New York Daily News

COUNCIL IMMIG FACEOFF

Demand that Adams restores cuts to asylum seeker services

- BY MICHAEL GARTLAND

City Councilwom­an Alexa Aviles demanded at a budget hearing Tuesday that Mayor Adams restore cuts to immigrant legal and language services, and criticized his administra­tion for relying too heavily on — and paying too much for — for-profit contracts in the city’s response to the asylum seeker crisis.

Aviles, who heads the Council’s Immigratio­n Committee, said the administra­tion must provide $150 million for “enhanced” immigrant legal services and add an additional $10 million to “adequately fund” adult education for immigrants.

“This defunding of literacy and legal services undermines opportunit­ies that we seek to create in our civil society, and it just doesn’t make sense. It must be addressed immediatel­y,” she said. “This is about sustainabi­lity of services for immigrant New Yorkers — 40% of the city’s population.”

The hearing — one of several the Council will hold as part of vetting the mayor’s preliminar­y budget and negotiatin­g a final spending plan — came one day after the Council released a new revenue projection forecastin­g $3.3 billion more in tax receipts than a projection by Mayor Adams’ budget director, Jacques Jiha, a developmen­t first reported by the Daily News.

As part of her demand to restore cuts, Aviles (D-Brooklyn) grilled Manuel Castro, the commission­er of the Mayor’s Office of

Immigratio­n Affairs, about new spending requests his office has made of the administra­tion and what specific services he believes deserve more funding.

“We have yet to request funding,” Castro said in response, adding that his office is “in conversati­on” with the mayor’s budget office about its needs. Aviles continued to press Castro on the needs of his office, and specifical­ly touched on its ability to provide legal services to immigrants. But Castro declined to put a specific dollar figure to his office’s spending needs.

“I can’t seem to get an actual concrete number from you,” Aviles said. “I don’t know if that’s because you don’t know it, or you don’t want to put it on the table, or you haven’t quite decided.

“I would just love for you to have the opportunit­y to say: ‘This is what we need. This is what we’re fighting for.’ ”

The Council focused not just on what Castro’s office needs, but also on how the city’s immigratio­n apparatus spends the money it has on hand.

The questions come amid several controvers­ies stemming from for-profit, private contractor­s the city has hired to handle the influx of about 180,000 migrants into the city since 2022.

One of those companies is DocGo, which state Attorney General Letitia James began probing last August over accusation­s that the company mistreated migrants. Another is Mobility Capital Finance, a company that will provide debit cards to

500 migrant families with children as part of a pilot program designed to lower food costs.

Molly Schaeffer, interim director of Adams’ Office of Asylum Seeker Operations, testified that she “would get back to” the Council about how many for-profit companies and entities based outside the city are providing migrant services to the city, as opposed to nonprofits.

“We want to get more nonprofits involved,” she said.

Schaeffer estimated that the debit card pilot program would save the city about $600,000 a month in costs associated with buying and delivering food to migrants.

“If this works out, it would replace DocGo deliveries,” Schaeffer noted, but she would not say whether the city could claw back money from its DocGo agreements when Aviles questioned her about it.

Aviles also questioned why the city is agreeing to higher hourly rates charged by for-profit contractor­s as opposed to paying less for nonprofits that charge less.

“We’re seeing this over and over again — obviously not simply with [Immigratio­n Affairs], but in this entire space we are seeing a prioritiza­tion of corporatio­ns and for-profit corporatio­ns and not for not-for profit, competent organizati­ons that have been here,” Aviles said.

Schaeffer responded that it’s “a point well taken,” but stressed that there was a mandate to provide services to migrants as quickly as possible.

 ?? ?? Molly Schaeffer (far right), the interim director of the Office of Asylum Seeker Operations, was among Adams administra­tion officials who were grilled Tuesday at a City Council hearing on funding for asylum seekers and the use of for-profit contracts in the city’s response to the migrant crisis. Restoring cuts to immigrant legal and language services was a focus of the hearing.
Molly Schaeffer (far right), the interim director of the Office of Asylum Seeker Operations, was among Adams administra­tion officials who were grilled Tuesday at a City Council hearing on funding for asylum seekers and the use of for-profit contracts in the city’s response to the migrant crisis. Restoring cuts to immigrant legal and language services was a focus of the hearing.
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