New York Daily News

Crisis complicate­d by surge of asylum-seeking fams with kids as school start looms

- BY CAYLA BAMBERGER NEWS EDUCATION REPORTER

The flow of migrants into the city includes a large number of families with children, adding another layer of complexity to a situation Mayor Adams says is already at the breaking point.

New York City, Adams said Wednesday, is on track to spend a staggering $12 billion on housing and caring for migrants by mid2025. The influx of children, just weeks before schools are due to reopen, will require the city to act on multiple fronts — from preparing local public schools for their arrival to providing emergency housing that keeps children out of large group settings.

Last month, the number of families with children in the city’s care was growing by roughly 47 households each day according to data provided by the Mayor’s Office of Management and Budget. That figure had more than tripled since the city budget was adopted earlier this summer, when 15 families with children were being added to the daily count.

“When you talk about families with children, which we see is the substantia­l increase that we’re getting, the largest percentage — everything changes,” Adams said at a news conference at City Hall.

“We can’t use the congregate shelter settings,” he added. “You have to make sure they are in school, that they have all the proper school supplies that come with it. So it’s just an entire new dynamic that we have to do when we continue to get a large proportion of our migrant asylum seekers families with children.”

An estimated 18,000 newly arrived students had enrolled in city public schools by the end of last school year, city data show. The mayor declined to gauge how many school-aged children could enroll this fall, saying the number is “continuing, growing and moving.”

Adams said there’s still a shortage of the “ideal number” of Spanish-speaking teachers in local schools, but insisted Schools Chancellor David Banks and the Education Department will be able to get migrant students what they need.

“We’re going to step up to the plate, like we have,” he said.

His remarks came a day after Adams said the city may be too cash-strapped to hire more bilingual teachers who speak students’ home language, suggesting the migrant crisis is not just a problem for the mayor but for the city as a whole to address.

Adams renewed that call on Wednesday, encouragin­g New Yorkers to teach English as volunteers through after-school programs and at churches.

“We need that help, and we have a lot of Spanish-speaking residents in the city,” he said.

Principals will likely find some relief through recent changes to the city’s primary school funding formula. The city is sending an additional $90 million through the Fair Student Funding formula that prioritize­s schools with students in temporary housing — including the migrants in shelters — and high concentrat­ions of children in poverty or learning English.

But city officials did not say if a $2,000 per student boost for schools receiving six or more homeless children that was allocated last year would be renewed for the next term.

The city is also turning to the state Education Department to assist asylum-seeking students, but that help is unlikely to be financial.

Adams’ chief of staff and city education officials met with state leaders on Monday to discuss “the arrival of large numbers of asylum seeker and migrant students,” according to a joint statement from Chancellor Lester Young and Commission­er Betty Rosa.

“While the department cannot provide districts with informatio­n on individual prospectiv­e students and unfortunat­ely does not exercise control over the availabili­ty of emergency funds to support an unanticipa­ted increase in student population, we offer a wealth of resources on instructio­nal practice and policy implementa­tion,” said Young and Rosa.

State education spokeswoma­n Keshia Clukey said the department has offered to connect school districts interested in enrolling migrant students with New York City education officials looking for other school systems to place families.

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