Times-Call (Longmont)

Hancock blasts Texas governor

Mayor upset over busload of migrants sent near Denver’s Civic Center Park

- By Saja Hindi shindi@denverpost.com

More than 10,000 migrants have made their way to Denver since December, but on Thursday, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced the first bus of arrivals that the state of Texas directed to Denver.

Republican governors across the country, including Abbott, have been transporti­ng migrants who arrive in their states to Democratic-led states and cities as a political statement. Although hundreds of asylum seekers, mostly from Venezuela, have been coming to Denver each week by way of El Paso, Texas since early December, the migrants have come on commercial buses, seeking assistance to get to their final destinatio­ns.

Colorado’s state and local officials have previously said that recent arrivals were not a result of political moves by GOP leaders and that the migrants were traveling to Denver on commercial buses, not coordinate­d by any state entities.

That is, until now.

In a statement posted on his Twitter account, Abbott said the first group of migrants chartered by his state to Colorado were dropped off near Civic Center Park at 14th Street and Court Place Tuesday afternoon.

“Until the President and his Administra­tion step up and fulfill their constituti­onal duty to secure the border, the State of Texas will continue busing migrants to self-declared sanctuary cities like Denver,” he wrote.

Texas has been chartering buses of migrants to Washington, D.C. since April 2022, and also started sending migrants to New York City, Chicago and Philadelph­ia last year. The state has bused more than 19,000 migrants

to other cities to “provide much-needed relief to Texas’ overwhelme­d border communitie­s,” according to Abbott’s statement.

Denver Mayor Michael Hancock called the move by Abbott “political theater and partisan gamesmansh­ip pitting jurisdicti­ons against each other,” further exacerbati­ng the problem, rather than finding solutions to the ongoing humanitari­an crisis at the border.

“If Gov. Abbott thinks he’s going to win over allies to his cause here in Denver with this latest stunt, he’s going to be sorely mistaken,” Hancock said in a written statement. “And we’re more than happy to send him the bill for any additional support we have to provide now because of his failure at managing his own state.”

Conor Cahill, a spokespers­on for Colorado Gov. Jared Polis’ office said the immigratio­n challenge is one that “requires problemsol­ving and collaborat­ion between cities, states and the federal government, not politics as usual.”

The governor’s office also reiterated Polis’ demands that the federal government “secure the border, provide Temporary Protected Status (TPS) work authorizat­ion permits for jobs, take action on immigratio­n reform, and provide financial resources to non-border states to address this challenge and treat individual­s and families fleeing oppression with dignity and respect.”

Earlier this year, the state of Colorado coordinate­d busing for migrants to other states like New York that were also struggling to keep up with demand, but state officials said they were merely helping transport the asylum seekers at their request, not for political motives.

The first Texas-chartered bus to Denver transporte­d 41 migrants — seven of them children with their families Thursday afternoon, according to the Denver Office of Emergency Management.

Nine of the migrants already had family members who live in the Denver metro waiting to pick them up at the bus station, said Yoli Casas, executive director of Vive Wellness. Casas is one of the navigators who greets new people when they get to Denver and directs them to resources. The rest of the people on the bus had immigratio­n appointmen­ts scheduled in Denver — they all have been in contact with immigratio­n authoritie­s, as is a requiremen­t to stay in an emergency shelter in Denver.

Regardless of how the asylum seekers get to the area or who sends them, Casas said the navigators at the processing centers are “going to help, no matter what.”

Hancock told The Denver Post in an interview that the city found out on Wednesday night that the bus was arriving Thursday because of Federal Emergency Management Agency protocol for reimbursem­ents, but he saw Abbott’s statement before the bus even arrived, further illustrati­ng the point that it’s political theater.

The migrants may have already made their way to Denver without Texas chartering their bus, Hancock noted, but Abbott “seems as if he is very adept at tracing the media cameras” to get attention. The Denver mayor said Abbott sent migrants to New York and Washington, D.C. when they were in the news, and now that the attention is on Denver, the Texas governor is sending people here, “playing games with the lives of vulnerable migrants.”

“It’s an act of buffoonery is what it is,” Hancock said.

Denver and Colorado have been considered socalled sanctuarie­s as the city and state have passed laws that protect immigrants, regardless of legal status. Immigrant advocacy groups said people have voluntaril­y come to the area, at the recommenda­tion of nonprofits and other migrants, because of its reputation as a place that can help them with resources along their journeys.

Hancock has repeatedly warned that the city cannot handle the increasing number of people in need of shelter without additional resources and funding, and he has decried the claims that Denver has brought this situation onto itself.

“Denver’s reputation as a welcoming and humane community is not the reason we have a hemispheri­c migration crisis,” he said last week.

The surge of migrant arrivals the past couple of weeks seems to be slowly dissipatin­g, at least enough that there is — at the moment — enough shelter space for those who need it and no one is sleeping outside, Casas said. Even the number of people leaving Denver on buses to other states is going down, she added.

On Thursday, 82 people came on buses to Denver, asking for assistance, compared with 109 the day before. But that’s still much more than the 20-30 people Denver was seeing daily in March and April. And Hancock said the city is expecting another surge toward the end of May or early June.

“We’re trying to do what we can to prepare for that (and) at the same time take care again of the souls that have come to us thus far,” Hancock said.

While Denver has been urging the federal government to take action, the city has not yet received any additional dollars. Hancock said he’s heard from the White House about setting up a meeting to discuss possible solutions.

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