Not even 2% of NYC migrants want tickets out of town


New York’s illegal migrants want to stay right here.  

In the latest grim news from the front lines of the crisis, the vast majority of migrants taken into the city’s overtaxed shelter system are simply staying put once their first 30 days are up, with less than 2% of adult migrants saying “yes” to a taxpayer-funded ticket elsewhere (based on numbers from the city’s East Village shelter re-entry center).

In other words, the city’s longtime policy of handing out travel tickets in hopes that people can find a better situation elsewhere is having close to zero effect.  


Of the 1,600 asylum seekers who have gone to an intake center in the East Village when their 30-day shelter stay expired, an average of 2% are accepting a free plane or bus ticket, according to reports.
J. Messerschmidt for NY Post

Yes, every little bit helps: Even that under-2% means a fractional easing of the massive pressure exerted by the 175,000-plus arrivals, a tsunami set to hit the city for $10 billion through the next fiscal year

But that more than 98% of migrants aren’t taking the offer of a free ride to move on reveals that free bus or plane tickets were only ever a way to manage the crisis — and in this case, to barely do that. 

It’s yet more evidence that this is a national crisis; local and even state solutions, no matter how generous, can’t deal with the mainspring of the problem

Plus, New York’s generosity toward these arrivals borders on the pathological, thanks to the open-border progressives who hold massive sway in city government (which no doubt partly explains the eagerness to stay, along with our plentiful gray-market job opportunities in app deliveries and the like). 

No: As long as President Biden pursues his policy of refusing to keep our border secure, illegal immigrants will continue to flood across and on into the interior.

The budgets of major cities as far from the border as New York will be strained to the utmost. 

And the pain and chaos will not end.



NEWS CREDIT