Mayor Eric Adams on Sunday pleaded for White House officials to expedite work authorization permits for migrants, arguing that barring tens of thousands of new arrivals in the city from legal work was โanti-American.โ
The heightened calls for state and federal support comes as Adams and city officials say theyโve run out of space to house asylum seekers and migrants with nearly 60,000 people in the cityโs care. Many migrants say their biggest challenge to moving out of city-funded facilities has been getting a permit to work legally.
โWhat is more anti-American than when someone comes to this country and they cannot work?โ Adams said on his call-in radio show โHear from the Mayorโ on WBLS.
โWhen I look at the full immigration migration experience, if it’s my family migrating from Alabama, if it’s my Caribbean diaspora, my African diaspora, my Irish, my Italian, my Jewish โฆ Every immigrant that has ever come to this city and participated in an American dream wanted to have the ability to provide for themselves,โ Adams said.
Nearly 3,000 people entered the cityโs care last week, according to city Emergency Management Commissioner Zach Iscol โ bringing the total migrants in the cityโs care to nearly 60,000 people, including nearly 20,000 children.
โThe dam has burst,โ Adams said on Sunday.
Adams met with White House liaison Tom Perez at City Hall on Thursday morning, which came after the mayor had for months called for federal officials to help the city manage the surge of migrants.
Gov. Kathy Hochul pledged more than $1 billion to the city for migrants in next yearโs budget. She announced on Saturday that she released $250 million of that money. The governor said she will meet with the U.S. Department of the Interior on Sunday to consider federal properties in New York that could be used to house migrants.
But city officials say thatโs not enough to foot the projected $12 billion bill theyโll run by June 2025. Iscol said the city has…
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