Migrants sleep in Chicago police stations as shelters strain
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[May 19, 2023]
By Eric Cox and Ted Hesson
CHICAGO (Reuters) -Chicago's new mayor is grappling with how to house
hundreds of migrants arriving on buses from the U.S.-Mexico border, with
some sleeping in police stations and shelters strained after border
crossings rose earlier this month.
Officials in the third-largest U.S. city have said they cannot afford to
rent hotel rooms for all arriving migrants and have pressed for more
federal funding. Some migrants seeking a safe place to sleep have turned
to police stations.
"We're waiting to see where they're going to place us," said Tomas
Orozco, a 55-year-old migrant who arrived at a Chicago shelter on
Wednesday with his family after an arduous seven-week journey from his
home country, Venezuela.
The trip took them through the Darien Gap, an inhospitable jungle
separating Colombia and Panama, and his family members were still sick
from drinking contaminated water, Orozco said.
The scramble for housing in Chicago and other cities follows the end
last week of COVID-19 border restrictions known as Title 42, which
allowed U.S. authorities to expel migrants to Mexico without the chance
to seek U.S. asylum. Tens of thousands of people hurried to cross the
border illegally before U.S. President Joe Biden implemented a strict
new asylum regulation to replace Title 42.
Earlier this month, Texas Governor Greg Abbott, a Republican, resumed a
campaign of busing migrants to Democratic strongholds further north,
including Chicago and New York City.
The busing aims to alleviate pressure on border cities and call
attention to what Abbott says were overly lenient policies by Biden's
Democratic administration.
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Migrants, without a place to stay upon
arrival in the city, seek safe shelter at the District 12 station of
the Chicago Police Department in Chicago, Illinois, U.S. May 17,
2023. REUTERS/Eric Cox
On Thursday, Texas began busing migrants to Denver, where Democratic
Mayor Michael Hancock is already struggling to house new arrivals.
New York City Mayor Eric Adams, another Democrat, has called on the
Biden administration to provide more funding to cities.
Adams suspended some of New York's right-to-shelter rules last week,
citing the strain of housing asylum seekers, and is considering
using school gyms as shelters.
Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson, a Democrat who took office on Monday,
reaffirmed the city's commitment to welcoming asylum seekers in his
inauguration speech, saying "there’s enough room for everyone."
Johnson's Democratic predecessor, Lori Lightfoot, declared a state
of emergency earlier this month, calling migrant arrivals a
"humanitarian crisis" and pressing for more federal assistance.
Dean Wynne, who owns a Chicago building serving as a temporary
shelter for nearly 200 migrants, said families were "subdued and
quiet" on the first day they arrived.
"By the second day, I could see little kids were playing around,
playing catch, kicking the ball and stuff," Wynne said. "They were
just happy."
(Reporting by Eric Cox in Chicago and Ted Hesson in Washington;
Editing by Mica Rosenberg and Bill Berkrot)
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