New York City will offer to start sending single adult men seeking asylum to two hotels in Rockland and Orange counties, a plan that is already meeting fierce resistance from officials in those areas.
In a press release late Friday, Mayor Eric Adams said the hotel program would be voluntary. The city intends to house migrants for up to four months and provide them with the same city-funded services โ such as food, bedding and healthcare โ delivered by the emergency response centers in New York City.
But itโs unclear how many migrants would be interested in relocating for four months to a smaller community with fewer job opportunities and a less robust public transit system.
On Friday afternoon, officials at the Rockland County Department of Social Services issued an angry statement opposing Adamโs plan.
โThis is absurd, and we will not stand for it,โ said Ed Day, the Rockland County executive. โThere is nothing humanitarian about a sanctuary city sending busloads of people to a county that does not have the infrastructure to care for them. Itโs the same as throwing them in the middle of the ocean with nowhere to swim.โ
In the press release, Rockland County officials said Adams had called a town supervisor early Friday and informed them of a plan to send migrants โwith few other details aside from theyโll be housed in a local hotel.โ
They said officials later learned that the city intended to house about 340 adult men in an Orangeburg hotel called Armoni Inn and Suite.
Advocates for the homeless have been critical of the cityโs handling of the issue. They say the mayor has not done enough to address the shortage of affordable housing. The cityโs homeless population has soared under Adams.
โThe city is struggling to meet its legal obligation to comply with local law and multiple court orders to ensure shelter for anyone in need, asylum seekers included,โ said Joshua Goldfein, a staff attorney for the Legal Aid Society.
He urged city…
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