Mayor Adams furious after Texas Gov. Greg Abbott sent dozens of migrants to New York City against their will
Gov. Abbott hopes Mayor Eric Adams will welcome the migrants arriving in the Big Apple.
By Marcia Kramer and Ali Bauman
CBS New York
August 5, 2022
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott accused Democrats of causing a “historic and preventable crisis.”
Fox & friends interviews a migrant
NEW YORK -- A red state, blue state border war has erupted after Texas Gov. Greg Abbott sent dozens of migrants to the Port Authority Bus Terminal, taking advantage of New York City's right to shelter law as he fights with President Joe Biden over immigration policy.
"Some of them weren't even supposed to be in New York. I mean there's people going to Portland, Oregon. We had to get them tickets to North Carolina, Washington, D.C. and all sorts of other places. So they were kind of inappropriately brought to New York," said relief worker Andrea Garbarini.
Kathryn Kliff, a legal aid attorney, said she's also worried that Abbott sent people here against their will.
"By their own choice, have endured horrific things before they got here and this is just an additional trauma to be sent somewhere that's not where you want to be," Kliff said.
CBS2's Ali Bauman spoke with a 44-year-old single father of three from Venezuela who wants to stay anonymous because he fears for his safety.He has been staying in Queens with his three sons since they arrived a few days ago.
In Spanish, he spoke about their journey.
"I spent five days in the jungle from Colombia to Panama," he said. "I got robbed, all my food and money was taken, so my kids and I spent two days in the jungle with no food."
Eventually, they made it to Texas.
"This charity in Texas sent us a voucher so we could fly from Texas to Chicago to New York," he said.
He added he feels blessed to have shelter, food and fresh clothing here, and he and his children say they're excited about the future.
This father is one of the 4,000 migrants seeking asylum who have come to New York City this summer.
Adams, meanwhile, is now turning to the federal government for more resources.
"We already have a housing crisis. Help us here because not only it's housing, it's translation services, it's education, it is food," he said.
The city is helped by nonprofits like Catholic Migration Services in Brooklyn, which provides legal services.
"We have the knowledge to help them. We just need more resources to be able to," said Raluca Oncioiu, an attorney with Catholic Migration Services' immigration program.
She says they're now receiving hearing notices for immigration court for people who are not their clients and they cannot contact.
"A number of them have told us that it was the officers at the border who put the address on the papers," she said. "Processes that have been put in place to ensure that people have their day in court, that they can actually seek asylum, those processes are being bypassed."
The city says it is increasing its capacities across the board for additional beds in the shelter system, as well as interpreters and legal services.
Legal Aid is asking Adams and Castro to provide a plan for addressing the needs of the migrants who have arrived here.
2 comments:
So NYC has eight million people living there and they are pissed off about five bussloads of undocumented democrats while the border states are dealing with tens of thousands of them. So, whose ox is gored now?
Good luck!
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