Beggars to choose from in New York City as illegal aliens shunned their latest digs with demands to return to their previous havens as part of a “disaster waiting to happen.”
On Sunday, after President Joe Biden’s administration gave the thumbs up for a former Brooklyn airfield run by the National Park Service to be used to temporarily house aliens, the first buses pulled up to Floyd Bennett Field. No sooner had they arrived than the smoking freeloaders were told in the New York Post, “We’re coming back.”
The newspaper indicated that dozens of families had been moved from other parts of the city on Sunday and many claimed they had not been told their fate.
“They didn’t tell us where we were going. I work in the Bronx. My kids go to school in the Bronx. For us to live here is ridiculous,” expressed one parent before adding: “We’re coming back.”
Another, who was said to live in Hotel Roosevelt in Midtown Manhattan, “They’re going to take us back to the train so we can go back to 45th Street. We didn’t know we were coming here. They just said they were taking us to a shelter.”
“I can’t stay here. This is crazy,” he added.
NEW: New York City migrants are now complaining and leaving their new makeshift tent city, brought to them by Mayor Eric Adams, because it wasn’t nice enough.
remarkable
The Adams administration tried to transport dozens of families to a makeshift tent city in Brooklyn on… pic.twitter.com/IkHyhuzX94
— Collin Rugg (@CollinRugg) November 13, 2023
After speaking with a representative of the city’s health and hospital system, New York State Rep. Jaime Williams (D-Brooklyn) told the Post, “When I asked her why they left immediately like that, she say people were scared. They weren’t sure what they were doing here. They don’t want to be here and asked to leave.”
“They said, ‘It’s so isolated, how could I go and work again?’ or, ‘Getting my kids to school from here would be crazy.’ So they all asked to leave,” he continued. “It’s a disaster waiting to happen.”
By Sunday night, as some families had agreed to stay in temporary facilities, New York City Mayor Eric Adams (D) was on the scene lamenting the crisis caused by open border policies. “This is not, you know, the best conditions, but we’re dealing with a crisis and we can’t say better than that we need help.”
On the ground at Floyd Bennett Field. pic.twitter.com/1gPM08Olng
— Mayor Eric Adams (@NYCMayor) November 13, 2023
A spokesman for Hizzoner added to the Post: “As we have said time and again, more than 139,500 asylum seekers have moved through our intake system since spring 2022, all of whom have been It offers them vital services.”
“But with more than 65,000 migrants still in our care, and thousands more continuing to arrive each week, we’ve used every possible corner of New York City and simply don’t have good options to accommodate migrants,” the statement continued. The Big Apple had already used hotels, schools and other venues while dealing with citizen backlash.
As for Adams’ call for help, New York Rep. Nicole Malliotakis (D) and Washington Rep. Dan Newhouse (D) agreed on stopping the buck with Biden and he wrote in part, “It is up to Congress to fix this problem as the Biden administration refuses to act. In addition to taking broader steps to secure the border, as when House Republicans passed HR 2 earlier in This year, we must take action to end housing on public land. We must pass HR 5283, the “Protecting Our Communities from Unsafe Border Act of 2023.”
They also noted, “The administration clearly had no plan to deal with the results of this influx,” referring to more than six million illegal crossings since Biden’s inauguration, “and has now resorted to use the public lands of the United States and waste taxpayer dollars to house people who reside here illegally.”
As well as the remote nature of the facility, which was said to be aimed at sheltering around 2,000, inspectors had also raised concerns for fire safety as the nearest fire hydrants for the area served by two FDNY satellite units covering the entire Brooklyn neighborhood were about half. -mile away and is considered “unreliable” and may allow illegal e-bikes to be used, which proves to be an added hazard in terms of the risk of lithium batteries starting fires.
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