New York City officials continue to try out new iterations of migrant relief centers as they grapple with, what Mayor Eric Adams calls, a “crisis.” This week, the city moved single migrant men out of the Watson Hotel and into the Brooklyn Cruise Terminal. City officials said the move was because the hotel space was needed for families seeking asylum.
However, some of these men voiced concerns about the new, thousand-bed facility. Particularly, that it is far from the jobs they had found in midtown, and that it lacked privacy and heat. City Hall has come out and said the facility is temperature controlled.
As of late January, Mayor Adams said the city was caring for nearly 28,000 migrants seeking asylum. City officials estimate the costs could exceed $1 billion this year. New York City has received far more migrants on buses from the southern border than any other northern city.