will be getting $9,000 a month while the other half will be working jobs that the blacks used to do and still getting their $9,000.


It won't, however the number of dismembered body parts found on overpasses will mysteriously go up.
$1500 a week is well beyond minimum wage and when the economy finally hesitates hard there's going to be blood on the streets.
 
Won't it be funny if Chiraq's violent crime rate goes down?
I predict we'll see a sudden rise in homicides before that happens though.
Now, now, petty little propagandists, post the picture of the felon so we don't make assumptions about his socioeconomic status going by his name alone:

View attachment 5416151
I was wondering how a man could blast into a crowd on full auto and only wound two people...
 
"The majority of migrants who have arrived over the past year come from Venezuela and are fleeing a collapsed economy, where they say they struggle to make more than $25 a week."

I see the cross Atlantic version aren't as savvy as the UK flavour. You're supposed to say you're a lesbian and all your kids are from corrective rapes by the secret police, not just straight up admit to being an economic migrant
 
@clipartfan92

"Currently, the state is funding temporary housing, including rented apartments and homes for migrants. The state is providing up to $9,000 in rental assistance over a 6-month period, which includes assistance with moving in and a starter kit to furnish the apartment.

"That rent lasts for six months and ideally people would have started their legal process, secured legal work authorization and be able to sustain that apartment."

Gee I wonder what the demographics of Chicago government and landlords look like? Because I can hear the hands rubbing from here
 
Migrants sleeping outside Chicago police stations brace for winter: ‘We aren’t prepared’
Chicago Sun-Times (archive.ph)
By Michael Loria and Emmanuel Camarillo
2023-10-14 21:57:20GMT

chi01.jpg
Jose Gregorio Mendoza Leal (right) sits inside a makeshift tent outside the Town Hall District police station with his wife Yohana Mendoza. He said conditions are especially tough on their daughter Yohanyelis, 6, (center) and his elderly father. “It feels worse when you have kids because when it’s cold you feel powerless. We don’t have a way to shelter from the cold. We have a lot of clothes, but it’s not the same as a house.”
Emmanuel Camarillo/Sun-Times


Even as temperatures drop, Yaritsa Leal and a dozen of her family members are sleeping outside the Town Hall District police station. There isn’t enough room for them inside.

They’ve jury-rigged a tent to shield them from the elements, but it’s not enough to keep out Chicago weather.

“We huddle under there and give each other warmth,” said Leal, 43. “I feel cold, I feel uncomfortable, and I feel scared, but I know that I can’t come here and demand too much.”

The Venezuelan family is among the approximately 3,000 migrants who were staying at police stations on Thursday, according to the city’s Office of Emergency Management and Communication. With room for only dozens inside at each station, hundreds of people, like the Leal family, are sleeping outside, according to volunteer estimates.

The North Side police station is one of the few where migrants have recently found some relief inside a city warming bus overnight, but that’s not offered at all stations, and those with little protection are facing a precarious situation advocates worry could become disastrous.

“Based on Chicago winters and the weather we’re heading into, I worry that it’s inevitable,” said Elizabeth Huggins, one of several volunteers at the Grand Central District police station, on the prospect of migrants becoming ill.

“Even if we don’t get all the way to hypothermia and frostbite, people are going to get sick, because there’s no way to dry off and keep warm.”

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Migrants staying at the Town Hall District police station have fashioned a makeshift tent to help ward off the elements because there isn’t enough room inside. They say the tent helps, but it’s not enough to keep them warm as temperatures drop. Emmanuel Camarillo/Sun-Times

At the station in Belmont Cragin, where there’s room for about 50 people inside, Huggins estimated at least 70 more were sleeping outside, nearly all of them with tents to protect them because of the limited space outside the station.

Huggins recently ordered 100 weather-resistant sleeping bags for those outside but isn’t sure how people will manage in the meantime without something like a warming bus provided by the city or winter clothes.

In a briefing with reporters on Thursday, Cristina Pacione-Zayas, first deputy chief of staff for Mayor Brandon Johnson, did not respond directly to questions about whether the city would send city buses to all stations, although she reiterated a call that the city recently put out for donations to help supply arrivals (more than 18,000) with winter clothes and other necessities.

Pacione-Zayas also said the construction of Johnson’s “winterized base camps” was “imminent,” although she did not provide an exact date and said about only a quarter of alderpersons had provided potential locations, as requested by the mayor.

She also alluded to working with “faith-based leaders” on a “plan for emergency staging and shelter” but did not offer more details.

In the meantime, volunteers at police stations with room for tents say they can’t get ahold of them fast enough.

“It’s difficult to source 100 tents,” said Lydia Wong, a volunteer at the Harrison District station.

There’s no room for people to sleep inside the station in East Garfield Park, meaning the 110 people there are all sleeping outside.

Volunteers set up 30 tents Wednesday, Wong said, but haven’t been able to find tents for the dozens more who need them.

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Migrants try to protect themselves from the rain outside the Austin District police station last month. Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times file

Wong encouraged those interested in helping to join Chi Welcome, a Facebook group where volunteers coordinate donations and other forms of assistance for migrants at police stations.

Without an urgent change, migrants themselves worry things could become drastic.

Jose Luis Perez, Leal’s husband, said he’s heard about how brutal Chicago’s winters can be and is afraid they will still be stuck outside the station when it’s freezing.

“We as Venezuelans aren’t used to such cold,” Perez said. “I’ve told others out here to get ready because what’s coming is going to be difficult, and we aren’t prepared.”

The family members said they don’t know if or when they’ll be able to find room at a more traditional shelter.

“I’d ask the city and the government to help us,” Perez said, “to approach this with a little more urgency.”

Michael Loria is a staff reporter for the Chicago Sun-Times via Report for America, a not-for-profit journalism program that aims to bolster the paper’s coverage of communities on the South Side and West Side.
 
This makes me so goddamn MATI. I work for a living and these fuckers think they get to show up and get a free goddamn house FFFUUCCKKKK THEM.
Same. Holy shit I’m actually seething at the implication that whites should have to do ANYTHING for these fucking leeches except ship them back to their shitholes or end their miserable existence.

“Even if we don’t get all the way to hypothermia and frostbite, people are going to get sick, because there’s no way to dry off and keep warm.”
Good. I hope they die, but everyone knows they’re going to get free government hotel rooms, heated by the American taxpayer dollar.
 
There's your problem.
These Red Diaper communists don't want the "wrong type" of migrants.. the ones who vote against socialism.
The Venezuelan migrants coming today aren't fleeing Socialism. They lived under Socialism for over a decade. They're just coming to the US because they ran out of Socialism back home and want to reup their supply of other people's money.
 
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