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Stop Blaming Migrants: NYC’s Crisis is About Mismanagement, Not Asylum Seekers

New York City is many things: lively, resilient, diverse, and a mecca for fashion and art. But as the city grapples with an influx of asylum seekers, it is becoming a scapegoating machine. 

Headlines and politicians have focused on migrants as the center of the city’s financial and housing struggles. But this isn’t a migrant crisis; it’s a management crisis. 

We can’t blame everything on asylum seekers. We can’t blame them for New York’s strained budget or overcrowded shelters; that’s morally bankrupt. The crisis has been soaking in for decades: soaring house costs, underfunded social services, and a lack of coordinated governance. Migrants are simply the newest faces to experience the consequences of a failing system. 

New York City has long been grappling with the migrant influx. In 2022, over 200,000 people emigrated to NYC alone, about 65,600 of whom were asylum seekers. While the number of migrants has decreased since 2022, the city continues to have trouble housing a substantial number of people. As of 2023, 8.3 million people live in NYC, 4.5 million more people than in Los Angeles. 

Mayor Eric Adams is a vocal supporter of New York’s status as a sanctuary city. He has criticized the federal government and called the White House irresponsible for handling the migrant crisis, “It is not about the asylum-seekers and migrants, all of us came from somewhere to pursue the American Dream.”

Migrants are still a big part of NYC. In 2021, immigrant New Yorkers paid $61 billion in taxes and had $138 billion in spending power. 

Instead of using this moment to rethink an inequitable housing system or call for a federal work authorization overhaul, leaders are scapegoating the vulnerable. While it’s easier to point at the newcomers, NYC must take responsibility for years’ struggles. 

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