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New York’s immigrant spirit tested by influx of asylum-seekers

New York embodies the immigrant ethos. But buffeted by the most sudden major influx of migrants in modern history, the city finds itself in the position of suggesting that asylum-seekers look elsewhere.

Upward of 113,300 newcomers have arrived since April 2022, many with no place to stay. A unique state mandate requires that New York City supply a bed and essential services to anyone who asks, and city officials are scrambling to provide care. Costs are estimated to top $12 billion over three fiscal years.

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New York has a rich history of welcoming newcomers. Faced with its largest migrant inflow since Ellis Island, the city finds itself grappling with how to provide funding and compassion.

New York City is the top destination in the United States for recent asylum-seekers. Many residents argue that New York cannot manage this influx on its own and are unhappy with the leadership of Mayor Eric Adams, Gov. Kathy Hochul, and President Joe Biden – all Democrats for whom this 17-month period has turned into a fiscal, logistical, and political quagmire.

Despite recent anti-migrant protests in Staten Island and Queens, and upstate, most New Yorkers statewide support efforts to house and expedite work permits for migrants, according to polling.

“New Yorkers aren’t anti-migrant; they’re anti-this-situation,” says Don Levy, director of the Siena College Research Institute.

Perhaps more than any other American city, New York embodies the immigrant ethos. Built by foreigners, it tends to be particularly accepting of those who want to make it in this country. But buffeted by the biggest, most sudden influx of migrants in decades, the city finds itself in the uncomfortable position of suggesting that asylum-seekers look elsewhere.

Upward of 113,300 newcomers have arrived since April 2022, many with no place to stay. Required by a unique state mandate that New York City supply a bed and essential services to anyone who asks, city officials are scrambling to provide education, medical treatment and more. With costs estimated to top $12 billion over three fiscal years, left-leaning New Yorkers are experiencing the tension that those in red border states have railed about for years. 

New Yorkers are never ones to shy from an argument, and the arrival of so many migrants has sparked intense debate – from protests in Queens to vociferous discussions in neighborhood social media groups. Ten protesters were arrested Tuesday for blocking a bus of asylum-seekers on Staten Island. Residents have found themselves at odds over what local leaders should do, even as most New Yorkers statewide support efforts to house and expedite work permits for migrants, according to polling. 

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

New York has a rich history of welcoming newcomers. Faced with its largest migrant inflow since Ellis Island, the city finds itself grappling with how to provide funding and compassion.

“New Yorkers aren’t anti-migrant; they’re anti-this-situation,” says Don Levy, director of the Siena College Research Institute, who polls state residents on politics, culture, and social sentiment.

Some city residents argue that as a self-declared sanctuary city – limiting cooperation with federal immigration authorities – New York is getting what it deserves for being so welcoming. Others lament that the city’s responsibilities toward asylum seekers mean less funding for city services and the Big Apple’s 50,000-strong homeless population. 

Eduardo Munoz/Reuters

A view of a sign as demonstrators protest against the opening of a shelter center for recently arrived migrants to New York in the Staten Island borough of New York City, Aug. 28, 2023.

Many residents argue that New York City cannot manage this influx on its own and are unhappy with the leadership of Mayor Eric Adams, Gov. Kathy Hochul, and President Joe Biden – all Democrats for whom this 17-month period has turned into a fiscal, logistical, and political quagmire.

Top destination for asylum-seekers 

More than 60,000 men, women, and children, whom the city says are asylum-seekers, are currently in New York City government care, with another 10,000 arriving each month. Some have slept on midtown Manhattan sidewalks, awaiting placement in the city’s growing network of more than 200 housing sites, including homeless shelters, repurposed hotels, and 1,000-person tent cities. 

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