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New York’s invisible migrant crisis

When Mayor Eric Adams took office this year, the shelter population was near its lowest level in a decade. But those gains were soon erased as migrants came to constitute more than one-fifth of the entire shelter count

October 02, 2022 / 22:27 IST
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New York City (Representative image : Shutterstock)
New York City (Representative image : Shutterstock)

During the past six months, thousands of asylum-seekers have been sent to New York, most coming from Texas by way of political gimmickry rooted in the goal that Northern liberals might finally understand the challenges of our immigration policy if they were confronted with a surge. By decree of a law long considered sacrosanct, anyone in New York without a place to stay must be granted one, which has brought roughly 14,600 of these new entrants into the city’s shelter system, where 11,000 currently remain in need of nearly everything.

When Mayor Eric Adams took office this year, the shelter population was near its lowest level in a decade. But those gains were soon erased as migrants came to constitute more than one-fifth of the entire shelter count, which swelled from 45,000 in April to more than 59,000 this past week. Six buses arrived at Port Authority on Monday alone. The mayor has properly described the situation as a “humanitarian crisis” and sought quick, contingent solutions — the construction of massive girded tents outfitted with cots in the parking lot at Orchard Beach in the Bronx for example. A response born of urgency amid the city’s ongoing housing emergencies, it was unwelcome by advocates for the displaced, who have criticized a plan to house migrants in a flood zone, far from public transportation and essential services.

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What is so striking about this crisis is that it has unfolded in a fashion that seems almost imperceptible to a vast majority of us. Ten years ago, New Yorkers marshaled the best of themselves to aid the victims of Superstorm Sandy, particularly in the Rockaways, in Brooklyn and in Staten Island, where homes were destroyed or severely damaged. It was hard to miss the major relief efforts amplified on social media — to raise money, corral volunteers to muck out basements, feed people. Even the Corcoran real-estate office in my neighborhood became a site of field operations, receiving donated clothing and diapers, which volunteers would then regularly run out to the affected areas.

The rarity of a natural disaster in New York City certainly inspired people and the devastation was plain to see. But the corporate altruism that emerged after Sandy followed in the service of a cause that was not entwined in rancorous political discourse.