Connecticut Post (Sunday)

State asks cities to prepare for busloads of migrants

- By Andy Tsubasa Field Andy.Field@hearstmedi­act.com; Twitter:@AndyTsubas­aF

State officials have requested for cities to be prepared in case Connecticu­t receives busloads of migrants from the U.S. southern border.

The request was in response to Texas sending busloads of migrants to major cities, such as Philadelph­ia and New York City, last year, according to Scott Appleby, Bridgeport’s emergency management director.

Connecticu­t Department of Social Services officials made the request in a December discussion on “mass migration preparedne­ss,” he said in a statement to Hearst Connecticu­t Media.

“The synergy behind the request was based upon the current migration crisis that is occurring down south at the borders,” Appleby said.

Connecticu­t is not expecting the arrival of immigrants beyond refugees and special immigrant visa holders, including Iraqi and Afghan nationals who helped U.S. combat missions in their countries, said DSS spokesman David Dearborn.

“We are not expecting an influx at this time; but we need to be prepared for that potential — just in case — and this is the subject of ongoing discussion­s,” said Dearborn, who declined to answer further questions about his department’s request to city officials in December.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security is preparing for the end of Title 42, a public health measure that has been used by the federal government to expel migrants at the southern border. Dearborn said state and city officials and nonprofit workers are preparing for a potential increase in migrants to Connecticu­t, especially if the order faces “significan­t federal changes.”

But in a discussion on homelessne­ss this month, Ebony Jackson-Shaheed, Bridgeport’s director of health and social services, said city officials were asked how they would provide short-term and long-term housing for migrants.

“To be honest with you, that’s very difficult at this point when we do not have housing,” said Jackson-Shaheed, who declined an interview after the discussion.

If Bridgeport were to receive busloads of migrants, it would temporaril­y house them under the same process for emergencie­s and disasters, said Appleby.

That process includes temporaril­y sheltering people in schools or other public buildings, Appleby said. People staying at those facilities would be registered and fed, according to the city’s “emergency shelters and mass care” plan. For the long term, people would be transferre­d to temporary housing in places such as rental units, motels or hotels, according to the plan.

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