Patchwork aid system and uncertain funding leave thousands of migrants
in limbo
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[January 19, 2024]
By ANDREW ADAMS
Capitol News Illinois
aadams@capitolnewsillinois.com
CHICAGO – As Illinois faces sub-zero wind chills, thousands of recently
arrived migrants are sleeping in precarious situations throughout
Chicago and its suburbs – overcrowded shelters, police stations, former
convenience stores, library basements and spare rooms in churches, to
name a few.
Many of these recent arrivals have come to the state with few
possessions and in need of food and shelter, which those cities and the
state have scrambled to provide amid a lack of federal coordination.
Since migrants began arriving – many bused or flown from Texas and other
southern U.S. border states since August 2022 – the state has already
allocated more than $500 million to set up emergency services, shelters
and other supports. So far, more than 34,000 migrants have arrived in
Chicago from Texas alone, though many have since moved onto other states
where they’ve been connected with family.
In November, Gov. JB Pritzker announced another $160 million would be
reappropriated from the Illinois Department of Human Services’ budget to
create more shelter sites overseen by the city of Chicago, provide
direct aid and case management services and to launch an intake center.
But even that plan – dubbed by Pritzker as “welcome, shelter,
independence” – has not kept pace with the influx of arrivals to
Illinois. Now, as lawmakers return to Springfield for their spring
legislative session, the question of what to do next hangs heavy in the
halls of the state Capitol, with talks of new funding so far not
yielding any specific proposals.
“We know this unprecedented humanitarian crisis is going to be critical
to discussions on budget and other important issues this session,” House
Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch said in a statement Tuesday, one day
before announcing a nine-member working group to concentrate on the
migrant issue.
“We’re going to keep all options on the table and have frank
conversations with our caucus, the Senate president, Governor Pritzker,
and other stakeholders,” Welch added.
The more than 34,000 migrants who’ve been bused or flown to Illinois by
order of Texas Gov. Greg Abbott represents just a portion of the true
number of migrants that arrived in Illinois over that time as the
country’s southern border faces an influx of hundreds of thousands of
people each month. Migrants are fleeing unstable political regimes and
economic chaos in south and central American and Carribean nations like
Venezuela, Honduras, Cuba and Haiti.
Last week, Pritzker sent a letter to Abbott requesting he stop sending
buses at least while Chicago experienced a deep freeze over the weekend
and into this week. While Abbott publicly denied the request, Chicago
reported that as of Tuesday afternoon, no new buses had arrived since
Pritzker sent the letter.
State funding so far
So far, more than half a billion dollars has been allocated to address
the influx of migrants, according to the governor’s office. That
includes $115 million in direct funding to the city of Chicago.
Sometime this month, the state is slated to open a key piece of the $160
million spending plan announced in November: the intake center designed
to welcome migrants, provide immediate triage and help them find a more
permanent home.
It’s going to be located at the same place as Chicago's “landing zone”
facility west of Chicago’s downtown neighborhood, where bus companies
are instructed to drop migrants.
The landing zone, where migrants have slept in heated tents and on
Chicago city buses to avoid the cold, was cleared out on Monday and the
migrants that were there were taken to Chicago’s Harold Washington
Library as part of the city’s “severe cold emergency operation plan.”
By Tuesday, the city reported no migrants at the site and 47 remaining
at the library.
The state has also provided funds directly to local governments to aid
migrants seeking legal assistance, health care and shelter. In
September, the governor announced a $42.5 million grant program for
municipalities around the state to fund aid to migrants who are seeking
asylum in the U.S.
So far, five municipalities have received funding: the city of Chicago
with the largest share of $30.25 million, along with suburban Lake
County, Elgin, Oak Park and downstate Urbana.
On Tuesday, the governor announced another $11 million for cities
outside of Chicago that are also caring for migrants. The money is from
the $160 million in spending announced in November.
Oak Park, a suburb just west of Chicago, received $400,000 through this
program. It’s used that money, alongside $650,000 in leftover federal
American Rescue Plan Act pandemic relief money and $350,000 from Cook
County, to provide legal assistance and shelter to migrants.
But the Oak Park aid program’s funding runs out on Feb. 29, at which
point the future for the roughly 160 migrants in the suburb – and any
arrivals thereafter – becomes somewhat unclear.
“The plan is that migrants are working with their caseworkers to make
plans about what comes next,” village spokesperson Dan Yopchick told
Capitol News Illinois.
With a near total lack of coordination at the federal level, advocates
have looked to the state to fill in some financial and administrative
gaps.
The Welcome to Illinois Coalition, a group of nonprofits and advocacy
groups, has asked the state to provide more funding for long-term
housing assistance and legal education. They’ve also called for an
expansion of the Health Benefits for Immigrant Adults program, which
provides state-subsidized health care to some noncitizen residents who
are in Illinois without legal permission – a group separate from many of
the migrants, who are here seeking asylum in the country.
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Chicago Transit Authority “warming buses” are pictured idling
outside the city’s “landing zone” facility where migrants are
dropped off after being bused from Texas. (Capitol News Illinois
photo by Andrew Adams)
But the state’s finances for the next fiscal year
remain uncertain, and Pritzker has already paused enrollment in the
program and expressed doubt about any expansion sought by advocates.
The current fiscal year, which ends June 30, is projected to end
with a $1.4 billion surplus – roughly 2.8 percent of the overall
budget – according to the Governor’s Office of Management and
Budget. But next year’s budget is projected to have an $891 million
deficit.
Possible action in Springfield
On Wednesday, Welch announced what is likely to turn into a key part
of the legislative response to the migrant crisis: a “working group”
group of nine House lawmakers – all Democrats – led by Rep. Jennfier
Gong-Gershowitz, D-Glenview.
The group is mostly made up of Chicago-area lawmakers, although it
also includes Rep. Dave Vella, D-Rockford, whose hometown saw a
plane of migrants arrive with little warning on New Year’s Eve, and
Rep. Jehan Gordon-Booth, D-Peoria, who oversees the House’s
budget-drafting process.
Republicans in Springfield, meanwhile, have called for a stricter
state stance toward immigration in general.
On Tuesday, a group of four conservative lawmakers announced they
were filing legislation that would repeal portions of the TRUST Act,
a 2017 state law that bars local law enforcement agencies from
participating in federal immigration enforcement, such as by working
with Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents or by detaining
people based on their immigration status.
“Repealing the TRUST Act is absolutely required to solve the
Illinois illegal immigration crisis and it’s the right thing to do
for the citizens of this state,” Rep. John Cabello, R-Machesney
Park, said in a statement.
Individuals seeking asylum, like many of the recently arrived
migrants, are generally not subject to deportation through
Immigrations and Customs Enforcement action.
Sen. Dave Syverson, R-Cherry Valley, also on Tuesday criticized the
management of two state programs that offer Medicaid-style benefits
to some noncitizen residents of Illinois.
These programs faced sharp criticism from the right in 2023 when
they exceeded expected costs by hundreds of millions of dollars and
again from the left when the governor’s administration instituted
cost-saving measures that limited the number of people able to
enroll in benefits.
“Our focus as a state should be on taking care of our own citizens,
especially the most vulnerable, before opening our doors to
undocumented individuals from countries all over the world,”
Syverson said.
The Health Benefits for Immigrant Adults and Health Benefits for
Immigrant Seniors programs, which Syverson proposed cutting back,
are designed for people who don’t have legal permission to be in the
country and some others. Asylum seekers generally don’t qualify for
those programs but do qualify for some federal benefits.
These proposals are unlikely to receive much traction in
Springfield, as they are unpopular with Democrats, who hold
supermajorities in both legislative chambers and every statewide
office.
Possible paths forward
For Pritzker, part of the way to help migrants is by providing the
opportunity to work.
In the fall, Pritzker pushed the Biden administration to expand
migrants’ ability to receive temporary protected status, or TPS, to
include those coming from Venezuela, allowing them to legally work
in the U.S. But days after saying he was “very pleased” with a
related change announced by the administration, Pritzker pushed the
White House again to remove fees for applying for TPS applications,
which can cost hundreds of dollars.
“The high cost of applying for TPS is yet another obstacle for the
population we have in Illinois,” Pritzker wrote in an October letter
to Biden.
The Biden administration has fast-tracked some work authorizations,
particularly for people who crossed the border using the CBP One
mobile app.
But Pritzker’s request to waive fees, alongside his call for the
administration to name a single person or office to coordinate
migrant relocation, has so far gone unfulfilled.
Some advocates, however, said reforming work authorization rules
will only go so far.
This includes Erendira Rendon, the vice president of immigrant
justice with The Resurrection Project, a nonprofit group that
receives state funding to provide legal education to recent
immigrants as well as a member organization of the Welcome to
Illinois Coalition.
She said the focus on work authorization leaves out many who don’t
qualify. She said that fewer than 5,000 of the migrants in Chicago
shelters qualify for work authorization through TPS or other federal
programs.
“There has never been a system to welcome immigrants,” Rendon said.
“That doesn’t exist.”
She said the state could better serve many of the migrants by
connecting them to existing immigrant communities and to others who
lack work permits so that they can learn how to navigate the country
they now find themselves in.
Capitol News Illinois is
a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering state government. It
is distributed to hundreds of print and broadcast outlets statewide.
It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the
Robert R. McCormick Foundation, along with major contributions from
the Illinois Broadcasters Foundation and Southern Illinois Editorial
Association. |