Migrant shelter population down more than a third since end of January
Thursday, Apr 18, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Chicago hasn’t updated its migrant dashboard since Tuesday, when it reported 9,137 people in shelters. That’s 34 percent lower than the 13,900 who were in shelters at the end of January. * The governor debunked what may have been a rumor at his Decatur press conference today…
* More from Isabel…
* Chicago Catholic | Migrant families expected to move into former school in May: The archdiocese is leasing the building, which is on the St. Bartholomew campus of Our Lady of the Rosary Parish, to the city of Chicago, which is, in turn, leasing it to the Zakat Foundation, who will be in charge of operations at the shelter at no cost to the city. Parishioners and other neighbors have, for the most part, been supportive of the shelter, and many have expressed interest in volunteering, Wollan said. “There appears to be an abundance of interest in terms of volunteers from the parish committee and the alderman’s office,” Wollan continued. “We want to be sure that we capture all of that. We don’t want to lose that momentum.” * Chalkbeat | Chicago Public Schools estimates between 9,000 and 17,000 migrant students are enrolled, depending on who is counted: Chicago Public Schools says the district is currently serving 8,900 students who arrived since August 2022, including those who passed through the southern border and were bused to Chicago from Texas. The district uses five criteria to identify this cohort: students who speak languages other than English at home, have been identified as students in temporary living situations, are new to the district arriving after August 2022, were born outside of the country, or are listed on the city’s Department of Family and Support Services shelter roster. The Illinois State Board of Education, on the other hand, says any student not born in the U.S. or Puerto Rico who has been attending school in this country for less than three years is eligible for the Immigrant Education Program. Chicago estimates roughly 17,000 students fit this definition. Chicago just started to collect this data in November 2023 and school staff are collecting the birth country and enrollment date of students. * Sen. Robert Peters | Chicago is ready for the Democratic National Convention: Like every other major city in America, Chicago faces its challenges — challenges that today’s Democratic Party is uniquely prepared to solve. We shouldn’t shy away from the problems we all know we face such as the migrant crisis and gun violence. The DNC is the exact moment Chicago needs to galvanize Democrats across the country to come together and nominate the only candidate who understands the complexity of these issues and is ready to help. Let us remember that Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbott is responsible for busing thousands of migrants to our city instead of rolling up his sleeves and finding sustainable ways to welcome migrants who’ve faced perilous journeys to get here. This is a political strategy in an election year that ignores human suffering for the sake of political jockeying on immigration policy, and it’s ugly, callous and un-American. * Rep. Martin McLaughlin | Intentions may be good, but city, state policies aren’t fixing migrant crisis: The desire to care for undocumented illegal immigrants may be well-intentioned, but our response to this crisis is the very essence of a bad idea. It is time to end the Sanctuary State and Sanctuary City policies. It is time for our leaders to demand that the federal government secure our borders. The actions taken to house, clothe and feed undocumented and illegal immigrants fails to address the problems we are facing in a meaningful way. These short-term solutions are simply not sustainable. * President of the YMCA of Metropolitan Chicago Dorri McWhorter | Chicago faces a three-part humanitarian crisis. We can solve this for everyone.: At the historic Wabash YMCA in Bronzeville, local Y leaders welcomed and worked to empower Chicago migrants from the Jim Crow South through housing and job training for the newly arrived African American individuals and families. And no matter the country of origin, each wave of immigrants to the region since 1858 has been met with connection, resources and support from the Y. We are proud to continue that legacy through our partnership with the city of Chicago, assisting with sheltering our newest migrant arrivals since they began arriving in the summer of 2022. We have provided shelter to more than 1,500 individuals through this partnership, along with resources and referrals for many more. We are committed to doing so until a long-term solution is enacted. * Kansas City Star | ‘All are welcome’: Mayor Lucas invites migrants overwhelming other cities to work in KC: “All are welcome in Kansas City,” Lucas said Tuesday in a social media post in which he shared a Bloomberg.com article that quoted him saying the Kansas City area could use more workers for its burgeoning economy. “Proud to work with my fellow mayors like @MikeJohnstonCO and @NYCMayor,” he wrote on X, formerly Twitter, referring to Denver’s mayor and New York City Mayor Eric Adams, “as we work to ensure decompression of new arriving communities and collaboration among cities, labor, non-profits, and federal officials.”
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- Proud Papa Bear - Thursday, Apr 18, 24 @ 7:08 pm:
“ The actions taken to house, clothe and feed undocumented and illegal immigrants fails to address the problems we are facing in a meaningful way.”
Says the man who attended a Christian school.
Is he proposing any meaningful solutions or just complaining about the current ones?