Renewed calls to end Chicago’s sanctuary status ahead of expected
migrant surge
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[July 29, 2024]
By Glenn Minnis | The Center Square contributor
(The Center Square) – With the city of Chicago already spending as much
as $1.5 million a day for migrant housing and thousands of new arrivals
expected in the weeks ahead, local activist Tio Hardiman is renewing his
call for the city to reverse its sanctuary city status.
For the past two years, Chicago has received more than 45,000 foreign
nationals from the southern U.S. border, where border communities have
been inundated with border crossers. The taxpayer costs for Illinois and
the city of Chicago continue with the new state budget that started this
month setting aside more than $900 million for health care, housing,
food and even legal subsidies.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott recently went on record with his plan to continue
busing people to Chicago, where local law enforcement are prohibited
from assisting enforcement of federal immigration laws. Earlier this
week, a Chicago City Council committee heard from the budget director
they have not budgeted for the expected surge.
Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson was asked about the potential of thousands
of more non-citizen migrants being transported to the city leading up to
the Democratic National Convention next month.
“We have right now, currently, roughly 5,600 new arrivals that are still
in our shelters. Our collective resources are prepared for as many as
15,000 but we certainly hope that Gov. Abbot finds Jesus Christ as his
lord and savior and don’t do that,” Johnson said Thursday.
Hardiman said he’s had enough of all the politics coming from both
sides.
“The Democrats may be looking at the migrant situation like, in the next
two or three years, all those migrants will become registered voters,”
he said. “The Republicans are looking from a lens where they're trying
to penalize some of the Democratic cities.”
Overall, the city has paid out at least $185 million to care for
migrants over the last six months. Hardiman said policies have to
change.
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On Feb. 20, 2019, a large group of migrants were intercepted by Yuma
Sector Border Patrol agents near Yuma, Ariz. - Jerry Glaser / U.S.
Customs and Border Patrol
“Let’s bring an end to sanctuary cities because the city is not
prepared,” Hardiman said.
Hardiman’s calls for the city to reverse course goes back to 2023,
when he argued state lawmakers were not doing nearly enough to help
the longtime downtrodden residents of the state and that its
newfound migrant problem is one wholly created by bad policy.
All the runaway spending sends a clear and irrefutable message, he
said.
“The state, city and county have already spent close to … $800
million or more on the immigrant crisis here, and all those
resources are going to the illegal immigrants and the resources
should be going to those that are already here struggling each and
every day,” he said. “The message is going out that elected
officials care more about the illegal immigrants than they care
about the people that have been there their whole life struggling.”
Through all the back and forth, Hardiman said one thing remains
clear to him.
“I'm never going to sit up and agree that we should be a sanctuary
city and allow illegal immigrants to come over and receive all the
resources in this state and you got people here starving right now,”
he said.
The surge of migrants is expected to coincide with the Democratic
National Convention that begins in Chicago Aug. 19.
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