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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It's been a while since my last update. Let's see how things are going...

Migrants report reusing soiled diapers on babies amid essential goods shortages in Chicago shelters
Chicago Tribune (archive.ph)
By Nell Salzman, Laura Rodríguez Presa, and Kate Armanini
2024-02-29 11:00:25GMT
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Angel Cardena, 25, holds his 3-year-old son Yulian Cardena outside a migrant shelter on the Lower West Side on Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2024, in Chicago. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune)

Migrant families are reporting a shortage of diapers in the city’s shelters, forcing some parents to reuse dirty diapers on their babies, according to migrants and a network of volunteers working closely with those living in shelters.

The desperation of the families has galvanized mutual aid groups to collect diapers, toilet paper and other hygiene products after city officials told them they couldn’t keep up with supplies, said Anna Gomberg, a lead volunteer helping migrants on the North Side.

Hygiene products, including diapers and toilet paper, are provided by the city’s emergency operations center’s logistics section, which was created to coordinate and allocate resources for migrants. The city receives supplies from the Illinois Emergency Management Agency, the Federal Emergency Management Agency and outside vendors.

Mary May, a spokesperson for the city, acknowledged that “supply shortages from IEMA and FEMA can result in temporary shortages of some supplies” for migrants, but said in the statement last Friday that officials had “received a large delivery of supplies” that included diapers to deliver to shelters.

“Shelter staff can only distribute what they have in supply. If inventory levels of certain items get low, emergency deliveries of the items are made,” May said.

On Wednesday, Esperanza Gil, 39, said she has constantly worried about having enough diapers for her 2-year-old since they arrived at the Inn of Chicago in Streeterville about three weeks ago. Diapers are restocked every few days, she said, but there are too many families with babies that need them.

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Esperanza Gil, 39, pushes her 2-year-old son, Habran Liendo, in a stroller near the Inn of Chicago migrant shelter on Feb. 28, 2024, in Chicago. Gil said she sometimes has to reuse diapers. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune)

She said she sometimes has to reuse diapers for her son.

“What else can I do?” she asked.

She said migrants have begun to gather in the room where they eat at the Inn to pool their resources.

“Because we can’t work, we all don’t have many options,” she said.

Migrant families at the Inn of Chicago, one of the largest city-run migrant shelters, began to report the need for diapers more than two weeks ago, said volunteers, who quickly learned that many more were in need in shelters across the city. Katharina Koch Staley, a volunteer helping migrants, said Tuesday a shelter in Rogers Park was in need of toddler diapers.

Elizabeth Huggins, a volunteer who was helping migrants when they were staying at the Grand Central District (25th) police station, said she is concerned about the ability of asylum-seekers to pay for diapers if they have little to no steady income, and worried about the sanitation inside crowded shelters.

“When you’ve got children, their bodies are learning to adapt to diseases. You don’t want to reuse things like diapers. … We are exposing people to feces and urine,” she said. “We can expose them to what made them sick or make them sick all over again.”

More than 36,000 migrants, mostly from Venezuela, have arrived in the city since August 2022, when Texas Gov. Greg Abbott began busing asylum-seekers from the southern border to sanctuary cities. City and state officials have struggled to keep up with the number of migrants in need.

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Frida Peña, 2, center, holds onto the leg of her mother, Daniella Narvaez, while looking for clothing and other supplies on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024, at a supply drive called "Freebies for Families" hosted by Southwest Collective at Edwards Elementary in Chicago. The collective gave out diapers, baby formula, clothing, shoes, and other supplies. (Vincent Alban/Chicago Tribune)

More than 12,100 migrants live in the city’s 23 shelters, which are managed by Favorite Staffing under a contract that has cost the city millions of dollars and garnered controversy for its sizeable overtime.

Favorite staff submit order requests with the logistics team and make sure residents receive what’s needed, May said.

Volunteers say it is not clear who rations diapers and toilet paper if shelters experience a shortage. The city did not respond to a question about who is in charge of rationing the supplies.

Outside the largest city-run shelter on the Lower West Side that houses over 2,000 migrants, Angel Cardena, a father from Maracay, Venezuela, stood outside in flip-flops in 20-degree weather Wednesday holding his 3-year-old son.

Cardena, 25, said he has been at the shelter for about a month but has not received diapers from shelter staff.

“Some people get more help than others,” he said. “But the majority of people here buy their own supplies.”

Migrants sleep in large rooms with hundreds of other people and are provided with little to no supplies or care, he said. He hasn’t been able to find work, partly because the single dad doesn’t want to leave his son alone at the shelter.

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Any Sanchez holds a package of diapers on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024, at a supply drive called “Freebies for Families” hosted by Southwest Collective at Edwards Elementary in Chicago. The collective gave out diapers, baby formula, clothing, shoes and other supplies. (Vincent Alban/Chicago Tribune)

Last Saturday, several migrant parents living in city-run shelters picked up diapers at a monthly community store set up by Southwest Collective, a mutual aid group, at Edwards Elementary in Archer Heights.

Jaime Groth, of Southwest Collective, said that volunteers told migrant parents that diapers would be available at the donation store. Some parents took several buses and trains to pick up the diapers, Groth said. Out of about 30 boxes of diapers of different sizes, they only had two boxes left.

Groth said that parents are also requesting formula and powder milk because the children are weak and malnourished. She urges the public to step in to help.

“There’s a lot of people and not enough diapers and the more we supply, the more people come and the more things we need,” Groth said.

May said that those who wish to help can purchase items directly from an Amazon Wish List set up in partnership with Instituto del Progreso Latino. The Wish List is regularly updated to meet the needs of migrants in the city’s shelters.

The wish list can be found at Chicago.gov/support (donations) or at InstitutoChicago.org. Additional ways to donate and volunteer can also be found at Chicago.gov/Support.

Website to donate items to Southwest Collective: https://www.swcollective.org/freebies-for-families
Hostile staff, bad food, filth — that’s life in city’s shelters, migrants say
Chicago Sun-Times (archive.ph)
By Adriana Cardona-Maguigad
2024-03-05 20:35:17GMT
The 248 grievances obtained through a public records act request include many complaints about hostile treatment by the staff of the Kansas-based company the city hired to run the shelters.
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Buildings throughout the city are housing migrants, including the American Islamic College. Some migrants staying there have complained about hostile treatment from several staffers. K’Von Jackson for WBEZ

A woman living in a shelter for migrants in Chicago said she asked a staff member for a late-night glass of milk last November to feed one of her babies. Instead, she said the staff member asked her uncomfortable questions and a male staffer told her to show her breasts. The woman said she complied because she felt forced to do it.

“That person made me let everyone see my private parts, and I cried at night because that made me remember a lot of violence that I experienced when I was on the road,” the woman wrote in Spanish in a grievance she filed during her stay at the Chicago Lake Shore Hotel on South Lake Shore Drive.

The allegation is one of 248 grievances lodged by migrants staying in more than two dozen city-run shelters between June 2023 and January. WBEZ obtained the grievances through a public records request with the Chicago Office of Emergency Management and Communications.

Thousands of migrants — most from Venezuela — have been sent here from Southern border states, primarily by the Texas governor, creating an ongoing humanitarian and financial crisis in Chicago. The city opened the shelters specifically to house the influx of migrants.

The nearly 500-page document obtained by WBEZ offers a window into how difficult and chaotic life can be inside these shelters — with complaints ranging from racist remarks to bad food and a lack of cleanliness. The majority of the grievances, about 60%, involve staff members from Favorite Healthcare Staffing, a Kansas-based company hired by the city to run its shelters. About 18% of grievances involve facilities and 15% relate to other residents. Migrants can file anonymous grievances using a QR code that directs them to an online form.

Grievances against staff include accusations of humiliations and hostile treatment, and some migrants say they are treated differently based on their sexual orientation.

“I feel discriminated against because [the staff] continue to bother me due to my sexual orientation,” one migrant wrote in Spanish, adding that staff wanted to kick him out of a shelter called the Social Club in the Loop.

Another migrant there wrote in Spanish: “A worker mistreats all the residents. She calls us bad words, she is racist.”

City says it investigates each grievance
A spokesperson for the Chicago Office of Emergency Management and Communications said a team investigates each grievance and may send a written recommendation for how to respond to the city’s Department of Family & Support Services.

“The city does not tolerate discrimination in any form and grievances of this nature that are founded result in corrective action up to and including demobilization from the mission,” OEMC wrote in a statement to WBEZ.

The city contracts a number of services at shelters — food preparation, trash and wraparound assistance. Favorite Healthcare Staffing has the largest shelter contract. Its roles running the shelters include site supervisors, janitorial services and shelter managers. In October, the company received a $40 million contract extension.

Keenan Driver, a senior vice president at Favorite Healthcare Staffing, told WBEZ in an email that complaints are investigated, verified and addressed, including up to termination.

“Favorite does not tolerate or accept discriminatory or abusive behavior by its staff, and expects all staff to treat shelter residents with respect and care,” Driver wrote. He said the company requires staff to participate in anti-harassment and deescalation training.

The grievances also reveal that some staffers were recommended for transfer to other shelters or dismissed. Sometimes migrants are moved to other shelters.

In one case involving a staff member accused of kicking a migrant out and throwing her belongings on the street while it rained, a manager wrote: “The coordinator believes verbal counseling will be ideal to remind staff about proper interactions with residents.”

There are also instances where there isn’t enough information to investigate a complaint or it’s too difficult to reach the migrant who wrote the grievance.

Life inside Chicago’s migrant shelters
When Margarita first arrived at a North Side shelter with her husband and 7-year-old daughter in January, she said the number of people crammed together shocked her.

“So many people that you don’t know, especially for those of us with children. I wanted to fly away,” said Margarita, a 39-year-old migrant from Venezuela.

Many migrants like Margarita don’t know what to expect when they enter Chicago’s shelter system after a long and dangerous journey across two continents and a perilous jungle. WBEZ is not using the migrants’ last names or the names of shelters where some are staying to protect their privacy.

Margarita and others say shelter rules include lines for showers and scheduled meal times. Families can’t take up too much space with clothes and other belongings. And they have a curfew.

Since August 2022, Chicago has received more than 36,000 migrants, most from Venezuela. In a political maneuver, Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has spent millions of dollars in state taxpayer money to bus and fly migrants all over the country, including to Democrat-led cities like Chicago in an attack on their stances on welcoming migrants.

The uncoordinated nature of their arrivals, along with the sheer volume of migrants coming to the city — often without proper clothes or shoes — has put tremendous pressure on the city and the families who have made the trek.

Without work permits, people are struggling to find jobs and permanent housing. Migrants have camped out at police stations and O’Hare Airport. And while cobbling together a network of shelters across the city — from closed public schools to converted hotels — city officials have struggled to provide resources in circumstances no mayor could have predicted.

In December, a 5-year-old boy died at a Pilsen shelter from sepsis. At that shelter on the same day, a grievance was filed by a mother who said her children were sick and needed immediate care. She said an ambulance was called but later canceled and that her daughter has been hospitalized twice with pneumonia.

Chicago has 23 active shelters housing about 12,000 people. After postponements due to winter weather, Mayor Brandon Johnson is enforcing a 60-day stay policy. The first wave of evictions will take place in mid-March.

WBEZ has not been allowed into the shelters but spoke with more than a dozen migrants who describe them as overcrowded and unclean, including complaints about dirty bathrooms, moldy food and bug infestations.

Residents said they don’t file grievances out of fear of retaliation from staff members, which some migrants say can include being transferred to a much more crowded location and being denied services or basic needs.

At times, migrants said they get what they need, but other times they feel humiliated and ignored, depending on who is in charge. They rely on staff for an extra glass of milk, medicine or hygiene products.

“I got my period recently. Since I don’t have any money, I had to ask a friend for some pads. She gave me three,” said Rosbelis, a 46-year-old single mother from Venezuela, who said her shelter wasn't offering any. “After that, I had to use toilet paper.”

Calls for greater access to shelters
Local volunteers and organizations also have limited access to the shelters. But several case workers allowed in a shelter on Foster Avenue, formerly a Marine building, say they have witnessed inappropriate behavior by staff.

“I don't know if the people who are there working directly in the shelter are not prepared or if the number of hours they work leads to a lack of tolerance with people, and eventually what they do is treat them badly — taking advantage of their power,” Cristian Villamizar said in Spanish. He is a caseworker with Onward Neighborhood House in Chicago’s Belmont Cragin neighborhood.

Mayor Johnson has been criticized for not hiring enough local organizations to staff the shelters. Some advocates say when staffers come from outside Illinois, they don’t know how to guide migrants or refer them to organizations for help. City officials say they are working with Favorite Healthcare Staffing to prioritize local hiring whenever possible.

In November, the federal and state government partnered with city officials and community agencies, including the Resurrection Project, a Chicago nonprofit, to assist eligible migrants with work permits. Other migrants have also been connected with housing assistance.

But the staff at Onward say they want to see Chicago-based groups staffing these shelters. They say families need mental health support and help learning how to navigate their new city and education.

“The city needs to really examine this situation,” said Mario García, executive director of Onward Neighborhood House. “The situation won’t change as long as the same people keep staffing these shelters.”
Measles reported at Chicago migrant shelter
Chicago Sun-Times (archive.ph)
By Michael Loria
2024-03-08 23:41:56GMT
Chicago health department officials said the patient has recovered and is no longer contagious. The shelter is on lockdown until residents are vaccinated, officials said.
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Public health officials confirmed Friday morning that a child at the Pilsen migrant shelter had measles, but has since recovered. Sun-Times file photo

A migrant shelter in Pilsen is on lockdown for one of Chicago's first measles cases in years.

Public health officials reported the cases of the disease Thursday and confirmed Friday morning that one of the cases was at the shelter at 2241 S. Halsted St., where 5-year-old Jean Carlos “Jeremías” Martinez Rivero had been staying before he died from sepsis caused primarily by strep throat, according to the autopsy.

The child at the shelter who contracted measles has recovered and is no longer contagious, the Chicago Department of Public Health said in a statement. The shelter remains on lockdown until residents are vaccinated.

Chicago officials have struggled to treat migrants at the shelter for months.

In the aftermath of Jeremías' death in December, the city scrambled to provide health screenings for shelter residents, and public health providers who have been treating thousands of migrants for months decried the lack of health care resources.

At the time, around 2,500 migrants were staying there, about half of them children, and many complained the crowded conditions made getting sick inevitable.

Since then, the number of migrants in shelters has fallen, from a peak of about 15,000 to around 12,000. The city's Department of Emergency Management and Communications said nearly 2,000 migrants were staying at the shelter Monday.

Measles can be serious, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, especially in children younger than 5. About 1 in 5 people in the U.S. who get measles end up hospitalized; 1 in 1,000 people with measles will wind up with brain swelling, which could cause brain damage; and 1 to 3 out of 1,000 will die, "even with the best care," according to the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases.

The disease is characterized by spiking fever, pink eye and a rash after flu-like symptoms begin. It is very contagious.

Cases of measles nationwide have been on the rise this year, according to the CDC. Forty-five cases have been reported in 17 states, compared to 58 in all of 2023.

Public health officials said shelter residents who have been vaccinated will be allowed to leave.
With shelter evictions looming, migrants worry about access to housing, work permits
Chicago Sun-Times (archive.ph)
By Erica Thompson
2024-03-10 01:47:34GMT
Dozens gathered Saturday in Pritzker Park to protest Mayor Brandon Johnson’s long-delayed plan to evict migrants living in shelters longer than 60 days. The order will go into effect March 16.
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Reina Isabel Jerez Garcia, a migrant from Colombia, holds a sign that reads, “Just Build Housing” on Saturday during a protest at Pritzker Park in the Loop, where activists protested the possible eviction of recently arrived migrants from shelters across the city.
Pat Nabong/Sun-Times


Dozens of activists gathered Saturday in Pritzker Park in the Loop with a message for Mayor Brandon Johnson and Gov. J. B. Pritzker: “No evictions, no more.”

That was one of several phrases chanted by the crowd, standing just across the street from a migrant shelter at the former Standard Club on South Plymouth Court. They held signs reading “housing for all” and “housing is a human right.”

They were protesting Johnson’s long-delayed plan to evict migrants living in shelters longer than 60 days. The order will finally go into effect March 16.

“We know that the people that are being evicted do not have the resources they need,” said Merita Bushia, an organizer with Community Care Collective and 33rd Ward Working Families — two of the groups organizing the protest.

“People say this is a migrant crisis, but it really isn’t. It’s a housing crisis, and it just has illuminated what many houseless Chicagoans have faced for years. We need to build permanent housing that is affordable to everyone.”

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Advocates call on the city to again postpone planned evictions of migrants living in city shelters on Saturday in the Loop.
Pat Nabong/Sun-Times


Currently there are 11,498 migrants residing in 23 active shelters, according to the city’s Office of Emergency Management and Communications. Back in January, Family and Support Services Commissioner Brandie Knazze told the Sun-Times that the first rounds of evictions would impact approximately 5,673 people, who previously had an exit date between Jan. 16 and Feb. 29.

Activists at the Saturday protest were critical of the eviction plan, citing barriers to accessing work permits, as well as limited rental assistance. They also spoke about poor shelter conditions.

The rally followed a recent lockdown of a migrant shelter in Pilsen after a measles case was reported.

Among the speakers was Reina Isabel Jerez Garcia, an immigrant from Colombia, who said she was still waiting on a work permit.

“It’s become almost impossible to be able to find secure work,” she said through a translator. “If we don’t make money, we can’t pay rent. If we can’t pay rent, we will have to live on the street.”

Referencing International Women’s Day, which fell on Friday, Garcia spoke about the challenges faced by migrant women.

“These conditions are pushing women to do precarious work, and the less support they receive, the more they’re going to have to find ways to survive,” she said. “And a lot of times this means they’ll have to do work that many would not consider dignified or safe.”

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Advocates for migrants protest the planned eviction of recently arrived migrants from shelters across the city during a protest Saturday at Pritzker Park in the Loop. Pat Nabong/Sun-Times

The evictions come as the number of migrants in shelters continues to drop. In mid-February, the number fell below 13,000 for the first time since Nov. 28. The shelter population peaked at nearly 15,000 in January. By late February, the city had closed four shelters in the Loop, North Lawndale, Lake View and North Park.

Mayor Johnson previously postponed the shelter evictions after more than a dozen alderpersons signed a letter calling for a delay.

Ald. Andre Vasquez (40th) attended the protest and said he has plans to ask his fellow councilmembers to sign another letter calling for an end to the 60-day eviction policy, ask for more support from Gov. Pritzker and an executive order by President Biden guaranteeing work permits for all.

“We’ve got about 12,000 people in shelters and only half of them are eligible for rental assistance,” said Vasquez, who is chair of the Council’s Committee on Immigrant and Refugee Rights.

“Only 10-20% of them are eligible for work authorization" he said. "So, at the end of April, you’ll see anywhere from 2,000 to 5,000 people out in the street. It’s my belief that the city can do better, and I’m glad that there are some people out here that believe the same.”
 
They literally bring disease with them.

Three more measles cases reported at Pilsen migrant shelter, bringing citywide total to eight
Chicago Sun-Times (archive.ph)
By Cindy Hernandez
2024-03-13 18:08:22GMT
Three more cases of measles were identified Tuesday inside a Pilsen migrant shelter, bringing the total number of cases in Chicago's current outbreak to eight, health officials say.

Seven of the cases were identified in residents at the shelter. Two of the cases were children; five were adults. These are the first cases of measles reported since 2019.

The Illinois Department of Public Health said Tuesday that it would mobilize resources to help Chicago and Cook County contain the spread of the virus.

“IDPH is working to coordinate state assistance to support our local public health partners as they contend with a measles outbreak that reflects an ongoing national rise in measles this year,” Sameer Vohra, state health department director, said in a statement.

“While the vast majority of Chicago and Cook County residents are vaccinated for measles and not at risk, we strongly support the call from the Chicago Department of Public Health for all unvaccinated residents to get the measles/mumps/rubella (MMR) vaccine now. Measles is highly contagious and can cause serious complications for those that are non-immunized.”

A team from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention arrived Tuesday to provide guidance for symptom-monitoring protocols, quarantine and isolation practices specific to shelter settings and coordination for the vaccination campaign at Chicago’s various new arrival shelters, the city's health department said.

"Although the cases are in Chicago, we are tracking nearly 100 potentially exposed people," said LaMar Hasbrouck, the Cook County Health Department's chief operating officer. "This investigation underscores just how infectious measles can be. We strongly encourage everyone to check their vaccination records and get vaccinated if needed."

More than 900 residents at the Pilsen shelter were vaccinated, and immunization was confirmed for the rest, the city health department said. Health officials have now moved on to other shelters across the city to provide vaccinations.

Health officials are also providing measles vaccinations at the landing zone for new arrivals.

Symptoms of measles can include rash, high fever, cough, runny nose and red, watery eyes, health officials said. Symptoms can take from seven to 21 days to show up after a person is exposed to someone with measles.

“While we’re seeing new cases every day, this is not like the COVID-19 outbreak. The vast majority of Chicagoans are vaccinated against measles and therefore not at high risk,” said city Health Commissioner Olusimbo Ige.

“But those who are unvaccinated need to take precautions, and if they’re exposed, quarantine immediately and connect with your health care provider. Above all else, get vaccinated so you, too, can be protected from this virus."
Change to immigrant health care programs in Illinois will cause up to 6,000 to lose benefits
Chicago Tribune (archive.ph)
By Jeremy Gorner and Olivia Olander
2024-03-13 12:30:58GMT
SPRINGFIELD — Thousands of non-U.S. citizens living in Illinois will no longer receive state-funded health care benefits as Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s administration looks for ways to cut the costs of two programs that came close to derailing state budget talks last year.


The Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services projects that as many as 6,000 people will lose coverage when the state stops offering the programs’ benefits to those who have green cards but have not completed a five-year waiting period in the U.S.


Individuals in that category may no longer be eligible for the benefits provided through two programs, Health Benefits for Immigrant Adults and Health Benefits for Immigrant Seniors, by as early as May 1. The affected individuals would then have to reapply for coverage through the federal Affordable Care Act Health Insurance Marketplace, which provides subsidies to noncitizens who are living in the country legally, the department said.


“It is important to note that all of the enrollee groups identified for changes … have alternative coverage options,” HFS spokesperson Jamie Munks said in an email. “These individuals will qualify for Medicaid coverage if they meet the eligibility requirements once they have been in the country for five years. We understand this creates turbulence for these individuals in their medical coverage and will do everything we can to help make the transition as smooth as possible.”

Munks said HFS is working with the state’s Department of Insurance to ensure that so-called navigators can assist these recipients with enrolling in a new plan.


The state budgeted $550 million for the programs last year, and Pritzker is proposing $440 million for them during the fiscal year that begins July 1. During a meeting before the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules on Tuesday, Healthcare and Family Services chief of staff Dana Kelly said removing the designated group recipients from the two programs would save a little over $13 million.


“We will be notifying them in the next week of that change and they will be made eligible for a special enrollment period on the Health Insurance Marketplace,” she said.


State Rep. Norma Hernandez, a Democrat from Melrose Park, criticized the changes as a “short-term cost-saving measure, not a long term” solution, and raised concerns about whether the navigators will suffice to help thousands of people through a complex enrollment process that could also be complicated by language barriers with only about a month and a half left before their state-funded health care begins to expire.


“Even for me, and I have an education, I have a health care background, a master’s, it’s hard for me to navigate and understand copays, deductibles, all of that stuff,” Hernandez said. “I actually have a decent way of living, right? And then there’s folks that make less than $30K a year, less than $20K a year, and are now going to have to figure out how to pay for health care.”

In addition to proposing $440 million from the state’s general revenue fund for the programs in the coming year, Pritzker also proposed that an additional outlay of nearly $200 million could be allocated toward the two programs through other revenue streams. More than half of that would come from a federal match to emergency services funding.


Illinois initially offered the health care benefits in 2020. The programs initially provided Medicaid-style coverage to immigrants 65 and older who were in the country without legal permission, or who had green cards but hadn’t completed a five-year waiting period and are therefore ineligible for the traditional health insurance program for the poor, which is jointly funded by the federal government. The state-run immigrant health care programs have been expanded twice and now cover those 42 and older.


The two programs launched in Illinois at a time when Medicaid redeterminations — annual checks that verify whether an enrollee is eligible for that benefit — were put on pause by the federal government during the COVID-19 pandemic. Munks said this year will be the first time enrollees in the state-funded immigrant health care programs, which are separate from Medicaid, will be subject to redetermination.

The health care programs became a major sticking point in budget negotiations last year. In his budget proposal a year ago, Pritzker pitched $220 million for the program. But as projected costs rose to $1.1 billion, he ended up striking a deal that set aside $550 million for the benefits.

The subsequent move to limit enrollment drew criticism from Latino communities at the time. The group Healthy Illinois, which advocated for the program, called Pritzker’s decision “immoral and fiscally short-sighted.”

Senate Republicans, meanwhile, this year indicated they had issues with continuing to fund the program.

Prior to the funding issues last year, Pritzker had said he believes “everyone, regardless of documentation status, deserves access to holistic health care coverage.”

The programs do not extend to the asylum-seekers primarily arriving in Chicago from Texas.
Johnson says limited migrant shelter evictions to start
Chicago Tribune (archive.ph)
By Alice Yin and Jake Sheridan
2024-03-13 17:59:54GMT
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Migrants eat dinner after attending a religious service outside a shelter on the Lower West Side, March 4, 2024, in Chicago. Several religious groups organized the event to feed migrants and hold a brief service on the sidewalk outside the shelter. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune)

Mayor Brandon Johnson said Wednesday the city will move ahead with evicting an unknown amount of migrants from city shelters for the first time, rejecting the latest outcry from a group of aldermen opposed to the policy.

Johnson told reporters at an unrelated West Side event an unspecified number of the thousands of migrant shelter residents who were issued 60-day notices to vacate by Saturday will receive “exemptions.” However, others without those privileges will be forced to leave and restart the process for temporary shelter.

“I don’t know if it’s a substantial number, but again, they can return to the loading zone,” the mayor said when asked about how many migrants must leave the shelters. “That’s one place, or they can decide to move on. You know, they don’t necessarily have to remain within the structure that we’re providing.”

It was unclear how many migrants previously required to exit will qualify for city-issued exemptions allowing them to instead stay. Johnson’s administration previously estimated as many as 5,600 could be removed, but exceptions will be made for those in the process of securing housing or out-migrating, as well as people with extenuating health circumstances, including pregnancy, he added

“The ultimate goal is to move people to resettlement or out-migration,” the mayor said. “What this policy has essentially done is given us the opportunity to have real substantive conversations with migrants to help them move on.”

Meanwhile, Johnson’s immigration committee chair was spearheading a letter with colleagues urging the city to scrap the 60-day shelter limit policy entirely.

The mayor first announced the policy in November to remove migrants from shelters after a 60-day stay as a way to push them to find permanent housing and relieve pressure on the expensive, overburdened shelter system. A day later, Gov. J.B. Pritzker announced the state’s rental assistance program for asylum seekers would be curtailed from six months of support to three.

Johnson has delayed enacting the policy three times since it was first announced. The previous pushbacks, each announced in January, came amid cold weather and aldermanic complaints just days before migrants faced removal.

The number of migrants in city shelters has sharply declined since a late-December high from 14,895 to 11,362 Tuesday as many migrants leave the city or move into other housing, often with rent support.

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Mayor Brandon Johnson arrives at a press conference on March 6, 2024, at City Hall. (Vincent Alban/Chicago Tribune)

Despite Johnson signaling last week the administration had not yet made a decision on whether to again delay, mayoral spokesperson Ronnie Reese told the Tribune “nothing has changed” since Johnson set the new removal date for Saturday on Jan. 29.

“The decision was made,” Reese said.

But the sudden spread of measles at a crowded Lower West Side migrant shelter has intensified concerns over the looming deadline. More infections have been announced almost each day since the first case became public Friday, with seven cases now confirmed.

The spread has prompted Latino aldermen to go inside the now-quarantined facility in an urgent bid to convince residents to get vaccinated against the virus. The illness’s new presence has also renewed calls from council and community members for Johnson to delay the 60-day limit’s enforcement once more.

Activists and volunteers held a rally Saturday urging another pushback, calling the removals “traumatic” and “damaging.”

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Ken Barrios, in yellow hat, a volunteer with the 33rd Ward Working Families Party, cheers among other activists during a rally in support of migrants on March 9, 2024, in Chicago. The rally was organized by activists and mutual aid groups demanding an end to shelter evictions until all people in Chicago have safe housing. (Vincent Alban/Chicago Tribune)

Ald. Andre Vasquez, 40th, began circulating a letter among aldermen calling on the mayor to replace the “60 Day Eviction Policy” with a policy that addresses shelter stays on a case-by-case basis. The majority of shelter residents are not allowed to work because of their asylum seeker immigration status or cannot access rental assistance, he wrote in the letter.

“What we have also now seen after this weekend is that there are public health concerns that could be exacerbated if people who have no rental assistance, no work authorization and significant language barriers are put out on the street,” Vasquez wrote.

Johnson deputy chief of staff Cristina Pacione-Zayas said after the last delay that giving migrants 60-day notices to leave shelter spaces should not be labeled an “eviction.”

“It’s a misnomer,” she said. “What’s implicit in that is that people have not been provided resources, have not been connected to a case manager and are just being pushed out.”
 
Migrants report reusing soiled diapers on babies amid essential goods shortages in Chicago shelters
These fucking dumb spics, man. When I was a very young widow with a baby, I literally hand washed cloth diapers in the bathtub with bleach and hung them to dry in my fucking apartment to save every dime I could.

Fucking lazy and entitled
 
Holy shit..... Dude gets paralyzed in Mexico City and decides that getting literally dragged across the border to a country he can't communicate in is ta better idea.... What a retard.

His idiocy has probably destroyed his ability to EVER walk again. His wife is going to leave him....

Goddamn these people are so fucking stupid.

Oh and who exactly is paying for all.kf that medical care.... Hmm...

The other story has that one dumbass who wanted to be a model.... Dude.... You don't have the face for that.
I liked the part where he left his papers and other shit behind at the hotel he moved out of, and they threw it all away after 5 whole days. And we're supposed to feel shocked and offended on his behalf. And a young man who still has full control of his upper body shouldn't end up with "gaping bedsores" at all. Absolutely no responsibility for himself.
 
Holy shit..... Dude gets paralyzed in Mexico City and decides that getting literally dragged across the border to a country he can't communicate in is ta better idea.... What a retard.

His idiocy has probably destroyed his ability to EVER walk again. His wife is going to leave him....

Goddamn these people are so fucking stupid.

Oh and who exactly is paying for all.kf that medical care.... Hmm...

The other story has that one dumbass who wanted to be a model.... Dude.... You don't have the face for that.
This kind of retardation tells me someone is coaching them to come here. By the way.
 
This kind of retardation tells me someone is coaching them to come here. By the way.
Many people don’t realize that these people are the absolute dregs of their home country. They get shipped up here because they’re such utter failures at home. Spic leaders have been sending their absolute worst up here for decades. Their entire purpose is sucking up as many gibs here as possible so some of it can be sent back home as remittances. These people are nothing but parasites and will never actually contribute anything to America unless it’s completely coincidental.
 
“Secondly, what we need to do is disperse the migrants across the country evenly, and not just send them to certain cities or certain states. Everybody should be helping out with this crisis.”

No, because my locale didn't vote for Biden or declare that we're a Sanctuary City. Get bent, your problems are not going to become my problems simply because you've fucked yourself and think everyone else needs to share the pain.
 
No, because my locale didn't vote for Biden or declare that we're a Sanctuary City. Get bent, your problems are not going to become my problems simply because you've fucked yourself and think everyone else needs to share the pain.

Their idea of collective cooperation is "we dictate, you follow, isn't working together to solve problems great?"
 
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Many people don’t realize that these people are the absolute dregs of their home country. They get shipped up here because they’re such utter failures at home. Spic leaders have been sending their absolute worst up here for decades. Their entire purpose is sucking up as many gibs here as possible so some of it can be sent back home as remittances. These people are nothing but parasites and will never actually contribute anything to America unless it’s completely coincidental.
Crime rates are literally dropping in Latin America because they are shipping all their criminals and retards to bughives in the U.S
 
Since August 2022, Chicago has received more than 36,000 migrants, most from Venezuela. In a political maneuver, Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has spent millions of dollars in state taxpayer money to bus and fly migrants all over the country, including to Democrat-led cities like Chicago in an attack on their stances on welcoming migrants.
"An Attack on their stance on welcoming migrants".
One might call that the consequences of your actions.
I like how it's somehow all Texas's fault. Chicago and New York were all fine and dandy to have open borders and a sanctuary city policy when the problem was 1500miles away in Texas.
 
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.”
What a stupid bitch. She makes policy based on how she imagines people will *feel." This is why women make worthless political leaders.
 
These fucking dumb spics, man. When I was a very young widow with a baby, I literally hand washed cloth diapers in the bathtub with bleach and hung them to dry in my fucking apartment to save every dime I could.

Fucking lazy and entitled
But le tradpilled hispanics. Instead of realizing diapers are a grift and reusing the cloth ones they just let their babies stew in shit.
 
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