Imperial Valley Press

NYC opens emergency center for influx of bused migrants

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NEW YORK (AP) — A complex of giant tents built on an island opened Wednesday as New York City’s latest temporary shelter for an influx of internatio­nal migrants being bused into the city by southern border states.

The humanitari­an relief center on Randall’s Island is intended to be a temporary waystation for single, adult men — many from Venezuela — who have been arriving several times per week on buses chartered predominan­tly from Texas.

Spartan and utilitaria­n, the tents include cots for up to 500 people, laundry facilities, a dining hall and phones for residents to make internatio­nal calls.

The city’s plan is to bring single men to the facility after they come into the main Manhattan bus terminal and to house them there for a period of days while determinin­g next steps, officials said. The first arrivals were brought to the center on Wednesday.

“We needed a different type of operation that gave us the time and space to welcome people, provide them a warm meal, shower, a place to sleep, to understand their medical needs, to really then work with them to figure out what their next step is going to be,” said Emergency Management Commission­er Zach Iscol.

The white, plastic- walled tents also include a space where migrants can meet with case workers to determine their next steps, as well as a recreation­al room with television­s, video games and board games. They are heated, since overnight autumn temperatur­es can fall into the 40s and 30s. In the sleeping area, row upon row of green cots stretch out, each one with a pillow, some sheets and a blanket, and some towels. The city said it will be able to double the sleeping capacity of the tents, if needed.

Similar types of tents have been used as temporary shelters in other places, like the southern U.S. border. In recent years, both the Trump and Biden administra­tions have come under criticism for conditions in some tents, including overcrowdi­ng.

In recent months, New York City has seen an unexpected increase in migrants seeking asylum in the United States who have been sent to the city from other states including Texas and Arizona. The influx has put a strain on the city’s shelter system, leading officials to look for other places to house people and propose the temporary tent facilities. Migrant families with children are being housed in a hotel.

New York City’s homeless shelter system is now bursting with more than 63,300 residents. While there are fewer families in the shelters now

than there were in the years before the pandemic, the number of single men has soared since the spring, largely because of the influx of migrants. There were more than 20,000 single adults in the shelter system Monday, up 23% from the nightly average in July.

Mayor Eric Adams declared a state of emergency earlier this month, calling the increased demand being put on the city “not sustainabl­e.”

The tents were initially planned for a far-off corner of the Bronx, but were moved after concerns about flooding and criticism from immigrant advocates over the remote location. Iscol said the Randall’s Island location was safe from flooding.

Advocates remain concerned even with the new location, questionin­g what conditions migrants will be kept in, and whether the support they get will be adequate.

Kathryn Kliff, an attorney with The Legal Aid Society, said there were questions about what kind of oversight would be maintained at the center, which is not part of the city’s homeless shelter system and so does not fall under the same court-ordered oversight some of the shelters do.

And there were still concerns about why migrants were in tents at all, instead of buildings like hotels.

 ?? AP PHOTO/BEBETO MATTHEWS ?? New York’s Office of Immigrant Affairs Commission­er Manuel Castro (far left) Health and Hospital Vice President Dr. Ted Long (second from left) Deputy Mayor for Health and Human Services Anne Williams-Isom (second from right) and Emergency Management Commission­er Zach Iscol (far right) hold a news briefing in the sleeping area of the city’s latest temporary shelter on Randall’s Island, on Tuesday in New York.
AP PHOTO/BEBETO MATTHEWS New York’s Office of Immigrant Affairs Commission­er Manuel Castro (far left) Health and Hospital Vice President Dr. Ted Long (second from left) Deputy Mayor for Health and Human Services Anne Williams-Isom (second from right) and Emergency Management Commission­er Zach Iscol (far right) hold a news briefing in the sleeping area of the city’s latest temporary shelter on Randall’s Island, on Tuesday in New York.

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