JFK mail warehouse may soon become migrant shelter
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Friday, June 2, 2023

Hello, and welcome to the month of June. We’re almost halfway through the year already. Yay?

In today’s newsletter: City’s efforts fall short of need to hire legal representation for asylum seekers, advocates say “at least $70 million” needed

Also in the news: City officials are expecting to provide temporary relief to 1,000 adult asylum-seekers at JFK mail warehouse — Work stoppages, rallies support ‘A Day without Immigrants’ in protest of DeSantis law — And more in Stories We’re Following

Plus: Catch up recent Documented stories

By: Fisayo Okare 


NYC’s efforts fall short of providing legal representation for asylum seekers, advocates say “at least $70 million” needed  share

Immigrant rights advocacy groups  — Immigrant Arc, Make The Road NY, Win, New York Immigration Coalition, and others — gathered in City Hall Park on Thursday morning to demand that the New York City government allocate “at least $70 million” for legal services for asylum seekers. City Councilmember Shahana Hanif, City Comptroller Brad Lander, and Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso were there to support their effort.

The city administration will decide by June 30 whether the adopted budget will include the $70 million for legal services for asylum seekers.

Of that amount, advocates have asked that $10 million be used for scaling up pro se legal clinics to support people representing themselves as they apply for asylum, work authorizations, and temporary protected status. The remaining $60 million could go toward providing legal representation to those in immigration courts. 

Hanif, chair of the immigration committee, said earlier last month she and her colleagues asked the city administration about the $5 million it said would allocate for immigration legal services. “They have not provided any clarity” on how much has been spent so far, Hanif said.

Instead, Hanif said council members were disappointed to learn from the city administration in May that the $5 million has not been allocated for legal services for asylum seekers who must meet the one-year application deadline to file for asylum or risk being out of status and becoming undocumented in the city. Now, she and other advocates are demanding an expansion to $70 million for immigration legal services. 

Over the past year, New York City has allocated resources and funds to helping asylum seekers, with the majority of it going into temporary housing costs.

“We have spent almost nothing helping folks get out and onto their feet. It is well past time we got started,” Lander said at the rally.

When asylum seekers are able to file their asylum applications and get their work authorization to get jobs, many can lessen their reliance on city services. Lander explained that this kind of support the cost-effective measure to help families and individuals move out of the shelter system. 

While asylum seekers have entered into shelters, and in many cases registered their children to attend public school programs, to receive health care, or for NYC ID, the failure to help them file for asylum applications will lead to a crisis, Lander said, as thousands of them will become undocumented.

Win — one of the major providers of family shelter and supportive housing in the city — is providing shelter to 270 asylum seeker families. Many of those the organization Win has encountered have thought they started the asylum process simply by crossing the border, which isn’t true, explained Dr. Henry Love, vice president of Policy and Planning at Win.

“We worked with the city, we were waiting for the city to do something beyond Know Your Rights legal instructional courses,” he said at the rally.

Win has partnered with NYLAG and pro bono lawyers to do a series of pro se legal assistance clinics from scratch. Hanif said the city can replicate these programs or use them as a blueprint. Through that partnership, Win has so far helped over three dozen families apply for “the incredibly arduous” process of asylum, Love said. 

Still, many families risk timing out on the one-year deadline.

“This is a racial justice issue,” Love said.

Many of the families that Win has received in its shelters are Indigenous or Afro descendants, Love said. When staff at Win talked to asylum seekers about their stories, the individuals from Garifuna communities in Honduras and Indigenous communities in Ecuador highlighted violence that they were facing. 

“They have incredibly strong asylum cases,” Love said. “It would be an ultimate shame because of the bureaucracy of our system, the complexities, that they wouldn't be able to submit the application and be able to ultimately get asylum in this country.”

Lander said the city has not focused as much on providing legal representation to asylum seekers for two reasons. The first is because of the logistical challenge of scaling up the shelter system, which has been the main focus of Mayor Eric Adams’ administration. The second is because the city had no system in place and lacked the data to connect people to legal services, as people were not asked about their immigration status when they sought shelter. 

“I actually think even just next fiscal year, spending this $70 million will save several hundred million. The cost of providing legal representation is far less than the cost of even three months of shelter, much less a year of shelter,” Lander said. 

The elected officials and advocates are also still requesting the federal government — either through humanitarian parole or Temporary Protected Status — enable folks to be eligible for work authorization immediately after they file their asylum application and not six months after. 

There’s a federal obligation to help people seek asylum safely, Lander said. But the city does not have to wait for federal support to provide the outreach, pro se clinics and legal representation people need to file those applications to get work authorization and move out of shelter. 

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STORIES WE ARE FOLLOWING

New York

Adams awaits green light from feds to convert JFK mail warehouse to migrant shelter
City officials are expecting to provide temporary relief to 1,000 adult asylum seekers there, and have installed 500 cots and several trailers with showers and bathrooms. — THE CITY share

Inside the grassroots granny network that helps migrants
The network was created in 2018 to protest the separation of families at the southern border. Now it has a presence in 14 states, and recently helped migrants who arrived in Newburgh. — The New York Times share  


Around the U.S.

Work stoppages, rallies support ‘A Day without Immigrants’ in protest of Florida law
Truckers and crane workers showed their solidarity with the local immigrant community by organizing protests across Orlando. — NBC News share

Everything immigrants need to know about the visa bulletin
Former State Department official Charlie Oppenheim discusses how the visa bulletin affects immigration policy and family and employment-based immigration. — Forbes share  


Washington D.C.

More migrants waiting in Mexico can soon secure asylum appointment through CBP One
Officials are preparing to distribute 1,250 appointments per day on the CBP One app starting in June — about 38,750 each month. — CBS News share

Revised DACA program debated before Texas judge who previously ruled against it
Judge Andrew Hanen had declared DACA illegal saying it had not been subjected to public notice and comment periods. — The Washington Post share  

 
 

CATCH UP ON DOCUMENTED EXCLUSIVES

Migrants arrive in Albany as part of New York City’s relocation efforts
The town of Colonie in Albany County sued New York City in the county Supreme Court over the weekend to stop the city from transporting more migrants.  share

Nonprofit New Women New Yorkers prepares immigrants for the job market
Over 900 immigrant women have gone through the job readiness workshops run by New Women New Yorkers, its founder Arielle Kandel says. share

What happens if you don’t file for asylum before the one year deadline?
Unless migrants meet certain criteria, failing to file their asylum application within the one-year deadline could risk having their asylum claim denied.  share

 
 

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Today's newsletter was edited by Kathryn Krawczyk.

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