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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Beale said there is “no conscionable way” that the Johnson administration should have spent nearly $1 million to build a winterized base camp on a contaminated industrial site in the Brighton Park neighborhood, only to have “the whole thing blown up” after Gov. J.B. Pritzker and the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency declared the site at 38th Street and California Avenue unsafe.

NO WAY. So after all of their scheming and spending the state said they couldn't use the site?
 
Voters won’t get chance to weigh in on Chicago’s sanctuary city status, City Council decides

Never forget that one of the most important aspects of elite globalist strategy is minimizing the "damage" voters could do to their agendas. We seen it after brexit with soyboys screeching about how we are ruining our betters master plans.. how in a "just" proper future, voters won't even have such a say. That's what their political classes are for and that some things are beyond having a choice or like minded person to vote for. This is exactly the type of thing they are talking about. How many European political systems work.

We have the same type of thing on certain issues. Look at immigration. The Republican establishment has already tried to work with dems on "open border" lite like policies. Neither party truly wants it shut. The dems want voters, the rep want to do what big business wants... as always. Whether it leads to their political annihilation or not. I don't even think they think about it.. they see it as "big business said so" so it's a good idea. (i'm growing to hate the other kind of libtards.. almost as much as the fake liberal ones)

The whole "contaminated industrial site" seems like a future angle or something to me. I could totally see courts blocking deportations based on the ongoing status of their legal claims against the city.
 
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A temporary migrant shelter will open in Portage Park. Residents have strong feelings.
Chicago Tribune (archive.ph)
By Ilana Arougheti
2023-12-19 13:23:00GMT

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The former St. Bartholomew Catholic School building at 4910 W. Addison in Chicago on Dec. 19, 2023. There are plans for a temporary migrant shelter in the former school building. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune)

As Chicago prepares for another influx of migrants over the holidays, Portage Park residents reacted Monday night to plans for a temporary migrant shelter opening next month in a local church building.

The temporary shelter will open in the former St. Bartholomew Catholic School building at 4910 W. Addison St. The school closed earlier this year.

An agreement to open the shelter at St. Bartholomew has not been finalized. Still, the space will open by mid-January, said Beatriz Ponce de León, the city’s Deputy Mayor of Immigrant, Migrant and Refugee Rights. It will stay open for at least six months.

The shelter will house families of young children, with capacity for 300 to 350 people. Residents will pass through a metal detector on their way in and out. The shelter will have an 11 p.m. curfew, with exceptions for work.

“It is imperative that we don’t leave these families, often with very young and small children, stranded on the street,” 30th Ward Ald. Ruth Cruz said Monday night. “However, we also have a duty to ensure the safety and well-being of our existing residents.”

As elsewhere, the city plans to enroll arriving migrant children in Chicago Public Schools, focusing on schools with English language learning programs.

The former Catholic school would be the first city-sponsored migrant shelter housed in a church. Other temporary shelter spaces have included motels, office spaces and retrofitted warehouses.

The Portage Park building came into play after the Archdiocese of Chicago contacted parishes about unused space.

Though migrant shelters are new to Portage Park, they’re not new to the 16th Police District. Local officers would be assigned to pay special attention to the shelter while on patrol, as they do for schools and parks, said 16th District commander Heather Daniels.

About 24,000 migrants have arrived in Chicago on 604 buses since August 2022. There are currently more than 14,000 people living in 27 temporary shelters, Ponce de León said.

“The numbers grew so quickly that we were not able to keep up with our shelter system,” Ponce de León said.

About 5,000 children currently live in Chicago migrant shelters, many younger than Pre-K age. The city has been opening about one temporary shelter a week, Ponce de León said, and nearly 10,000 migrants have moved to apartments.

Migrants are no longer sleeping in Chicago police stations. About 240 remain housed in airports.

Most recent arrivals lack family connections in Chicago. This makes migrant response particularly challenging for cities like Chicago to coordinate, Ponce de León said.

“Cities have not traditionally been the ones to have to integrate so many people,” Ponce de León said. “No city was prepared.”

At Monday’s meeting, tempers flared on both sides as Portage Park residents clashed over their views on the shelter.

Reflecting on his parents’ experience immigrating to Chicago in the 1960s, resident David Canario challenged the city to create safer spaces for migrants, starting with the new shelter.

“I consider every single one of these asylum seekers to be my family, my cousins, my brothers and sisters,” Canario said. “I hope we have the room for them. I hope we have the resources for them.”

One resident, Suzy Jackson, said working with a migrant family as a volunteer made her more excited to welcome others to Portage Park.

“Their story is a snapshot of so many other families,” Jackson said. “They endured a long and dangerous journey to get here…They want to be productive members of our community. Every day is a new challenge for them.”

Others expressed concern the city is defunding other causes to accommodate migrants.

Portage Park resident Judy Charnota said Monday that she would rather see the city fund programs for homeless veterans than open migrant shelters. Charnota called for the city to reroute arriving migrants to other states.

“Send [migrants] to Washington, and put them on the White House lawn,” Charnota said.

Some neighborhoods with new temporary shelters have faced issues with loitering and littering, Ponce de León said. For resident Nathalie Magallanes, the issue is financial.

Magallanes said once she learned how much money the city is paying contractors to operate shelters - most notably, national employment firm Favorite Healthcare Staffing - she was less than thrilled about the choice to open more.

The city has paid Favorite Staffing at least $56 million since September 2022. In October, the firm signed its third contract extension with the city, for $40 million through October 2024.

“I’m OK with housing migrants here,” Magallanes said. “I’m a migrant myself. My parents are. But I’m not OK with being screwed out of my taxpayer money.”

City officials emphasized Monday that the shelter will not, however, divert funding from city homeless shelters. If anything, Ponce de León said, organizing migrant shelters has taught the city its programming for unhoused residents is “not adequate.”

“This has taught us that we can do better,” Ponce de León said.

Resident Teresa Groat said she engages with both migrants and unhoused residents while working at the Harold Washington Library. At Monday’s meeting, she appealed to her neighbors to hold empathy for both groups.

“You’re talking about the same coin with two sides,” Groat said. “One does not have to be sacrificed.”

---

5-year-old boy dies, 5 others hospitalized after becoming ill at Pilsen migrant shelter
Chicago Sun-Times (archive.ph)
By Michael Loria and Kade Heather
2023-12-19 13:46:33GMT

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This converted warehouse in the 2200-2300 block on South Halsted Street in Pilsen houses more than 2,000 migrants. A 5-year-old migrant boy living at the site died Sunday from an illness. Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

A 5-year-old boy died Sunday and five more people, including four children, were hospitalized Monday after becoming ill at an overcrowded migrant shelter in Pilsen that has been the subject of repeated complaints about unsanitary conditions.

Jean Carlos Martinez was transported from the shelter at Cermak Road and Halsted Street to Comer Children’s Hospital just before 3 p.m. Sunday, police said. He was pronounced dead at 3:47 p.m. Autopsy results were inconclusive and pending further study, according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office.

Four more children and a woman were hospitalized Monday after getting sick at the shelter.

Four girls, ages 1, 4, 8 and 9, and an 18-year-old woman were taken to hospitals at different times Monday morning with fever and vomiting, Chicago Fire Department spokesperson Larry Langford said.

Their conditions weren’t immediately known.

Police are investigating the boy’s death. Migrant advocates say the boy died in a bathroom after staff refused to call an ambulance, but this could not be confirmed with police.

“My heart and my prayers go out to the Martinez family,” Mayor Brandon Johnson said in a statement Monday morning. “The city will continue to provide resources and support to them during this difficult time,” Johnson said.

During an unrelated news conference that grew heated when reporters asked about the boy’s death, Johnson emphasized that “people are showing up in very extreme circumstances.”

“They’re just dropping off people anywhere,” he said, referring to Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s migrant busing program. “Do you understand how raggedy and how evil that is?”

The Pilsen facility is a converted warehouse that opened in early October and has since become the most crowded shelter in the city, holding more than 2,000 people. It is run by Favorite Healthcare Staffing, a Kansas-based contractor the city has awarded close to $100 million to run shelters since September 2022, shortly after the first buses carrying migrants began arriving.

In a statement late Monday evening, the city highlighted the city’s efforts to provide medical care for migrants in shelters, including “thorough health screenings,” offering new arrivals “transportation to Cook County Health” and weekly visits by health care providers to shelters.

Changes to shelter staff protocols would be made based on findings in an investigation into the death, according to the statement.

A law enforcement source told the Sun-Times the child died en route or upon arrival to the hospital. He had a face mask on, was bleeding from his mouth and nose, had a fever of more than 100 degrees and had had diarrhea for days.

The family had previously told shelter staff to leave them alone regarding the sick child, the source said.

The facility is one of several shelters that opened in the fall amid a crush of new arrivals and a push to move migrants from police stations.

Migrants at the shelter quickly began sharing complaints with reporters and advocates, alleging it was overcrowded with many people sick and staff indifferent to the conditions.

Videos from inside the shelter shared with a reporter showed water leaking through the ceiling onto cots where migrants sleep, as well as many children who were visibly sick. Conditions appeared similar to those at the O’Hare Airport shelter, first reported on by the Sun-Times in September.

Volunteers who work with migrants say this is exactly why they have been asking the city for greater access to shelters.

“It’s really awful and preventable,” said Dr. Evelyn Figueroa, director of the Pilsen Food Pantry. “Nothing like this had to happen.”

Since before the shelter even opened, Figueroa said her organization had asked for access to it, especially to provide medical help.

Figueroa’s organization operates the Mobile Migrant Health Team, a volunteer health care organization run by local physicians, medical students and other health care workers, that provided care for thousands of migrants in police stations since the late spring.

In November, leaders from the medical team asked where the city needed help with migrants after it emptied out police stations, according to a screenshot message shared with the Sun-Times, to which an Office of Emergency Management and Communications official responded: “At this time we don’t believe that we will need help in shelters.”

Still, hundreds of migrants have been walking the mile from the shelter to the pantry to ask for medications, Figueroa said.

“This is the result of the city shutting out the people who have been helping,” Figueroa said. “We all really have to come together, we cannot lose another child.”

This isn’t the first incident of concern at the shelter.

In messages shared by Annie Gomberg, a longtime volunteer with migrants on the West Side, one desperate family called on volunteers in October after their child became unresponsive with a high fever, nosebleed and diarrhea.

The family was dissuaded from calling an ambulance by shelter staff, who told the family it would be “financially ruinous for them,” Gomberg said.

That child, a 3-year-old boy, was taken to a hospital after volunteers called emergency services and has since recovered.

The only reason there was a different result in the October case was because that family had volunteers who could advocate for them, Gomberg said.

“I don’t know how we wouldn’t see tragic consequences,” Gomberg said, adding how migrants often don’t speak English, are concerned about retaliation and either have no one to talk to or are ignored by those who are supposed to help.

Contributing Tom Schuba, Phyllis Cha

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 shit stops yesterday when the Chicongo citizens get out the KILLDOZER(tm) and fuck up each and every building, lot, or site where an ILLEGAL ALIEN shelter is about to go.

Yeah, you'll lose a building.
But Brandon's making damn sure you done lost it anyway.

KILL

FUCKING

DOZER

Get your shit together, Illinois!
 
NO WAY. So after all of their scheming and spending the state said they couldn't use the site?
It is a contaminated industrial site after all. The city only chose that property because it's out of sight, out of mind. Who cares if the homeless immigrants being piled there get poisoned? That is scumbag logic right there.
 
Editorial: Spiraling migrant crisis, not Gaza, needs full City Council attention
Chicago Tribune (archive.ph)
By The Editorial Board
2023-12-19 18:25:00GMT

chi01.jpg
Migrants live in tents along the Dan Ryan Expressway near 5100 S. Wentworth Avenue and outside a Chicago police station on Oct. 17, 2023. Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune)

Even as news broke about a 5-year-old boy, Jean Carlos Martinez Rivero, dying at a Pilsen shelter, the City Council’s Committee on Health and Human Relations spent hours Monday listening to a dozen carefully chosen speakers all calling for a cease-fire in Gaza. What will be the impact of that resolution, should it pass the full council, on the actions of either Hamas or Israel?

Zero.

We, too, would like to see much better civilian protections in Gaza and an end to the loss of innocent life. But this particular hearing was both a distraction from a crisis and a performative sham: There was scant mention of the horrors of the Hamas atrocities. This complicated crisis requires nuance, an understanding of history and the engagement of both sides, all present within Joe Biden’s administration but absent at City Hall. Israel still is dealing with the worst trauma in generations; this hardly is the moment to make most Jewish Chicagoans feel less safe.

No wonder the Chicago Jewish Community Relations Council called the resolution from their own elected representatives “reckless, irresponsible and dangerous.”

You might say that of how this administration has handled the migrant crisis, which seems to be spiraling further out of control as the holidays approach.

Venezuelan migrants living in the Pilsen shelter have told the Chicago-based, nonprofit Borderless Magazine they are being treated “like dogs” in Chicago’s largest migrant shelter, a former warehouse now home to more than 2,000 migrants. They described little “dust and fiber-like particles” falling from the ceiling, dirty bathrooms, limited and spoiled food and, overall, cots shoved together and becoming a hotbed of infections.

Borderless reported another telling allegation in its piece, republished by Block Club: “Staff have barred migrants from recording or taking photos inside the shelter and ‘threatened’ to kick migrants out if they speak with members of the media.”

Why the attempt at muzzling the freedom of speech of folks who have traveled to the United States to take advantage of that very thing?

We all know why: Neither the private contractors like Favorite Staffing nor the city want close scrutiny of what is actually going on inside a shelter that was supposed to house 1,000 migrants but now handles more than twice that number. For an administration that has claimed a commitment to transparency, that’s outrageous.

Cameras should be welcomed, and shelter residents who choose to speak to anyone they want should be free to do so.

Remember the state’s impressive emergency medical facility set up at McCormick Place during the COVID-19 crisis? There was a news conference to show the media the care behind, and cleanliness of, the facilities. Why should this time be any different?

We understand the difficulty of this cascading crisis for this city; time and again this page has called for Texas Gov. Greg Abbott to stop this inhumane busing without notice, and for the federal government to face up to its responsibilities at the border, however politically toxic.

But job one now in Chicago has to be about making conditions on the ground better for these folks, not about trying to deflect responsibility.

Alas, Mayor Brandon Johnson’s biggest worry appears to be about who is getting the blame and working to make sure it is not him.

“They’re just dropping off people anywhere. Do you understand how raggedy and how evil that is … and then you want to hold us accountable for something that’s happening down at the border?” an angry mayor told reporters on Monday, as the Tribune reported.

No, Mr. Mayor, we don’t hold you accountable for the border. But, given your elected office, we do hold you accountable for what is happening at a shelter in Pilsen.

And the Tribune story of what happened to the migrant boy, a narrative of a family that apparently could not get the help it needed quickly enough, is harrowing to read, including as it does allegations of a feverish child without warmth or enough to eat, days of sickness going mostly unnoticed, and parents not being allowed to ride in the ambulance and then suffering the indignity of being patted down at the hospital rather than being allowed to be with their son at what turned out to be his final moments.

All this just before Christmas. What a welcoming city we have become.

One might think the alderman representing Pilsen would have spent Monday working to improve the situation. Instead, 25th Ward Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez spent much of the day at the committee meeting on the Gaza resolution, thundering about “genocide” and “apartheid” in Gaza — 6,000 miles away. A perfect encapsulation of how this ideologically obsessed group of progressives would prefer to deal only with issues of their choosing rather than the urgent local matters immediately before them.

If this were happening, if a child had died under those circumstances, on the watch of either of the two previous mayors, the outrage from immigrant-service organizations on the left would have been deafening.

They’ve been co-opted by this administration, of course.

It’s time they found their voices nonetheless.

chi02.jpg
Gracely Velasquez, 36, of San Juan del Rio, Mexico, stands next to her 2-year-old daughter while looking through a pile of clothing outside a Pilsen migrant shelter on Dec. 18, 2023, where 5-year-old Jean Carlos Martinez Rivero died after a medical emergency on Sunday. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune)

As we’ve said before, City Hall must get a better handle on logistics, and it has to deal with Austin, however difficult that might be. Lashing out at easy targets achieves nothing.

Take, for example, a city ordinance that passed last week allowing the city to tow and impound so-called “rogue” buses that don’t deliver asylum-seekers to the city’s designated “landing zones” within the assigned windows. Last Wednesday night, a bus was indeed towed and impounded.

A good idea in theory. But in practice, the ordinance just made things worse.

Unsurprisingly, private bus operators didn’t care to see their vehicles towed away, or for being blamed for their companies being fined $3,000, so they starting hiding their activities even more blatantly, sending migrants to the suburbs or arriving when and where they would not be easily seen. What little communication had previously existed diminished even further, Cristina Pacione-Zayas, Johnson’s deputy chief of staff, told the Tribune. The “landing zone” is now being ignored. Unintended consequences strike again.

The problem with the ordinance is that it targets the wrong villain. All kinds of entities are making a buck off a crisis costing Illinois taxpayers millions of dollars, whether it’s staffing shelters or chartering buses. The problem here is flowing from the state of Texas, not a guy driving a bus and trying to make decisions on the fly without getting fired.

The problem, of course, is that there is no line of communication between Chicago (or Springfield) and Austin.

One has to be established. Whatever has to be done. And in the meantime, these shelters have to be improved immediately.

There are no other solutions and, as we all know now, lives are at stake.
 
This is the endgame. Due to "racism", cities with large black populations won't have to house them. If Trump loses the election, we'll be forced to Quarter them in our homes.
This is absolutely the case. They're already rolling this out in Europe, both within the EU and within certain member states. If Globo has their way not a single street will remain free of cultural enrichment.
 
Migrants flown to Chicago from Texas on chartered flight, officials say
Chicago Tribune (archive.ph)
By Nell Salzman
2023-12-20 23:41:00GMT

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Yanitza Rico, 16, from left, Omar Smith, 1, their mother Anna Vaccaro, 40, her husband Jose Orellana, 38, and their child Gianfranco Matute, 8, all from Venezuela, eat at O'Hare International Airport on Dec. 20, 2023, after arriving in Chicago by private plane the previous day. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune)

Migrants were flown to Chicago from Texas on a chartered flight Tuesday night in the state’s latest effort to ship people to the sanctuary city after buses carrying migrants have been penalized.

The city did not receive notice prior to their arrival and has had no communication with Texas officials, according to Mayor Brandon Johnson’s spokesperson Ronnie Reese. Reese said he wasn’t sure how the city would respond.

Andrew Mahaleris, a spokesman for Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott, said in a statement to the Tribune the migrants had signed consent waivers available in multiple languages upon boarding the flight.

“Until President Biden steps up and does his job to secure the border, Texas will continue taking historic action to help our local partners respond to this Biden-made crisis,” Mahaleris said in the statement.

Mahaleris cited Biden flying migrants across the country as justification for the plane sent Tuesday night. Texas sent flights to Chicago after Johnson started “targeting migrant buses from Texas,” according to Mahaleris. He said the mayor is “failing to live up to his city’s ‘Welcoming City’ ordinance.”

Mahaleris said 120 passengers were aboard the flight, but he did not respond to questions how much the chartered flight cost or who paid for it.

According to Chicago officials, police at O’Hare International Airport received a call around 7:15 p.m. that a private plane chartered by the Texas Division of Emergency Management landed and left about 100 asylum-seekers at Signature Flight, officials said in a statement to the Tribune.

Two unidentified individuals who flew on the plane reportedly fled Signature Flight and left the scene in an Uber prior to the arrival of police, officials said.

The plane’s arrival at O’Hare was first reported by WTTW.

Jose Orellana, 38, from Barquisimeto, Venezuela — one of the migrants who arrived last night on the private plane — sat on a metal bench at O’Hare Wednesday afternoon.

“On our journey here from Venezuela, we thought that we’d take a bus,” he said in Spanish. “But when we were trying to buy a bus ticket, they told us we should go to the airport instead.”

Orellana said they didn’t have any connections in the United States, and had heard there were shelter options and resources available in Chicago. He was surprised by the comfort of their journey to Chicago in the private plane.

His wife Anna Vaccaro has a cancerous tumor in her head, he said, and his 8-year-old son Gianfranco Matute has leukemia. They were both brought immediately to a hospital Tuesday night from the airport to receive medical care.

“We were so grateful to arrive by plane, because taking two buses would have been hard,” Orellana said. His wife and son were discharged were from the hospital and sent back to the airport at 5 a.m. Wednesday, he said.

The city reported Wednesday that 607 buses have arrived in Chicago from border cities since Aug. 31, 2022. Migrants have also arrived to the sanctuary city with the help of plane tickets purchased by Catholic Charities in San Antonio.

On Saturday, Johnson’s deputy chief of staff Cristina Pacione-Zayas told the Tribune that Texas had halted all communication with the city of Chicago following the city’s harsher penalties for bus owners whose vehicles violate rules to rein in chaotic bus arrivals.

On Dec. 13, City Council approved an ordinance that buses would face “seizure and impoundment” for unloading passengers without a permit or outside of approved hours and locations. Violators are subject to $3,000 fines, plus towing and storage fees.

That same day, the city impounded a “rogue bus” trying to drop off 29 migrants at the approved landing zone in the West Loop at 800 S. Desplaines St.

To dodge penalties and fines, bus drivers have dropped migrants off in Indiana and given them Amtrak tickets or Metra cards to get downtown, according to city officials.

Jose Ramirez, 35, from Venezuela, sat next to Orellana at the airport Wednesday afternoon, eating a sandwich that shelter staff at the airport passed out for snack. He said he arrived with the help of a ticket purchased by Catholic Charities.

“We heard at the shelter where we were staying in Texas that when buses drop people off in Chicago, they leave them on the side of the road. Then they buy them a train ticket,” he said.

Reese said based on the buses arriving from Texas without coordination, “it would not be surprising” if Chicago received more chartered flights from southern border cities.

“I think what they’re doing is chaotic,” said Reese. “But we’ll continue to meet the moment and provide support for individuals as they arrive.”

According to city data Wednesday, there are now 296 migrants staying at O’Hare waiting for shelter placement. The city has received more 26,100 migrants since the first buses were sent in 2022.

Orellana and his family sat on the floor in the airport, eating food, waiting. Vaccaro touched the tumor in her head and grimaced.

“We understand that the shelter system is full. That someone has to leave for us to enter,” Orellana said.
 
After planned migrant camp is scrapped over toxins at Brighton Park site, neighbors want to know how city is going to protect them
Chicago Tribune (archive.ph)
By Samantha Moilanen
2023-12-21 11:00:00GMT

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Sofia Salinas walks along the fenced-in area that was to become a migrant tent encampment near her home in the Brighton Park neighborhood, Dec. 14, 2023, in Chicago. Salinas and her neighbors are concerned about the presence of ground chemicals on the site that prevented the encampment from opening. She said all of the construction that had been completed was taken down fully by the previous night. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)

Sofia Salinas’ home backs up to a vacant lot at 38th Street and California Avenue in Chicago’s Brighton Park neighborhood.

When the city announced a plan to build a migrant camp on the lot, some residents were angry they weren’t consulted. But when that plan was scrapped after the discovery of high levels of toxic metals, including lead, Salinas said it felt like “a slap in the face.”

A first-time homeowner who has lived in Brighton Park for four years, Salinas said she and other residents have been working to improve the area through regular community meetings, welcoming the opening of a new church and helping neighbors keep up their homes. Now she questions whether those efforts have been in vain.

“You don’t know whether or not you want to stick around. You don’t know whether or not to put your money into building a community when it’s toxic. It’s like, ‘Should I even be living here?’” Salinas said.

Ald. Julia Ramirez, 12th, whose ward includes Brighton Park and McKinley Park, said the 38th and California lot was once a freight terminal for the Alton Railroad. During that period, it housed a zinc smelter — an operation involving potentially toxic processes that use heat and chemicals for metal extraction.

Ramirez said diesel tanks also used to be stored underground, but those have since been removed.

In mid-October, residents said they woke to the sound of trees being cut down and the installation of bright overhead lights at the vacant lot.

Maria Rolon, a resident of Brighton Park for 54 years whose home is adjacent to the lot, said the community was not informed of the city’s plans to use the site to house migrants until construction had already begun.

“I was very upset,” Rolon said. “I’m a senior, even my daughter lives next door. I have other kids. … That was my main concern.”

chi02.jpg
Homes across the street from the now-closed migrant tent encampment project are seen in the 3700 block of South California Avenue in Chicago's Brighton Park neighborhood on Dec. 14, 2023. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)

The city signed a six-month land-use contract Oct. 26 for the lot owned by Barnacres Corp., a Markham-based company run by Otoniel “Tony” Sanchez. Sanchez was also a donor to Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson, giving $1,500 to the mayor’s political fund two months before the lease signing. Johnson’s political advisers have said that money was being returned and that city workers involved in scouting the location did not know about the donation.

The city planned to temporarily house close to 2,000 migrants in a winterized base camp on the 9-acre property. Residents protested the city’s plan day and night, citing safety and environmental concerns due to the site’s history of industrial use.

After open records requests, the city released on Dec. 1 an 800-page environmental assessment report by outside contractor Terracon Consultants, which found high levels of mercury, lead, arsenic and manganese and traces of cancer-causing PCBs, among other contaminants.

A spokesperson for Johnson told the Tribune the site is “safe for temporary residential use.”

However, after the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency reviewed the report, Gov. J.B. Pritzker announced the city would not use the Brighton Park site as a migrant camp citing “serious environmental concerns” in a statement released by the governor’s office Dec. 5.

According to the report, to limit access to the contaminated soil, contractors covered the entire lot with a 6-inch stone layer meant to provide an “engineered barrier” that would be routinely inspected and maintained by city workers.

Despite the addition of the stone barrier and the mayor’s statements that the site is safe for residential use, homeowners on 38th Street are not convinced the land isn’t toxic.

Ermelinda Quiles, a resident of Brighton Park for 49 years, has lived across from the vacant lot for most of her life.

Quiles said she struggles with health problems she believes are linked to the air she breathes as she lives 50 feet from the former industrial site.

“We all got sick all the time, I got very sick for a month, and my old friend (next door) died. They found out she had cancer,” Quiles said.

Javier Lopez, a Brighton Park resident whose home sits adjacent to the vacant lot, said the city had already initiated excavation at the site to evaluate plumbing installation for the winterized tents that were going to be set up for migrants. Lopez said the community is concerned the city exposed toxins in the soil when they began digging into the contaminated ground.

“We’re concerned, I mean, we’re concerned about our water; they shut off our water for a few hours to dig back there,” Lopez said. “I’m sure the pipes are surrounded by these contaminants. So it’s very, very scary that that stuff was coming into our house.”

Salinas said residents were notified the city would begin water testing in October. According to a flyer distributed to residents, they were instructed to flush out their water to mitigate potential lead levels after pipe disturbances. This involved opening every faucet in their homes for 30 minutes every two weeks over a three-month period.

“They were like, ‘You’re gonna have to flush out your water for the next three months, but don’t worry, it will only be like $1 each time you do that,’” Salinas said. “I don’t care if it’s $1 or a penny, I shouldn’t have to pay to flush my water out. Now this is scary to me.”

Quiles said her water has consistently been discolored since the city began digging at the lot.

“The water comes out brown, and (there’s) like snowflakes, I gotta let it run for at least 20 to 30 minutes,” Quiles said. “I had to buy water to be able to cook and because I’m a very sick person, I got a lot of health problems.”

Many residents on 38th Street said the city’s plan to house migrants at the vacant lot was done hastily and without community input.

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The now-removed tents are shown at the failed encampment project in Brighton Park on Dec. 5, 2023. (Trent Sprague/Chicago Tribune)
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Signs are posted on a fence surrounding the failed tent encampment for migrants at the northwest corner of California Avenue and 38th Street in Chicago's Brighton Park neighborhood on Nov. 28, 2023. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)

Lopez said residents feel they were “left in the dark” on the city’s plans for the lot and the potential environmental impacts from disturbing the contaminated land.

“We’re kind of wondering what the next step is gonna be,” Lopez said.

Ramirez said she is following up with Johnson’s administration on whether plans will be developed to clean up the site.

“The highest priority for me is if we did find toxicity, contamination in the soil, that they’re able to provide full information on the details of it, you know, what can be done or what has been done,” Ramirez said. “These are ongoing conversations, and I will be having more conversations with people in the administration about this.”

Some residents are doubtful the city will clean up the site.

“I can guarantee you they’re just gonna leave it like it is,” Rolon said.

Ramirez said she is discussing what it means to be an environmental justice zone with the community.

In September, the Johnson administration released a cumulative impact report that is intended to capture how exposure to toxins, socioeconomic factors and health conditions vary throughout the city. The most burdened census tracts, which are designated environmental justice neighborhoods, would be subject to special considerations in future zoning and permitting decisions. Brighton Park is among these neighborhoods.

Ramirez also said lead testing kits are being distributed, and she is exploring ways to use the vacant lot for the neighborhood’s benefit.

Now that migrants won’t be living at the site, residents hope their concerns won’t be ignored.

“What I think (the mayor’s) No. 1 priority needs to be is safety. It can’t be temporarily safe. It needs to be safe,” Lopez said. “It’s not good enough just to get the migrants not to go through it. Now you gotta follow through all the way.”

---

Charter plane company used to transport deportees for U.S. was hired by Texas governor to bring asylum-seekers to Chicago
Chicago Sun-Times (archive.ph)
By Tom Schuba, Frank Main, Lauren FitzPatrick, and Michael Loria
2023-12-21 23:15:25GMT

A bankrupt aviation company that brought more than 120 asylum-seekers from Texas to Chicago on Tuesday has a history of handling deportation flights for the federal government.

A Boeing 737 owned by iAero Airways flew out of El Paso and landed at O’Hare Airport around 9:34 p.m., according to flight records. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s office took responsibility, saying his state was “expanding our operation” of shuttling migrants to Chicago after Mayor Brandon Johnson began “targeting migrant buses from Texas.”

It marked the first time Texas officials chartered a flight to transport migrants to Chicago since Abbott began sending busloads of asylum-seekers to Chicago last year as part of a broader push to shift the burden of immigration onto liberal cities that have committed to welcoming new arrivals.

Abbott’s office didn’t immediately respond to questions about the flight or its relationship with iAero, a company based in Greensboro, North Carolina, that acquired Swift Air in May 2019. Executives at iAero, whose main hub is in Miami, couldn’t be reached for comment.

In April 2019, the University of Washington Center For Human Rights published a report saying Swift Air was a key player in a lucrative business of deporting migrants for the federal government.

Swift became one of the “most frequently-used aviation subcontractors,” operating deportation flights under a contract with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the report said.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s inspector general reported in 2015 that ICE’s overarching air operations, known as ICE Air, could have saved more than $41 million by optimizing flight capacity and managing its resources better. At the time, ICE Air paid an average of $8,419 hourly for each charter flight regardless of the number of passengers, the inspector general said.

Although iAero has chartered flights for rock stars and professional sports teams and has counted the massive asset manager Blackstone Inc. as an investor, the firm recently filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.

Its creditors include the Chicago Bulls, the Chicago Blackhawks and the city of Chicago. A spokesperson for the city couldn’t immediately say what iAero owes it.

A spokesperson for the Department of Aviation declined to answer any questions, referring them all to the mayor’s office.

More than 26,000 migrants have been bused to Chicago since August 2022, when Abbott started sending them to push back against President Joe Biden’s immigration policies.

Several thousand more have been flown by other groups, including Catholic Charities of San Antonio.

More than 600 buses have arrived in Chicago. But the vast majority — 500 — have arrived since Title 42, a Trump-era policy that allowed for migrants to be turned away at the border, ended in May and in particular the past few months.

At the start of October, about nine buses were arriving daily and had begun to arrive at all hours.

This month, Johnson attempted to crack down on these “rogue buses” dropping off migrants without coordination by filing lawsuits against operators and leaning on a new measure that allows the city to impound buses for flouting the rules.

The City Council passed its bus ordinance on Nov. 18. In a statement Thursday, the city said 96 buses had been cited and one had been impounded.

The city received its first “permitted bus arrival” Thursday, according to the statement.

There’s nothing that city officials could legally do to block chartered flights, according to Joseph Schofer, an emeritus professor of civil and environmental engineering at Northwestern University who used to direct the school’s transportation center.

“They’re not in a position to say, ‘I’m sorry you can’t land here because we don’t like what you’re doing,’” Schofer said. “It’s interstate commerce. The FAA dominates.”

The FAA also would have required the charter flight company to share its flight plan identifying itself and the plane, and listing its origin and planned destination, he said. But he characterized the reporting requirements as “minimal” because O’Hare is a public facility.

The FAA did not return messages Thursday.

In a Facebook post, Abbott said his decision to place migrants on the charter flight, sending his Operation Lone Star into the air, was driven by Johnson’s bus gambit.

“Sanctuary city Chicago started obstructing and targeting our busing mission,” Abbott said in the post, which includes video of migrants boarding the plane. “Texas will now expand our operation to include flights to Chicago.

“Until Biden steps up to secure the border, we will continue to provide overwhelmed Texas border towns with much-needed relief.”

Bus operators from Texas have also begun skirting the bus drop-off rules by dropping off migrants at train stations outside the city and buying them tickets from there.

The city did not answer questions about what it would do about other charter planes arriving carrying migrants.
 
City taps $95M in federal COVID-19 relief funds for migrant housing costs
Chicago Sun-Times (archive.ph)
By Mitchell Armentrout
2023-12-29 19:12:01GMT

With the city anticipating a budget surplus to close out the year, Mayor Brandon Johnson will shift $95 million in COVID-19 relief funds to cover some of the ever-mounting costs of sheltering thousands of asylum-seekers coming to Chicago by the day.

Johnson’s top aides said they announced the budget maneuver Friday for the sake of transparency over how the city is paying to care for nearly 15,000 migrants living in city shelters — but acknowledged the revised accounting won’t move the needle in a crisis pushing city resources to the limit.

“This doesn’t change that outlook,” Johnson’s senior adviser, Jason Lee, told the Sun-Times. “We’re going to continue to lobby the federal government for more support as the situation becomes, frankly, more unstable.”

The city had budgeted about $152 million for 2023 city operations to be covered in American Rescue Plan Act funds, the dollars allotted by the federal government in 2021 to help local governments make ends meet amid COVID-19 shutdowns.

Better-than-expected city revenue means some of those operational costs can be covered by the city’s corporate fund, freeing up $95 million in federal dollars for the migrant crisis, said city Budget Director Annette Guzman.

The city so far has spent more than $138 million to care for the new arrivals, mostly Venezuelan migrants from the southern U.S. border who have been bused and flown to Chicago by Republican leaders aiming to shift costs to Democratic-led cities.

Johnson has criticized President Joe Biden’s administration for not directing more federal money to help deal with a situation that’s only expected to escalate.

In a statement, the mayor said “[W]e are allocating federal funds to deal with a federal problem. By allocating ARPA funding for this mission, we are meeting the City’s financial obligations without cutting the critical services that Chicagoans rely on every day.”

Johnson’s office briefed City Council members on the plan Friday.

The $95 million has effectively already been spent on leases, staffing, food and supplies for some of the 27 city shelters that have been launched since last year.

Johnson went to the City Council earlier this year to approve $51 million in emergency spending, and his first budget, which goes into effect in the new year, includes $150 million for migrant spending — which his office has acknowledged is well short of what will be needed.

“We have reached a critical point in this mission absent real, significant intervention immediately,” Johnson said Wednesday in his latest call for more federal assistance. “Our local economies are not designed to respond to this kind of crisis.”

The city has about $400 million left in federal rescue plan act funds that are earmarked for community projects, according to Guzman, who said city officials “don’t anticipate” resorting to using those dollars for the crisis in 2024.
 
Sorry for the double post. I somehow missed this a couple of weeks ago.



NAACP Leader Blasted After Calling Migrants Rapists, Savages
The Daily Beast (archive.ph)
By Brooke Leigh Howard
2023-12-13 21:40:35GMT

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Photo Illustration by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast/Getty

A top civil rights leader in Illinois has been pressured to resign from her post in the NAACP after spewing discriminatory remarks against immigrants—ironically—during a leadership meeting on Zoom.

NAACP Illinois State Conference President Teresa Haley was recorded in a virtual meeting calling migrants “savages” and claiming they are raping people in the Chicago-community.

In an interview with The Daily Beast Wednesday, former NAACP DuPage County President Patrick Watson said top NAACP leaders throughout Illinois met for a meeting on Oct. 26. Haley, who also leads the Springfield chapter, presided over the meeting.

“The comments came up when some of the Chicago-based presidents started to talk about the migrant crisis, the funding that was going into neighborhoods, and they had differing opinions from my own. It's OK to have differing opinions,” Watson said. “They had different opinions about some of the resources that were going to the community, that resources weren't going towards individuals within the community, even though those resources are coming from different sources… That's OK to have a different opinion. But President Haley engaged in what I would call absolute hate speech.”

In a recording Watson provided to The Daily Beast, members of the meeting are seen discussing the influx of migrants in Chicago.

“What’s happening in Chicago is a shame,” Haley says, “and it’s a crime,”

She and others explain how the Black community of Chicago is lacking resources; meanwhile, they claim migrants receive more attention and care from state and federal authorities.

“The busloads are coming, and we’re seeing families on the street,” Haley says.

She pointed out that homeless Black people have not received the same help as migrants because of stereotypes of Black people on the streets as “drug addicts” and people battling mental health issues.

Oddly enough, Haley then dishes her own set of negative generalizations about migrants.

“But these immigrants we got coming over here, they been raping people, they been breaking into homes. They’re like savages as well,” Haley says. “They don’t speak the language, and they look at [Black people] like we’re crazy because we were the only people in America who were brought over here against our wills and were slaves, sold into slavery.

“I’m trying not to be a n----,” Haley jokes, attempting to excuse her rant.

“I was absolutely horrified,” Watson told The Daily Beast. “I worked as an advocate for immigrant and refugee rights, pushing Congress to move forward on comprehensive immigration reform. …To think that this is someone who is perceived as a leader in the African American community here, within the civil rights movement, and she would be openly saying these things about another group of marginalized people, it was reprehensible.”

Watson said Haley’s comments were “exactly word for word” with what former President Trump has said at his political rallies.

“It felt as though I was listening to another prominent national figure instead of the state president of the oldest civil rights organization in this country,” he said.

Interestingly, before diving into U.S. immigration at the meeting, Haley talked about the Gaza-Israel war and how her Jewish cousin has been treated “like a terrorist” and that she had family members who were “so black, they were blue.”

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker said Haley’s comments were “reprehensible” and that he expected her to apologize.

“I also think that people should recognize that immigrants in this country are all around us,” he told The Seattle Times. “Virtually all of us came here from somewhere else. So remarks like that are commentary on our entire society. Extraordinarily inappropriate.”

Watson said the meeting in October was not the only time Haley made questionable statements.

“She made comments about the LGBTQ community,” Watson explained. “She spoke about a conference call that she was on where there were individuals that had their pronouns. … And she said something along the lines of, ‘The national organization is becoming more diverse. We've got people there that want to be called they, them, it. What the hell is that?’”

But he said the xenophobic statements were the “final, final straw.”

On Tuesday, Watson submitted his resignation as president of the DuPage chapter, claiming the October meeting “was not the only time” Haley “uses her powerful platform in a manner that sets up a destructive atmosphere.”

“We live with the horror of persons being shot, shot at, exploited, shunned, burned out of houses and homes, and murdered due to being immigrants, migrants, asylum seekers, refugees, being Black, surviving being Black and male in hostile environments,” Watson issued in a press release of his resignation and provided to The Daily Beast. “A person in a leadership position should exercise care of her heart and words and not be flippant when speaking about how the LGBTQIA community wants to be described and acknowledged.”

He went on to say that he could no longer work under Haley nor her “abhorrent” speech.

Watson explained that the Midwest region of the NAACP is conducting elections for the national board through December. After his resignation as president, Watson told The Daily Beast that the DuPage County chapter of the NAACP voted to promote Haley to NAACP’s national board of directors.

“After hearing this, many of them were on the call and heard it live,” Watson said. “How could they lend their legitimacy to this? And I would ask that of all members and anyone that's present within that branch: How can you lend your legitimacy to this kind of hate?”

According to Haley’s LinkedIn profile, she previously served on a county board for Habitat for Humanity and has been the state president of the NAACP since 2015. She’s currently serving her third term in the position.

Neither Haley, the Springfield Chapter of the NAACP, nor the Illinois State Conference of the NAACP immediately returned The Daily Beast’s request for comment Wednesday.

However, while on vacation in Dubai, Haley told ABC 7 Chicago that she didn’t make the statements that appear in the video.

“With AI, anything is possible,” she told the local news outlet.

“She has a history of twisting the truth,” Watson told The Daily Beast.
 
Mayor Brandon Johnson will delay enforcing migrant shelter evictions policy, acknowledges pause on opening new sites
Chicago Tribune (archive.ph)
By Alice Yin, Dan Petrella, and Nell Salzman
2024-01-12 23:36:00GMT
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Migrants follow an official after getting off a warming bus near West Polk Street and South Desplaines Street in the West Loop on Dec. 31, 2023. (Eileen T. Meslar/Chicago Tribune)

Mayor Brandon Johnson will delay enforcing his 60-day migrant shelter limit policy for the first group of asylum-seekers due to leave the system next week, his administration announced Friday as heavy snowfall and low wind chills pummeled the city.

The group of about 50 migrant shelter residents who have been in the system since 2022 and had been required to leave by Tuesday will now get to stay through “at least” Jan. 22, said Brandie Knazze, commissioner of the Department of Family and Support Services.

The same goes for another 600 residents who entered the shelter system after the 60-day limit was instituted in November and were supposed to leave between Tuesday and Jan. 21.

“To be clear, we’re not kicking new arrivals out in the cold this winter,” the mayor said at a news conference at the city’s emergency communications headquarters. “Our mission is to continue to live up to our values. As we welcome new arrivals, we will continue to meet this challenge.”

The announcement comes as the city braced for its harshest winter storm yet this season, which had previously seen bursts of snowfall and freezing temperatures here and there but stayed relatively mild. Early next week will be rougher, with wind chills that could reach minus 20 degrees, weather officials said.

The threat of more extreme Chicago winter weather will pose one of the mayor’s biggest challenges in the near future as the city continues grappling with how to care for its asylum-seekers, the first of whom were bused north by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott in August 2022 as part of his bid to punish liberal cities who support open immigration policies. Since then, the total number of migrants who have arrived in Chicago has surpassed 34,000 and continues growing by the day.

The city-run shelter system has been at capacity for months, with 28 buildings currently housing 14,600 migrants. Yet because of fiscal concerns, the prospect of more sites opening in the near future appears dim, with Johnson confirming Friday that there has been a pause in standing up additional shelters since mid-December.

The state did open a long-discussed shelter at a former CVS store in the Little Village neighborhood on Wednesday, intended to house more than 200 people.

Johnson did not say Friday how long the city’s pause on opening new shelters will be, or guarantee the resources are there to keep operating its current roster of 28 shelters for the rest of this year, absent further federal and state assistance. His earlier plan to open winterized tent encampments for incoming migrants remains on the back-burner too, he said.

In 2023, Chicago spent about $148.6 million paying for migrant services, per the city’s expenditures dashboard, down from earlier projections that pinned the costs at more than $300 million. This year, Chicago budgeted $150 million, and Johnson said his administration will “work hard to stay within the confines of that budget and continue to meet the needs of this ongoing, evolving crisis.”

The administration had sought to alleviate the strain by issuing 60-day shelter limit notices starting in November while also clearing out more than 3,300 migrants camped at Chicago police stations by mid-December. However, the harsh winter and ongoing lack of shelter beds are complicating that goal as some asylum-seekers are now sleeping inside heated buses at the “landing zone” for incoming new arrivals instead. More than 500 migrants were waiting at that site on Monday, but that number has since dipped to about 140 as of Friday.

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Maggie Gallagher and her husband Michael Gallagher talk with a Chicago police officer after they were told they couldn’t deliver soup to migrants staying at the city’s migrant "landing zone," on Jan. 12, 2024. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune)

Some of those 140 new arrivals who spoke with the Tribune on Friday expressed shock at the biting cold, a stark contrast to the tropical climate of their home country of Venezuela, from where most of Chicago’s asylum-seekers hail.

Yorbelis Suarez, 22, shivered outside in a black parka as she recounted the past four nights of sleeping inside a CTA bus at the landing zone.

“It was horrible last night. The wind and the snow hitting the walls of the bus. And it continues to be horrible,” the native of northern Venezuela said.

Johnson acknowledged the situation at the landing zone was concerning and noted that there are 10 warming buses on the lot Friday, with preparations for additional vehicles in place.

“It’s certainly unacceptable for the governor (of Texas) to continue just sending people to the city of Chicago, but we’re meeting the moment,” Johnson said in response to whether poor conditions at the landing zone are acceptable. “No, it was never designed to be a shelter. That’s why we’re working very hard to get people in the temporary shelters.”

While the cold weather persists, migrants will have access to blankets, winter clothes, immigration services, meals, medical care and hygiene resources at the landing zone, Johnson added. Chi-Care, a local nonprofit, has provided 4,000 free meals there in the past two weeks via “private funding” secured by Johnson’s team, he added. Meanwhile, city officials will be transporting migrants to Chicago Park District facilities for showers, while public health department employees will work with volunteers to provide mobile medical care.

On the state side, Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker sent a letter to Abbott on Friday imploring the Republican to stop sending migrants to Chicago while it is in the grips of harsh winter weather, especially “without coats, without shoes to protect them from the snow.”

While he admonished the Texas governor for “callousness” that he said threatens the lives of asylum-seekers, Pritzker also struck a more desperate tone than before, writing: “I plead with you for mercy for the thousands of people who are powerless to speak for themselves. Please, while winter is threatening vulnerable people’s lives, suspend your transports and do not send more people to our state. We are asking you to help prevent additional deaths.”

In response to the letter, an Abbott spokesman Friday noted the way Pritzker frequently touts Illinois as “the most welcoming state in the nation.”

“Instead of complaining about migrants sent from Texas, where we are also preparing to experience severe winter weather across the state, Governor Pritzker should call on his party leader to finally do his job and secure the border — something he continues refusing to do,” Abbott spokesman Andrew Mahaleris said in a statement. “Until President Biden steps up and does his job to secure the border, Texas will continue transporting migrants to sanctuary cities to help our local partners respond to this Biden-made crisis.”

Pritzker, a key Biden campaign surrogate, has called for more federal assistance and urged the White House to provide better coordination of the migrant response, but he’s also blamed Republicans in Congress for blocking bipartisan efforts to address the immigration system.

With Chicago selected as the site of the 2024 Democratic National Convention this summer, local leaders expect the national spotlight to entice Texas and other Republican-controlled states along the U.S. border to ramp up the pace of buses and planes further still.

Johnson also revealed he had a fruitful call with White House officials Thursday night on “creative ways” to add relief for Chicago. At the same time, the mayor continued to knock the federal government for not heeding his calls for more aid, saying Congress is “paralyzed.”

“I just want to make sure everybody understands the decision ... police stations, or the floors of buses,” Johnson said about the evolving challenge of taking in more migrants than shelter space allows. “That chaos is being caused by the governor of Texas. He has put the entire country in that situation. Look, there are no easy decisions in our office.”

Out of work and running out of time, migrants struggle to find jobs in Chicago
Chicago Tribune (archive.ph)
By Nell Salzman
2024-01-14 11:00:00GMT
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Matthew Anderson, 19, right, watches Rayni Cuadrado, 29, of Venezuela, change a drill bit on Jan. 11, 2024, while clearing debris from a broken doorway at New Promise Land Missionary Baptist Church in Chicago's North Lawndale neighborhood after it was broken into. Cuadrado, who had been going to Home Depot every day for a month, said it was his first substantial job after arriving in the U.S in November. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune)

After a month of standing in Home Depot parking lots in Chicago hoping to find work, Rayni Cuadrado had finally found a day job.

The 29-year-old from Maracaibo, Venezuela, moved metal scrap and took measurements Thursday inside a decimated church in North Lawndale. He had once dreamed of studying art in his home country, he said, but due to the political and social unrest there, he instead walked to the United States with his daughter to find work.

Like countless other groups of migrants and undocumented workers across the city, Cuadrado has been getting up at 5 a.m. every day for the past month to stand in parking lots and wait to be picked for day labor jobs. When a vehicle drives by, he said there is a rush. People want to find work so badly they will push each other.

“This is my first job in America. The majority of people don’t want to hire us,” he said.

While he’s living in a city shelter now, he hopes to make enough money to find an apartment for himself and his 4-year-old daughter. But he isn’t part of the group of migrants who qualify for a work permit authorization.

Thousands of people who have arrived in the city since August 2022 — when Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbott began sending asylum-seekers to sanctuary cities like Chicago — have been shut out of an initiative to help migrants get work permits. The program, launched in November by a coalition of federal, state and local governments and advocacy groups, has only made a small dent in the number of people even applying for work permits, much less getting them.

Organizers call the program a “one-stop-shop work authorization clinic,” assisting migrants with the daunting application process for a permit and waiving the nearly $500 fee. But it is only available to migrants who entered the country legally with humanitarian parole or were granted the opportunity to apply for temporary legal status by President Joe Biden, and who are staying in one of the city’s 28 shelters.

The state had the goal of submitting roughly 11,000 applications for eligible asylum-seekers residing in Chicago shelters by February, according to a Nov. 16 news release from the governor’s office. But Eréndira Rendón, vice president of immigrant justice at Resurrection Project — which spearheaded the program — said only 1,655 people have registered for the program and a few hundred have been approved.

Of more than 34,500 migrants who have arrived in Chicago, thousands like Cuadrado are left out of the legal pathway for employment, forced to find alternative options they say are unreliable and often risky and less lucrative.

While only a fraction of the people in shelters qualify for work permits, most people outside shelters don’t qualify either or can’t afford to apply. Migrants who can’t make enough in their home countries to live have decided to walk thousands of miles for economic opportunity, only to face a bureaucracy in the United States that prevents the vast majority of them from being legally hired.

‘I just want to get a good job so I can move forward’
Cuadrado took almost four months to make it to the border between the United States and Mexico. He said he and his daughter witnessed crime and violence in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, that was almost worse than in his home country of Venezuela: kidnappings, shootings and threats.

He said he couldn’t stay in Juárez waiting for his online immigration appointment because it felt unsafe. The day before they left Mexico, he said, 16 people were taken from the house where they were staying. Nine disappeared.

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Rayni Cuadrado, left, of Venezuela, and pastor Markel Anderson remove broken light panels on Jan. 11, 2024, from a room at New Promise Land Missionary Baptist Church in the North Lawndale neighborhood after it was broken into. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune)

Fleeing for their lives, they crossed illegally, bypassing the Customs and Border Protection’s CBP One app — an official mobile application the agency uses to inspect and document arrivals and departures in the United States. As a result, Cuadrado doesn’t qualify for the program established by the city.

Many migrants like Cuadrado and his daughter cross illegally without using the app, which they say is cumbersome and can take weeks or months. There were thousands of illegal crossings along the southern border in December alone, according to Ruben García, director of Annunciation House, a migrant shelter in El Paso, Texas.

Migrants who enter illegally can technically file for asylum and apply for a work permit 150 days later, but migrants and their advocates say the process is long, confusing and expensive. Many know there is a chance they won’t be granted asylum, so they may prefer to stay under the radar.

Experts speculate that without more federal action, the migrants recently arriving in Chicago without the app will likely fold into existing undocumented communities who have worked under the table for decades.

“It’s so hard, I’ve even thought about going home to Venezuela,” Cuadrado said on Thursday. “I just want to get a good job so I can move forward.”

Program requirements
Rendón said only 30% of migrants who live in shelters qualify for the new program.

“After digging more into it, actually the population (that qualifies for work permits) looks to be closer to about 4,600 people,” she said.

Venezuelans who entered before July 31 and apply for temporary protected status may be eligible for work permits. Migrants who have been paroled — which is a separate program — may also be eligible.

Humanitarian parole is a measure expanded by the Biden administration in October 2022 that allows more migrants from countries like Venezuela and Nicaragua to temporarily enter the United States and apply for relief. This group must have entered with the CBP One app, unlike Cuadrado.

He said he watches others at the shelter where he’s staying receive help from the program.

“I’m so worried because we were told we need to leave the shelter on March 4 and I don’t have work,” Cuadrado said. “I spend all day outside, and my fingers freeze.”

A record number of migrants have crossed the southern border this year seeking employment and opportunities in the United States, pitting Republicans and Democrats against one another in national congressional debates about how to best respond to thousands of people who are in desperate need of shelter, food and health care.

Most are from Venezuela, a country with a buckling economy under a far-left leader, made worse by over a decade of sanctions imposed by the United States on crude oil and gas exports.

Migrants fill Home Depot parking lots waiting for day labor jobs. They stand on street corners with cardboard signs. They sell candy outside businesses to make small amounts of money.

For months, migrant advocates and mayors of cities like Chicago have asked President Joe Biden to give migrants the chance to contribute to the economy legally.

In September, facing mounting pressure, Biden gave some migrants, whose home countries are considered unsafe, the right to live and work in the United States for a temporary period of time. That protection, called temporary protected status, applies to an estimated 11,000 Venezuelans in Chicago who arrived in the country before July 31 — and it fast-tracks their approval to work legally.

At the time, migrant advocates celebrated, but warned that it would take a long time to make its way into city-run shelters.

Work authorization applications are long and extensive. Just one application asks for pages of documentation in English, and costs close to $500, according to the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services website.

‘We can barely afford to buy anything’
Cuadrado said he had found his job Thursday with the help of God.

Denzel Johnson, 29, owner of the construction company Need a Hand LLC drove by a Home Depot in the West Loop in a white car. A group of migrants came over to him, and he explained using Google Translate that he needed help cleaning up a church in North Lawndale that had been destroyed.

Cuadrado and David Avendano, 25, were offered the work. They rode in the back of Johnson’s Audi to the site.

Johnson said the church had been broken into and wrecked. The perpetrator had pulled ceiling panels down and taken metal from the frames, exposing decades-old ornate floral tiling.

Whoever had broken in had stolen everything of value, including the broom. They had cut the cord on the vacuum and the wires on the organ. Dust and debris covered the velvet red carpet. Metal hung from the ceiling.

jobs03.jpg
Rayni Cuadrado, 29 and from Venezuela, measures a broken door behind the New Promise Land Missionary Baptist Church, Jan. 11, 2024. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune)

“That’s what happens to churches on the West Side,” said the owner, pastor Markel Anderson, 25, who grew up sitting in the pews of the church.

The building had been in his family for 35 years, and he inherited it from his grandfather. It was under renovation when it was broken into. The damage would take at least a year to fix, he said.

When asked about why he gave the migrants the opportunity to work, Anderson said he wanted to help.

“Jesus was a migrant,” he said.

Cuadrado said other employers weren’t always friendly. People he knew at the shelter where he’s staying had worked for weeks at a different church and weren’t ever paid. He hoped Anderson would give him a fair amount for the day’s work, but they hadn’t discussed wages yet.

With the language barrier, the men communicated using hand gestures.

The migrants spent the afternoon clipping metal trappings that hung from the ceiling, drilling holes in doors and picking up scraps in the cold church and the yard outside.

“They said they want us to come back (Friday), too,” said Cuadrado, and his face lit up.

Avendano said he had been in Chicago about a week, and also didn’t qualify for a work permit. He has three children under the age of 8 staying in the city-run shelter with him. Yesterday, he spent an hour moving beds at a different church and was paid $25.

“How am I going to feed my family?” he asked, worried. “Food is so expensive. We can barely afford to buy anything.”

‘Everyone in the same room’
David Fish, an employment lawyer and partner at Fish Potter Bolaños PC, said migrants without work permits face more exploitation or abuse in the workplace, and likely make around 30% less than those who can work legally.

He said businesses and restaurants need workers right now.

“Think of all the businesses and restaurants that have shut down, and all these people desperate for work sitting around, having trouble finding jobs,” he said. “Somebody needs to get these two sides together. It could really be great for Chicago.”

In an effort to do so, state, city and local officials launched their pilot program in early November to help abate the costs and ease the bureaucratic hoops of the work permit approval process, which normally takes two to four months or longer, experts say. Lawyers from the nonprofit Resurrection Project said it has both sped up the process and made it more affordable.

“The Biden-Harris Administration is committed to supporting local jurisdictions hosting recently arrived migrants, that is why President Biden submitted supplemental funding requests to Congress which address a series of national priorities, including … funding for accelerating the processing of work permits for eligible migrants,” a White House spokesperson said in a statement to the Tribune.

The pilot program is “unique” in design, said Elizabeth Rompf Bruen, an immigration attorney with Delgado Rompf Bruen LLC and the immediate past chair of the Chicago Chapter of the American Immigration Lawyers Association, who has worked in the clinics since they began in November.

“These parties often work together, but to have everyone in the same room is something I’ve never seen before,” she said. “This workshop has been a perfect example of the progress that can be made when legal advocates, community members and the government — city, state and federal — coordinate with each other.”

Normally, submitting applications to USCIS is a multiple-step process. In this case, legal screening, translations, application preparation, submission, initial review by the government, receipt issuance and photos and fingerprints for biometrics processing all take place on the same day in the same location.

Having all parties in the same room creates efficiencies that will save applicants and the government months of waiting time. Rompf Bruen said they typically see 100 to 150 people a day, four days a week.

Case managers at city shelters conduct intake screenings and then schedule legal review and application preparation appointments. Migrants are picked up and brought to the clinic in a building downtown, where they fill out paperwork and are connected to potential employers.

The Illinois Department of Human Services provides $8 million in funding to support nonprofits and pro bono attorneys who run the legal clinics, according to Rachel Otwell, a spokesperson for IDHS. The federal government has also waived all $500 fees for work permit applications in shelter.

“Work permits allow asylum-seekers to gain employment and achieve self-sufficiency, thereby alleviating the strain on state resources,” said Otwell in a statement. “Employment is a crucial first step to living independently, and our new arrivals are eager to get to work and build better lives for themselves and their families.”

A ‘lifesaving document’
Undocumented immigrants for years have struggled to find avenues to work legally. They also gather in parking lots waiting for jobs, and are now competing for day labor with migrants.

“The government has created options for and has been able expedite work permits for recently arrived. But you have a lot of longtime undocumented in Illinois in Chicago for whom these aren’t viable options,” said Katherine Greenslade, an attorney and the director of the Immigrant Justice Legal Clinic at the Resurrection Project.

Rendón called a work permit a “lifesaving document.”

She said she hopes Biden can use his parole authority to grant work authorization eligibility to undocumented communities who have been in Chicago for decades. Ultimately, she wonders if the pilot program can serve as a blueprint to reach all immigrant communities in Chicago who want to work but can’t.

In mid-February, the city hopes to expand the program to migrants who have moved out of the city’s shelter system and don’t currently qualify. For now, those outside the shelter system have been relying on smaller community-based organizations for assistance.

Centro Romero in Edgewater has provided legal services and resources to more than 4,000 migrants since August 2022, according to Diego F. Samayoa, associate director.

Samayoa said there is a high need to expand the criteria for fee waivers for programs like his, that don’t look like the city’s one-stop-shop.

“We are doing it, but it’s not like we have all the resources,” he said.

‘People always ask me if I have my work permit’
Every day, migrants across the city spend hours looking for work, often with no luck.

A father from Venezuela stood outside a Home Depot in freezing rain Tuesday afternoon holding his thumb out. He said had been looking for work for more than six hours.

Nelson Orellana, 30, shook a hand warmer for heat and watched a shiny Range Rover drive by. His daughter had turned eight years old the day before and he said he missed it. As he stood on a curb in Chicago, she was seven countries away.

“My little Sofia,” he said, tearing up.

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Nelson Orellana, 30, of Venezuela, stands in the rain Jan. 9, 2024, while waiting for work in a Home Depot parking lot in Chicago. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune)

Orellana said he came to Chicago for the future of his 8-year-old daughter, Sofia, and 6-year-old daughter, Victoria. He got to the city with the help of a free ticket bought by state officials in Eagle Pass, Texas, and is staying at a shelter in West Town.

“There was no future for my family in Venezuela. I struggled to pay for food. My daughters weren’t receiving an education,” said Orellana, who said he worked in construction in his subtropical home city of Valencia.

Wind and ice whipped his face. ”Hello, help me with something, to eat or work. Job please job,” read a cardboard sign that lay discarded in the bushes nearby.

At one point in the rainy cold afternoon, a car pulled over to talk to Orellana. The man driving rolled the window down.

“What kind of work are you looking for?” the man asked in Spanish.

Orellana walked over and leaned in to talk to him. Orellana showed the man videos of himself painting and doing little jobs — which he called “trabajitos.” The man told him he would give him a call in three hours, and drove away.

“People always ask me if I have my work permit. And when I tell them I don’t, they say they can’t hire me. They can’t help me,” he said.

He stood on the side of the road, shivering. He wore thin pants and white sneakers.

“I will bring them here,” he said about his two daughters.
 
“But these immigrants we got coming over here, they been raping people, they been breaking into homes. They’re like savages as well,” Haley says. “They don’t speak the language, and they look at [Black people] like we’re crazy because we were the only people in America who were brought over here against our wills and were slaves, sold into slavery.

“I’m trying not to be a n----,” Haley jokes, attempting to excuse her rant.

Watson said the meeting in October was not the only time Haley made questionable statements.

“She made comments about the LGBTQ community,” Watson explained. “She spoke about a conference call that she was on where there were individuals that had their pronouns. … And she said something along the lines of, ‘The national organization is becoming more diverse. We've got people there that want to be called they, them, it. What the hell is that?’”

But he said the xenophobic statements were the “final, final straw.”

On Tuesday, Watson submitted his resignation as president of the DuPage chapter
However, while on vacation in Dubai, Haley told ABC 7 Chicago that she didn’t make the statements that appear in the video.

“With AI, anything is possible,” she told the local news outlet.

Lmao based grifter negress outlived the fag. Good for her.
 
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