Gulf Today

Surprise is key part of migrant travel from Florida, Texas

- Rodrique Ngowi, Gisela Salomon and Claudia Torrens, Associated Press

Florida Gov. Ron Desantis took the playbook of a fellow Republican, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, to a new level by catching officials flat-footed in Martha’s Vineyard with two planeloads of Venezuelan migrants

The chief executive of Martha’s Vineyard Community Services was wrapping up work when she looked outside to see 48 strangers at her office with luggage, backpacks and red folders that included brochures for her organizati­on.

The Venezuelan migrants who were flown to the wealthy Massachuse­ts island from San Antonio on Wednesday by Florida Gov. Ron Desantis said they were told they were going to Boston.

Desantis took from the playbook of a fellow Republican, Texas Gov. Greg Abbot, by surprising Democratic stronghold­s with large influxes of migrants and providing litle or no informatio­n.

“They were told that they would have a job and they would have housing,” said Elizabeth Folcarelli, who leads Martha’s Vineyard Community Services and described the scramble for shelter as a “huge challenge.”

Julio Henriquez, an atorney who met with several migrants, said they “had no idea of where they were going or where they were.”

Two flights to Martha’s Vineyard stopped in the Florida Panhandle, Henriquez said. While on board, migrants got brochures and maps of Massachuse­ts.

An unsigned leter told migrants to notify US Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services of address changes, though US Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t is actually responsibl­e for tracking migrants, Henriquez said. “This is terrible advice,” he said.

Many immigrants have appointmen­ts with ICE on Monday in San Antonio. Others were ordered to report to immigratio­n authoritie­s in two weeks to three months in cities including Philadelph­ia and Washington.

US officials told immigratio­n atorneys that required check-ins would be postponed, Henriquez said. Homeland Security officials didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment Friday.

In San Antonio, a Latina woman approached migrants at a city-run shelter and put them up at a nearby La Quinta Inn, where she visited daily with food and git cards, Henriquez said. She promised jobs and three months of housing in Washington, New York, Philadelph­ia and Boston.

The woman, who introduced herself to migrants as Perla, promised jobs, housing and support for their immigratio­n cases, said Oren Sellstrom of Lawyers for Civil Rights, which offered free consultati­ons.

The city of San Antonio was unaware of the flights, said Maria Villagomez, deputy city manager.

Pedro Luis Torrelaba, 36, said he was promised work, food and housing. He thought he was going to New York.

“I am not a victim,” he said Friday, expressing gratitude to residents of Martha’s Vineyard for their hospitalit­y. “I simply feel misled because they told a lie and it has come to nothing.”

The migrants were being moved voluntaril­y Friday to a military base on nearby Cape Cod. Republican Gov. Charlie Baker said he would activate up to 125 National Guard members to assist the Massachuse­ts Emergency Management Agency. Desantis said Friday that most migrants intended to come to Florida and that the trip to Martha’s Vineyard was voluntary. He did not address the migrants’ claims that they were told they were going elsewhere.

Florida’s governor defended picking up migrants in Texas and vowed to continue transporta­tion to immigrant-friendly “sanctuary” jurisdicti­ons.

“Our view is that you’ve got to deal with it at the source, and if they’re intending to come to Florida or many of them are intending to come to Florida, that’s our best way to make sure they end up in a sanctuary,” he said.

Texas has bused about 8,000 migrants to Washington since April, including more than 100 Thursday to Vice President Kamala Harris’ home. It also has bused about 2,200 to New York and 300 to Chicago.

Arizona has bused more than 1,800 migrants to Washington since May, but has kept officials on the receiving end informed of the plans. The city of El Paso, Texas, has sent at least 1,135 migrants on 28 buses to New York since Aug. 23 and, like Arizona, shares passenger rosters and other informatio­n.

Last week, a 2-year-old who arrived in New

York from Texas was hospitaliz­ed for dehydratio­n and a pregnant woman on the same bus was in severe pain, according to advocates and city officials.

Volunteer groups oten wait hours for buses arriving from Texas in a designated space of Manhatan’s Port of Authority Bus Terminal. They rely on tipsters for help.

“It’s a problem because we don’t know when the buses are coming, how many buses are coming, if anyone on these buses has medical conditions that they will need help with, if they need a wheelchair,” said Manuel Castro, commission­er of the New York City Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs. “We at least want to know that so that we can best help people as they arrive.”

A contractor that Texas hired to bus migrants signed an agreement that prohibits them from talking to New York officials, Castro said.

Some fathers have arrived in New York while their spouses and children were sent to Washington, said Ilze Thielmann, a volunteer director with TLC NYC, a group working to reunite them.

Illinois Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker said his administra­tion has reached out to Texas but gets no informatio­n. The first migrants arrived at Chicago’s Union Station from Texas on Aug. 31.

Abbot’s office dismissed complaints about lack of coordinati­on and keeping cities guessing about the governor’s next moves as he tries to stoke opposition to President Joe Biden’s border policies. “Instead of complainin­g about fulfilling their sanctuary city promises, these Democrat hypocrites should call on President Biden to do his job and secure the border — something the president continues failing to do,” spokeswoma­n Renae Eze said Thursday.

Arizona has been working since May through the Regional Center for Border Health, which runs clinics for low-income patients in Yuma. Several days a week, a bus heads east from a clinic office in suburban Somerton.

Amanda Aguirre, the health care provider’s CEO, said she told Republican Gov. Doug Ducey’s staff that she wouldn’t participat­e without close coordinati­on. Arizona establishe­d informatio­nsharing protocols from the start with Carecen, a nonprofit group that assists migrants in Washington, Aguirre said.

“I will never allow people just being dropped in the street because that’s what I’m trying to prevent here in Yuma, being just dropped in the street,” Aguirre said.

Some migrants seem unaffected by the chaos. Cleiver Rodriguez of Venezuela said he appreciate­d the free ride from Texas to New York, where he came looking for work.

“I don’t have any kind of opinion because at least they helped me get here,” Rodriguez, 24, said as he let a shelter.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Carlos Munoz reaches out to hug Larkin Stallings of Vineyard Haven, Massachuse­tts, as the immigrants prepare to leave St. Andrews in Edgartown, Massachuse­tts, on Friday.
Associated Press Carlos Munoz reaches out to hug Larkin Stallings of Vineyard Haven, Massachuse­tts, as the immigrants prepare to leave St. Andrews in Edgartown, Massachuse­tts, on Friday.

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