Business World

Chinese join influx from southern border to NY

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NEW YORK — When busloads of migrants from Venezuela and Latin America started turning up on New York City streets in 2022, it spurred a crisis that has overwhelme­d city shelters and incited protests over immigratio­n policies.

And while Mayor Eric Adams and city leaders have sought to slow the pace of new arrivals, there has been another, smaller but also growing group of migrants coming into the city — largely unnoticed.

Thousands of Chinese migrants have also made their way to New York, with many following on the heels of migrants from Central and South America and crossing at the United States-Mexico border. Once they reach the city, however, many are tapping into long-establishe­d family and social networks in Chinese enclaves to get on their feet quickly and, for the most part, on their own.

It is not known exactly how many Chinese migrants have landed in New York. But immigratio­n court filings since October 2022 show that the state was their top destinatio­n — with more than 21,000 filings for Chinese migrants — followed by California, according to an analysis by Julia Gelatt, an associate director at the Migration Policy Institute.

The influx of Chinese migrants into the city has been the largest in more than a decade, and marks a return to the sizable immigratio­n of Chinese people beginning in the 1980s that revived struggling neighborho­ods like Chinatown, and cemented newer ethnic stronghold­s in Flushing, Queens, and Sunset Park, Brooklyn.

Yet this revival of Chinese migration has attracted relatively little attention, in part because it has been dwarfed by the numbers of people arriving from Latin America. The rapid increase in Chinese newcomers, nonetheles­s, promises to have a significan­t effect on New York City and its sprawling Chinese American community of 590,000, which is the largest in the nation.

“There’s a large-scale migration going on in the Chinese community that’s completely off the radar screen,” said Kenneth J. Guest, an anthropolo­gy professor at Baruch College who studies Chinese immigratio­n.

The latest increase in Chinese migrants has been driven in part by frustratio­n over China’s harsh pandemic-era lockdowns, authoritar­ian government and a worsening economy. A flurry of online and social media posts has provided detailed instructio­ns and tips on how to cross the southern border.

Across the United States, the number of Chinese migrants has soared. There were 52,700 Chinese migrants arriving without a valid entry visa at land borders, and on boats and planes, during the federal government’s fiscal year 2023, or more than double the number just two years earlier, according to the analysis by Gelatt, of the Migration Policy Institute. Those numbers did not include people who came in without encounteri­ng border officials or later overstayed their visas.

These Chinese migrants have increasing­ly crossed at the southern border, with the number encountere­d by border officials there jumping more than sixfold to 5,980 in December 2023 from 950 a year earlier.

Still, they were just a small subset of the 3.4 million migrants who have crossed the southern border since October 2022, which included more than 974,000 Mexicans and over 410,000 Venezuelan­s.

Wang Chao, 39, had worked as a hotel security guard in Hainan province, an island in the South China Sea, before leaving China last October. He flew to Thailand, and then Turkey, before landing in Ecuador and embarking on the long trek north. He contracted dengue fever and malaria in rainforest­s in Panama and was later kicked off a truck carrying migrants in Guatemala because the driver thought someone cursed at him in Chinese.

Mr. Wang eventually crosse d into California, where he said he was briefly detained by border authoritie­s. When he was released, he continued on to Flushing, arriving in December. He paid $12 a night for a bunk in an apartment shared with other Chinese immigrants before recently moving out of state for work.

The Chinese migrants have largely stayed out of New York City’s shelters. Fewer than 400 of the more than 173,000 migrants passing through the city shelter system since spring 2022 have reported coming from China, according to

city officials. The Chinese newcomers did not need to rely on the shelters because they could turn to ethnic enclaves, which are home to many of the city’s 411,000 Chinese immigrants. Such enclaves have long played a key part in helping Chinese immigrants integrate into New York and other cities, according to Guest, of Baruch College.

At East Broadway Mall in Chinatown, hundreds of newcomers have gathered through word of mouth for help applying for city IDs and finding health care resources from community leaders.

Brad Song, 30, a migrant from Hunan who arrived last summer, found temporary refuge at a Chinese massage parlor in Flushing that let migrants sleep in the beds for $10 a night. At the supermarke­t where he went to buy noodles, a store worker helped him land a job at a Chinese banquet hall. He has also worked for the food delivery app Fantuan and installed solar panels for a Chinese-owned company in New Jersey.

But even as the migrants have settled in, their growing numbers have also created challenges in immigrant communitie­s where many people were already struggling with financial insecurity and social isolation because of language and cultural barriers, as well as fears about their safety following a spate of anti-Asian hate crimes.

Asian American leaders said their communitie­s have long been underfunde­d by government programs, in part because of enduring model-minority stereotype­s of Asians as self-sufficient and upwardly mobile. A 2015 report found that organizati­ons serving the city’s Asian American communitie­s had received a tiny part of the city’s social service contracts.

State Assemblywo­man Grace Lee, whose district includes Chinatown, said there has been a “false narrative” around the needs of Asian communitie­s that “we as legislator­s are trying to break.” Ms. Lee, who is Korean American, led a coalition of state legislator­s who helped secure $30 million in state funding last year specifical­ly for Asian American organizati­ons statewide.

While some of the newcomers have fled political and religious persecutio­n in China, a growing number — including families, middle-class profession­als and small-business owners — are looking for more economic opportunit­y, said Edward Cuccia, an immigratio­n lawyer in Chinatown, who has taken on more than 70 new Chinese asylum cases in the past two years.

“America’s still the golden country in their eyes,” he said.

However, some migrants have found that they are not necessaril­y better off. At employment agencies in Flushing, dozens of recent migrants have returned day after day to sit on folding chairs waiting for jobs.

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