Springfield, Ohio resident Mark Sanders talks about the migrant crisis that has impacted his community.
Springfield, Ohio
resident Mark Sanders detailed Thursday how the influx of tens of
thousands of illegal immigrants has left a devastating impact on his
community's small population.
Sanders told
Fox News host Jesse Waters that about 30,000 Haitians have come to
Springfield over the past two years, leading to a housing, jobs and
healthcare crisis for the city's 60,000 residents.
A
big problem, he says, is the impact on the roads and driving: "Our
roads are like it's like ‘Escape from New York’… You don't know if
you're going to get from point A to point B without getting run over,"
he said, referring to the 1981 movie.
"Life-long
residents have been moved out of their homes that they've rented for
decades. People who own their homes have accepted very high offers and
then they've been turned into basically dormitories by landlords, both
American and Haitian. There's a lot of greed on both sides of the
fence," Sanders said on "Jesse Waters Primetime."
"We
have a temp service. A temporary staffing service, that actually is
probably employing about 95% of those that have arrived here that are
working. Many aren't. Not everybody's working. And people will say that
not everybody is. But the staffing service owns 63 homes. Those homes
are used as dormitories. They shuttle the workers to and from their
jobs. And, you know, they go. He takes a portion of their check, charges
them for transportation charges and for lodging," he continued.
Residents say auto wrecks have also spiked since migrants arrived.
Last year in Springfield, dozens were injured and a boy was killed after a Haitian migrant without a valid driver's license swerved and caused a school bus to crash.
Sanders
says Springfield residents aren't "anti-immigrant;" they just want the
town to feel safe again and for its residents to have the resources they
need.
"Nothing can be further from the
truth," Sanders said. "What we are is a city that only wants our safety,
security and sovereignty back."
"When you have, obviously the incident that
occurred a year ago, we've had total upheaval because of that. Our food
pantries, they get stripped. Our clinic, which is [called] Rocking
Horse, is a federally funded clinic in town. Their budget was decimated.
In Haitian, clinic means hospital. Our emergency rooms are overrun," he
continued.
"Of course nobody's being
compensated unless they've actually checked in with the Health
department and qualified for the Medicaid," he said. "Our roads are like
it's like ‘Escape from New York’ and everybody feels like Snake
Plissken. You don't know if you're going to get from point A to point B
without getting run over, run into or have a SUV flip over in front of
you. And again, the bad driving is multinational. I don't want to sound
like it's only one group that's doing it, but I think that they're the
most that's happening. I mean, they have between four and six wrecks a
day and probably over 50% of those are people without licenses, without
insurance and have no English skills."
Springfield came into the national spotlight this week after former President Trump highlighted the tiny town's problems during the presidential debate, blaming President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris' "open-border" policies.
During
her 2019 presidential campaign, Harris supported decriminalizing
illegal border crossings, called to shut down immigration detention
centers on day one and talked about Immigration and Customs Enforcement
starting again "from scratch."
Since
emerging as the 2024 Democratic nominee, Harris has pledged to "Secure
Our Borders and Fix Our Broken Immigration System," on her campaign's
policy page. She has also doubled down on her support for an "earned
pathway to citizenship" for illegal immigrants.
Sanders was skeptical of Harris' pledge to secure the border after three and-a-half years in office.
"I
think Kamala is kind of like that spouse that cheats on you and says
she'll stop when it's your anniversary. All the things she's promising
to do she can do now. She just chooses not to," he told Watters. "She's
not the one for the White House. She's not the one."
2 comments:
Since they were probably going to vote for Trump anyway nobody in DC cares.
My question is why is the feds dumping do many people into a small town and then not providing resources to that small town?
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