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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The kicker is that as soon as these people move on to where ever, they'll leave all the free things they've been given in a dirty pile of trash on the ground. It's fucking ridiculous that individuals, charities, and churches are rushing in to hand out more freebies to people who are in this situation voluntarily, while the working poor, who pay taxes, are out there living with the thermostat down at 50, and living off spaghetti with no sauce.
Reminds me of a few years ago when the first migrant caravan from Central America was walking through Mexico. They left trash everywhere, to the point native Mexicans were disgusted. Venezuelans really are the niggers of South America. No one likes them, they do not bring prosperity, but conservatives think free shit and libertarianism will make them vote Red.

Also, to the one migrant who said we need to stop being xenophobic: fuck you, bitch, and get scraped on the barbed wire home.
 
I'm so curious to hear from any farmers who are living close to the areas that have been swamped by migrants. Anyone have any anecdotes to share? What's it like, who has shown up, what are people saying about them? I was just watching a thing about Chicago where these people have moved into the police stations, air mattresses and all.
I've seen a few that sell candy, soda and water at certain traffic stops with their kids beside them. There are also people that loiter outside of stores while aggressively asking for money and change, usually with their families beside them using AC outlets to charge and use their cell phones. There was a letter sent out asking for people to sign against a certain area to be turned into a migrant camp, but knowing the mayor and how he willingly fucks over his own people... this seems like damage control. If so, then the local alderman won't get any pushback when it happens. As you see in the video clips that were previously posted: asians, blacks and mexicans are pissed that this is going on, yet the mayor deflects and can't give a single honest answer. He did the same thing when the teens were chimping out in the city causing damage and having the police not do anything about it.
 
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The kicker is that as soon as these people move on to where ever, they'll leave all the free things they've been given in a dirty pile of trash on the ground.
That's the biggest rage inducing thing they do.

"I NEED GIBS!"
>Leaves for new city
>Leaves all their stuff in a trash pile, usually after pissing on it so nobody else can have it.
"I NEED GIBS!"
 
”We just came here to find work,” she said they told her. “The tents are full. There’s rats. The only thing we want is a work permit. ... Please try to heal and not be so xenophobic.”

See, chuds? They just want to selflessly labor for the benefit of America, with absolutely nothing suspicious about that very specific paperwork demand.

National Employment Law Project website said:
The general rule is that US workers must have valid work authorization during the base period, at the time that they apply for benefits, and throughout the period during which they are receiving benefits.
 
I don't live there but have heard about the "candy kids" of Chiraq before.
It was the tween blacks doing it.
At first you might think "Good for them. They are showing initiative, putting in hard work, investing their own money in hope of a reward later."

Yeah, about that.
They steal the candy and soda they sell.
Since it is hard for an adult to get arrested for shoplifting anymore, minority youths can pretty much load the stuff up by the cart and just walk out the door.
If someone would dare to try to stop them you will hear "They are just hungry! How can you take food from the mouths of starving children?" from the bleeding hearts.

You know, the same ones that blame "food deserts" on racism rather than shoplifting.
 
I find it interesting that all the articles make sure to point out that republicans are bussing the migrants in to Chiraq.
They never mention that it is democrats that refuse to enforce immigration law on the fed level or allow the states to do it themselves.

They keep pushing the false narrative that the only choices are leave them in Texas or bus them to liberal cities.
There is the 100% legal option of saying "You are economic immigrants, your alyssum claims are invalid. We don't need or want you" and deporting them.
To these people border states are basically Mexico. Sadly they're not wrong.
 
1 dead, 1 hospitalized outside River North police station over the weekend
Chicago Tribune (archive.ph)
By Adriana Perez
2023-11-06 17:29:00GMT

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An ambulance waits by the sidewalk near tents before transporting a migrant outside Chicago's 18th District police station on Nov. 5, 2023. According to volunteers at the station, the migrant was transported after hurting their arm. On Saturday morning, a 26-year-old man died after being found unresponsive outside the River North police station. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune)

A 26-year-old man has died after being found unresponsive outside the River North police station Saturday morning.

Emergency services arrived at the station in the 1100 block of North Larrabee Street around 8:30 a.m. The man was transported to Northwestern Memorial Hospital, where he was pronounced dead at 9:08 a.m., according to police and the Cook County medical examiner’s office. An autopsy was scheduled for Sunday.

Over a hundred migrants, many of them Venezuelan families, are camping outside the Near North District police station in tents that have been winterized with blue carps. A few of them identified the deceased as one of their own and said another man, 27, was still hospitalized and intubated as of Sunday night.

According to police, no arrests had been made in the incident, but detectives are conducting a death investigation pending autopsy results.

Friends identified the deceased as a father from Caracas, Venezuela. He had four young children back home, one of whom had just celebrated their birthday, and he had arrived in Chicago less than a week ago.

Both the man who died and the man who was hospitalized had left the station at some point to pick up some clothing donations, other migrants said. They came back accompanied by three American men, who left shortly afterward.

The men then seemingly passed out, but their friends said they weren’t initially concerned because they thought the two men were tired or possibly drunk. It was only once they noticed the pair had lost consciousness that they realized something was wrong and emergency services were called.

“I was in shock,” said Renny Riera, a longtime friend of the man who died, in Spanish. Once the reality of the situation set in by evening, he said he had to go sleep elsewhere because his tent was right next to where his friend had died hours earlier.

“I cried all night,” he added.

Riera, who is originally from the Venezuelan city of Valencia, made his way north to the United States with two of his own relatives, but he said he had met the man years ago in Bolivia, after which they migrated to Chile. Their last journey together had brought them to Chicago.

Friends said the family is hoping they can repatriate his remains soon.
 
I find it interesting that all the articles make sure to point out that republicans are bussing the migrants in to Chiraq.
They never mention that it is democrats that refuse to enforce immigration law on the fed level or allow the states to do it themselves.

They keep pushing the false narrative that the only choices are leave them in Texas or bus them to liberal cities.
There is the 100% legal option of saying "You are economic immigrants, your alyssum claims are invalid. We don't need or want you" and deporting them.
The Biden administration is INCAPABLE of deporting even 1% of these gib hungry fucks. The admin is full of shitbags that practically WORSHIP brown people don't course they want millions to show up and helpfully vote for DSA retards.
Riera, who is originally from the Venezuelan city of Valencia, made his way north to the United States with two of his own relatives, but he said he had met the man years ago in Bolivia, after which they migrated to Chile. Their last journey together had brought them to Chicago.

Friends said the family is hoping they can repatriate his remains soon.
Nope, burn the remains and dump the ashes into a landfill unless the family can pay cash for repatriation.

Fucker was a professional gib hunter, as seen by his free tour of the entire fucking continent.

Dude still had enough time to make four kids which he promptly abandoned.
My guess is the still living immigrant "hurt his arm" by injecting into it.
Yep

Dumbass decided to get high and OD'd. Wish more migrants would do that.
 
Both the man who died and the man who was hospitalized had left the station at some point to pick up some clothing donations, other migrants said. They came back accompanied by three American men, who left shortly afterward.

The men then seemingly passed out, but their friends said they weren’t initially concerned because they thought the two men were tired or possibly drunk.

See chuds? This noble father of four managed to overdose on fentanyl not one week after arriving here, what could be more American than that?
 
If only there was some warning, perhaps a book, about how Chicago is a brutally unforgiving city designed to ingest and exploit naive foreigners.

Day after day he roamed about in the arctic cold, his soul filled full of bitterness and despair. He saw the world of civilization then more plainly than ever he had seen it before; a world in which nothing counted but brutal might, an order devised by those who possessed it for the subjugation of those who did not.
Upton Sinclair, The Jungle.
 
Hundreds march in Brighton Park to protest tent encampment for migrants
Chicago Tribune (archive.ph)
By Nell Salzman, Alice Yin, and A.D. Quig
2023-11-11 00:05:00GMT

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People protesting against the possible construction of a winterized tent camp for migrants on a vacant lot at 38th Street and California Avenue in Chicago, march on Archer Avenue on Nov. 10, 2023. (Terrence Antonio James/Chicago Tribune)
Hundreds turned out Friday afternoon in Brighton Park to march in protest of Mayor Brandon Johnson’s plan to erect winterized tents to house 2,000 migrants in an empty parking lot.

Many residents of the neighborhood — which has historically been a haven for immigrants — are worried about the plan to house thousands of migrants. They think politicians are not listening to them.

Ruth Diaz, a Mexican American who has lived in Brighton Park for 33 years, was one of about 300 people who turned out for the march.

Diaz said the close to 21,000 migrants who have arrived since last August have not had to work for what they’re being given by the city. She owned a grocery store near the proposed site and said she worked hard to send her daughter to nursing school.

She held a sign that said: “Protejan nuestra comunidad. Protect our community.”

“The migrants want everything in a dish ready to eat,” she said. “Why do they get off so easy?”

The protest came as the city continues an environmental assessment to determine whether it’s safe to have people live on the property. Johnson signed a six-month, $548,400 land use contract on Oct. 26. for the location on the corner of 38th Street and California, but a final determination is awaiting the outcome of that study.

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Protesters walk down West 38th Street during a protest in Brighton Park on Nov. 10, 2023 against a proposed migrant camp at 38th and California. (Trent Sprague/Chicago Tribune)

County property records show the Brighton Park site is owned by Barnacres Corp., a Markham-based company helmed by Otoniel “Tony” Sanchez. Sanchez is the president or manager of several other businesses registered to the same Markham address, including Sanchez Paving Co., which offers concrete, as well as asphalt paving, patching and overlay, according to its website.

Sanchez was also a Johnson donor, giving $1,500 to the mayor’s political fund in August, two months before the city signed the land use contract with his site on 38th and California. On Friday, Johnson’s campaign announced it was returning 30 donations totaling $46,500 in campaign contributions following a Sun-Times investigation that found city contractors were donating to the mayor against the ethics rules.

Bill Neidhardt, political adviser to Johnson, said in a Friday statement that the $1,500 contribution had no influence on the base camp site decision. He said city workers involved in scouting locations did not know about the donation and received an unsolicited “inquiry” about the Brighton Park property.

“The mayor did not solicit this contribution and was unaware of this contribution until its return this month,” Neidhardt said. “This particular parcel came from an unsolicited inbound inquiry addressed to city personnel tasked with identifying properties and who did not have any knowledge of this minor campaign contribution. The decision to advance this property was based solely on the standard analysis performed on all such properties by said personnel.”

A number listed under Sanchez went unanswered Friday.

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People look on from their residence as protesters against the possible construction of a winterized tent camp for migrants march to the Archer Avenue office of Ald. Julia Ramirez, 12th, on Nov. 10, 2023. (Terrence Antonio James/Chicago Tribune)

Sanchez also appears to have a role in another asphalt company, MAT Asphalt, which is headed by Michael Tadin Jr., son of longtime city contractor Michael Tadin, who was tight with former Mayor Richard M. Daley and whose businesses received tens of millions of dollars in city contracts. The elder Tadin was part of the city’s Hired Truck Program, which was halted in 2006 after city officials and trucking contractors were indicted in massive bribe schemes that led to dozens of convictions.

The $46,500 pot of money being returned from Johnson’s campaign coffers also includes checks from Tadin Jr., who has business ties with Sanchez. In a phone interview, Tadin Jr. denied that he ever profited from Sanchez’s recent land use agreement.

“That property has nothing to do with me or any family member of mine,” Tadin Jr. said about the potential base camp site. “We don’t own any properties together.”

Johnson’s political director Christian Perry also said “absolutely not” when asked whether Tadin Jr.’s contribution was at all tied to the 38th and California deal. He added that a nationally based compliance team used the wrong ethics guidelines in an “oversight” corrected more than a month ago.

“These contributions were mostly made at fundraiser events where our campaign provided instructions to follow all city campaign finance rules for city contractors and lobbyists, and a vast majority of those who attended complied with those rules,” Perry said.

With over 2,500 migrants sleeping in and around police stations and at O’Hare International Airport, Johnson’s administration is hastily trying to come up with a solution to ensure migrants have a roof over their heads and a warm place to stay for the winter. There are 25 active shelters in vacant buildings housing migrants around Chicago, and more arriving on buses and planes from border cities every day.

Ald. Julia Ramirez, 12th, was not notified that the lease for the site in her ward had been signed before news of the signing spread, she said in a statement shared with the Tribune Nov. 3.

City construction crews began work at the proposed site in October, increasing tensions in the community. Protesters swarmed Ramirez at one mid-October demonstration in what Johnson condemned as a “violent act.” Demonstrations against the tent proposal haven’t ceased since.

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Hundreds of people against a proposed tent city for migrants in Brighton Park protest in front of Ald. Julia Ramirez's office on Nov. 10, 2023. (Trent Sprague/Chicago Tribune)

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Migrant family journeys back to Venezuela, more leaving Chicago as winter looms: ‘The American Dream doesn’t exist anymore’
Chicago Tribune (archive.ph)
By Laura Rodriguez Presa
2023-11-12 11:00:00GMT

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A migrant child scooters past Venezuelan migrants Michael Castejon and daughter, Andrea Sevilla, wait for a ride-share at the 1st District police station in Chicago, Nov. 3, 2023. They were heading to O’Hare International Airport to get to Texas and then back to Venezuela. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune)

Over the past five months since arriving in Chicago, Andrea Carolina Sevilla’s parents have been unable to enroll her in school even though the reason they left everything behind in their native Venezuela was for her to have access to better education.

In Venezuela, she said, she was lucky she could even attend school. Many other teenagers start working at an early age to help out their families, who often face extreme poverty.

But she did not have the same luck in the city that she once dreamed of visiting. The family went from sleeping on the floor of a police station, to a crowded shelter, to a house on the Far South Side, and then back to the floor of the police station after her stepfather Michael Castejon, 39, couldn’t afford the rent. He could not find a job that paid enough without a work permit, he said.

On Nov. 3, they set out to go back to Texas. And from there, they would go to Venezuela, the country they fled to seek asylum in the United States. They’re among the countless number of migrants who have chosen to leave Chicago in recent weeks in their search for a better life. They’re looking for warmer weather, more resources or to reunite with friends and family in other places.

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Yorbelis Molero, 16, second from left, says goodbye to a friend as Molero and her family of five wait to leave a Chicago police station and head to a Greyhound bus station on Nov. 2, 2023. The migrant family is leaving Chicago for Detroit. (Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune)

One family of five left for Detroit because another migrant told them there was work there. One man went back to Texas, where he will join his cousins after trying his luck in Chicago. In the past month, at least 40 people, including Sevilla’s family, have left Chicago from the 1st District station on the Near South Side with the help of Catholic Charities of Chicago.

“The American Dream doesn’t exist anymore,” said Castejon as he laid on a blanket on the bare floor of the station the afternoon before they left. “There’s nothing here for us,” he added.

Migrants said they’re realizing the city is at a breaking point. Not only is there no more space in shelters, they also acknowledge that some residents in Chicago oppose the opening of more shelters for them. Castejon said that despite the dangerous trek to get here — often begging for money and sleeping in the streets to cross several borders — the journey had not been worth it.

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Migrants Michael Castejon and wife Induliz Seville, wait for an Uber ride from the 1st District police station in Chicago to O’Hare airport on Nov. 3, 2023, as they try to return to Venezuela. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune)

His attempts to settle in the city failed. He said he never felt comfortable in a shelter, and that the hot meals, stipends and good jobs he’d heard about from other migrants never materialized. The father didn’t consider that once in the country, the family wouldn’t be granted asylum immediately and or even get a work permit while they wait.

It could have been misinformation, he said. Or that the benefits that those who arrived in the city before him, are no longer available because of the amount of people now here. But even after hearing that the temporary protected status (TPS) program was expanded and the process to get job permits could be accelerated, he decided he was exhausted and chose not to wait.

“We didn’t know things would be this hard,” he said. “I thought the process was faster.”

More than 2,000 people have gotten monetary aid from the state through Catholic Charities to relocate to other states with family and friends, according to Katie Bredemann, a spokesperson with Catholic Charities of Chicago. The program has been part of their effort to help ease the humanitarian crisis in Chicago and offer the migrants an opportunity to reunite with families or reach the city they intended to go to before being sent to Chicago.

“The state of Illinois determines who is eligible for relocation to other states, then Catholic Charities assists in helping to help make the travel arrangements,” Bredemann said in an email.

But while some migrants are choosing to leave, many more still arrive every week. In what could be considered a revolving door for taxpayers, for example, Catholic Charities of Chicago is using Illinois taxpayer money to transport the migrants who want to return to Texas or to other states while simultaneously the Catholic Charities of San Antonio and the city of Denver are using federal taxpayer money to send new migrants to Chicago.

As of Friday, there were 20, 700 migrants who have arrived in Chicago since August 2022 when Texas Gov. Greg Abbott began sending migrants to sanctuary cities such as Chicago, in part to protest federal immigration policies.

Castejon said Chicago wasn’t what they expected when they arrived in June. But the father was determined to succeed, he said.

The family was first taken to the 1st District police station where they stayed for a couple weeks before getting transferred to Wright College with hundreds of other asylum-seekers. The family lived there for about a month before moving into a house with another migrant who was renting an apartment through a city voucher program that offers up to $15,000 for up to six months of rental assistance.

But when rental assistance vanished, neither could afford rent, so they were once again homeless, the father said.

They eventually met someone who offered to rent them an apartment for $750. They managed to afford it because Castejon had found a job in construction, where he was getting paid in cash. But the work was heavy and the pay was not enough, he said, so he left.

Unable to pay rent, the family returned to the 1st District station, where they waited about two weeks before packing their belongings, mostly collected through donations, and headed back to Venezuela.

As the patriarch, he said he felt powerless not being able to provide for his wife and daughter, he said.

“How many more months of living in the streets will it take? No, no more. It’s better that I leave. At least I have my mother back home,” he said angrily.

He said the family decided to seek asylum in the United States because of the extreme poverty in which they were living in Venezuela’s authoritarian regime. But the trip was not worth it, he said.

“We just want to be home,” he said. “If we’re going to be sleeping in the streets here, we’d rather be sleeping in the streets over there.”

The first few colder days influenced the family’s decision to contact staff at Catholic Charities, pressing for plane tickets that would put them closer to a border town to find a way back home. When they got the news that they had been approved and had their tickets in hand, Castejon felt relieved, he said.

The feeling of disappointment and impotency that Castejon felt is shared by many of the migrants, said Brayan Lozano, head of the volunteer group of the Police Station Response Team at the 1st District station.

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Brayan Lozano, an asylum-seeker from Colombia who has become a leader of the mutual aid group at the 1st District police station, talks with migrants camped outside the station on Oct. 6, 2023. (Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune)

As an asylum-seeker himself, Lozano understands firsthand the experience the migrants go through: the environment they’ve escaped from their native countries and their expectations for the United States, which may have been influenced by social media and word-of-mouth from the first group of migrants who arrived in Chicago. There may have been more resources when they first came in August 2022, he said.

Even though many, including Castejon’s family, are leaving, others still hope to eventually find shelter in hotel rooms, get access to public services and cash assistance or live out the American Dream.

A proposed ballot question asking Chicagoans whether the city should keep its designation as a sanctuary city has roiled the City Council in recent weeks and immigrant- and Black-led groups gathered Thursday morning across the street from City Hall to urge “solidarity, not division” in responding to the migrant crisis.

“Like many people, we’re just here for a better life. I’m grateful to God and I’m just following a dream to be able to offer more to my family,” said Ana, a Venezuelan teacher who came to Chicago in September because she could not afford to live on the pay she was making at home.

The teacher spoke in Spanish through a translator.

“I am here to continue to advocate for Chicago to be a sanctuary city, for there to be resources for everyone, for us immigrants, to continue to receive the help that we deserve, because everyone deserves a sun to shine on them,” she said.

Lozano said there are several migrants who transitioned from sheltering in suburban hotel rooms into apartments with the help of the city and state resettlement program, received assistance to file their asylum cases, found jobs working under the table, like many people who live in the country without authorization do, and are settling in the city.

But the resources have been exhausted for more recent arrivals and the resettlement program has been trumped by the number of migrants who are arriving.

Lozano said that there is a lot of misinformation flowing within the asylum-seeking community about what is actually happening in Chicago.

As snow and rain have come with the colder temperatures, the reality for migrants stuck sleeping outside of police stations has grown dire. Mattresses are wet, the smell inside tents is sticky, humid and pungent. They eat standing up, rubbing their hands together to keep warm.

“The word of the situation in Chicago is beginning to spread,” Lozano said.

Jose Nauh, 22, decided to give Texas another shot and returned earlier this month after sleeping in a police station in Chicago for more than two weeks.

He came to Chicago even though he has family in Houston because the ticket was free, he said, and he wanted to see what the buzz was all about.

Like Castrejon, he heard there was shelter, food and other public benefits. “That’s not true,” he said.

He grabbed a pink backpack, waved goodbye to Lozano, and rushed into a white car that took him to O’Hare International Airport to board a plane back south.

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Diana Vera combs daughter Ana's hair as the extended family of five prepares to leave the Chicago Police Department’s 1st District station en route to the Greyhound station on Nov. 2, 2023. (Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune)

That same day Diana Vera, her three children and daughter-in law boarded a bus to Detroit, hoping that a cousin would take them in once they arrived.

“We heard that there are a lot of jobs over there even if you don’t have a permit,” the mother said as she brushed her hair while sitting on a blanket on the floor of the police station that had been their home for nearly a month.

Vera also was discouraged from staying after hearing from migrants at city shelters that the conditions are overwhelmed with people, the food is cold and there are no real beds.

“It sounds worse than sleeping at the police station,” she said.
 
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