San Diego Union-Tribune

NYC MAYOR SEEKS HELP SHOULDERIN­G COST TO HOUSE, CARE FOR MIGRANTS

Adams estimates influx will cost $12B over three years

- BY JEFFERY C. MAYS Mays writes for The New York Times.

For a year now, Mayor Eric Adams has been sounding the alarm about a humanitari­an crisis like few New York City has seen before, as tens of thousands of migrants arrive from the southern border.

On Wednesday, he made yet another plea for federal help and cited a staggering new cost estimate: $12 billion to house and care for the newcomers over three years.

This fiscal year, the mayor said, the city has estimated that it will spend about $5 billion on migrants, as much as the annual budgets of the Fire, Parks and Sanitation department­s combined.

Officials said they had raised the estimate as migrants continued to arrive in the city by the thousands. By 2025, the mayor said, the city could have more than 100,000 migrants in homeless shelters, about twice the number currently in the facilities, including people who have arrived since the spring of 2022.

New York is not alone in its struggles to accommodat­e migrants, most of whom have entered the country along the southern border. Adams said he had coordinate­d with other cities facing a similar influx of migrants, such as Los Angeles. President Joe Biden has tried to slow the influx with new rules making it more difficult to apply for asylum.

“If we don’t get the support we need, New Yorkers could be left with a $12 billion bill,” Adams said in a speech from City Hall. “While New York City will continue to lead, it’s time the state and federal government step up.”

With the new cost estimate, Adams said the city was examining the services provided to migrants to look for savings, possibly by reducing the cost of meals or laundry.

“Some things we were doing, we’re not going to be able to do,” Adams said.

mayor repeated a call he has made many times over the past year: asking the federal government to declare a state of emergency, provide emergency aid and create a “decompress­ion” strategy that would slow the flow of migrants to cities like New York. He also called on Biden to give migrants work authorizat­ions.

Adams added that Gov. Kathy Hochul should develop a plan to help distribute arriving migrants throughout the state, to ease the burden on the city’s shelter system.

“We need additional resources now,” the mayor said, adding that the city was running out of “money, appropriat­e space and personnel” to properly care for the migrants.

Speaking at an unrelated news conference in Brooklyn on Wednesday, Hochul said she would ask the Legislatur­e to allocate $1 billion in next year’s budget to help the city.

The governor said the state had already given $1 billion to help with housing and legal services and had helped find and prepare locations to house the asylum seekers. The state will pay for the cost of a new tent shel

ter on Randall’s Island.

Hochul said she was also in communicat­ion with the Biden administra­tion and repeated a call for the asylum seekers to receive work authorizat­ion, adding that she had “brought enormous resources to the table.”

Many of the migrants are coming from Latin America, particular­ly Venezuela, where the country’s economic collapse has caused millions of people to flee. Other migrants say they are fleeing extortion from violent drug gangs or persecutio­n because of their sexuality. Recently, more and more migrants have been arriving from countries in Africa.

For nearly a year, Adams has been saying that the shelter system is at its breaking point, and he has made concerted efforts to stop migrants from coming to New York. Three weeks ago, New York began distributi­ng flyers at the southern border telling migrants that living in the city is expensive and that there is no guarantee they will receive help should they come, even though the city is required to house those who ask.

The mayor also instituted a rule requiring single adult migrants to reapply for shelThe

ter every 60 days. And he asked a judge to relieve the city of some of its legal obligation­s to guarantee people shelter.

Of the 96,000 new arrivals, more than 57,000 are staying in homeless shelters, according to Anne Williams-Isom, the deputy mayor for health and human services. The total number of people staying in homeless shelters, including migrants, is 107,900, she said — by far the most ever recorded.

The arrival of migrants, including a recent influx of families with children, has overwhelme­d the city’s shelter system, Williams-Isom said. Between July 30 and Aug. 6, more than 2,900 migrants arrived in the city, she said.

In an effort to house the newcomers, the city has opened 194 sites, including 13 humanitari­an relief centers, which are operated by the public hospital system. Officials said they had reviewed 3,000 sites as potential places to house migrants.

“We are past our breaking point,” Adams said. “New Yorkers’ compassion may be limitless, but our resources are not.”

 ?? BEBETO MATTHEWS AP ?? New York Mayor Eric Adams (left) on Wednesday called on the federal government to declare an emergency as the city struggles to accommodat­e migrants.
BEBETO MATTHEWS AP New York Mayor Eric Adams (left) on Wednesday called on the federal government to declare an emergency as the city struggles to accommodat­e migrants.

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