Chicago homeless migrants shelter faces backlash
Send a link to a friend
[December 01, 2023]
By Eric Cox
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Chicago is grappling with local backlash against
moving homeless migrants into a new government-run tent encampment as
temperatures drop and more migrants continue to arrive.
Hundreds of migrants are still sleeping on floors or in tents outside
city police stations. Some who remained this week huddled near tents
wearing parkas, knit hats and even ski goggles to cope with the cold
weather and falling snow.
At the same time, dozens of protesters have been gathering daily near a
construction site where one of two new shelters is being built in
Chicago's Brighton Park neighborhood. The shelters, funded by the state
of Illinois and expected to open as soon as mid-December, will house up
to 2,200 asylum seekers and cost $65 million to build.
Community members in Brighton Park are suing the city to try to stop
construction, saying it violates Chicago zoning laws.
"These people are just getting off the bus and everything's given to
them," said one of the demonstrators, longtime resident Ricardo
Palacios. "As a taxpayer, I don't think that's right."
For several months, thousands of migrants with nowhere to go have been
sleeping at Chicago police stations and O'Hare International Airport,
but the city and churches have stepped up efforts to move migrants into
shelters.
Around 1,000 asylum seekers remain at police stations, down from 4,000
three weeks ago, according to city figures.
Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson, a Democrat who took office in May, has
struggled to house arriving migrants, including hundreds bused up each
week by the Republican-led border state of Texas after crossing the
U.S.-Mexico border. Many of those arriving come from Venezuela and lack
family and friends to help them.
[to top of second column]
|
Migrants, without a place to stay upon arrival in the city, seek
safe shelter inside the District 12 station of the Chicago Police
Department in Chicago, Illinois, U.S. May 17, 2023. REUTERS/Eric
Cox/File Photo
The housing issue has become more urgent in recent weeks as the
city's frigid winter season - when temperatures routinely drop below
freezing and can sometimes fall dangerously low - draws closer and
snow has started to fall.
On Tuesday, Johnson, who is Black, criticized Texas Governor Greg
Abbott's busing effort during a press conference, calling it
"right-wing extremism" that was intentionally targeting cities "led
by people of color."
"Their whole motivation is to create disruption and chaos," said
Johnson, who has also sought more federal funding to deal with the
issue.
Since April 2022, Texas has bused more than 66,000 migrants to six
Democratic-run cities, four of which have Black mayors - Chicago,
New York, Los Angeles and Washington.
Abbott spokesperson Renae Eze called Johnson's remarks "falsehoods
and outright lies" and questioned his commitment to receiving
migrants.
"In May, Mayor Johnson welcomed migrants to Chicago, saying the city
has 'enough room' for them," Eze said in a statement. "With millions
of residents, Chicago is only dealing with a fraction of what our
small border communities deal with on a day-to-day basis."
(Reporting by Eric Cox in Chicago; Writing by Ted Hesson; Editing by
Mary Milliken and Sandra Maler)
[© 2023 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]This material
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |