The Day

NYC planning an asylum applicatio­n center

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New York City is planning to open an asylum applicatio­n center in the coming weeks to help migrants formally apply for asylum — a necessary step in securing permits to work legally in the U.S.

Mayor Eric Adams announced the plan to open the new help center Tuesday morning — weeks after elected officials and homeless services providers criticized him for not doing enough to help the thousands of migrants who’ve streamed into the city in recent months with navigating the asylum applicatio­n process.

“The Asylum Applicatio­n Help Center will assist the asylum seekers in New York City through the complex federal immigratio­n process, bringing them one step closer to being eligible for work authorizat­ion and the ability to support themselves,” Adams said in a written statement put out by press release Tuesday morning. “We must act swiftly to ensure the well-being of the thousands of migrants whose deadline to submit an asylum applicatio­n is fast approachin­g, and this center will help us do that.”

Since last April, more than 70,000 migrants have come to the city, most of them from Latin American countries. To secure permits to work in the U.S. legally, those seeking asylum must file their applicatio­ns within a year’s time.

For months, Adams has been pleading with the federal government to loosen restrictio­ns around work permits with the expectatio­n that such a move would relieve the strain the migrants have put on the city’s homeless shelters and social services infrastruc­ture.

His rhetoric around the migrant crisis has become more and more critical of the federal government since last year, and Tuesday’s announceme­nt kept with that pattern.

In the statement his press team put out, Team Adams notes that the center is being created “in absence of national strategy.”

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