Immigration and housing advocates are stepping up calls for Mayor Eric Adams’ administration to expedite the closure of high-profile migrant shelters ahead of President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration.
They are concerned that immigration officials will raid or stake out the sites in order to round up noncitizens under Trump’s “mass deportation” plan.
A sprawling 2,000-person tent camp at Floyd Bennett Field in southeastern Brooklyn, which is situated on federal park land leased by the city, is of particular concern. Adams administration officials are considering shuttering the site, as first reported by the New York Times, and confirmed by City Hall spokesperson Kayla Mamelak. But no plans have been finalized.
The advocates, including Christine Quinn, president and CEO of shelter provider WIN, are also worried about the city’s more than 200 other emergency migrant shelters, which are segregated from the city’s traditional shelter system.
Advocates worry that highly publicized sites might draw special attention. That includes the roughly 3,000-person migrant shelter in an empty office building in Clinton Hill, Brooklyn, and intake centers at a Midtown hotel and a former East Village Catholic school where migrants seek and reapply for shelter.
“If we have any places that are all migrants, that’s a bad thing,” Quinn said. “Like shooting fish in a barrel.”
Trump’s transition team did not respond to a request for comment.
The Adams administration has already shuttered 11 migrant shelters over the past month and plans to shutter 10 more sites upstate by the end of this month as fewer migrants arrive and seek shelter in New York City.
The closed sites include a warehouse shelter at JFK Airport, while a tent camp on Randall’s Island is set to close in February. That’s as the number of migrants departing shelters outpaces the number of new arrivals, with around 1,300 migrants leaving the shelter system each week compared to roughly 900 newcomers, according to data from the city comptroller’s office.
It remains unclear if the Adams administration will close any additional sites before Trump takes office on Jan. 20. At a press conference on Tuesday, Adams said he won’t finalize his next steps until after he talks to Trump’s chosen “border czar,” Tom Homan.
Immigration advocates have found common ground with lawmakers who have advocated closing large shelters. Rep. Nicole Malliotakis, a Staten Island Republican, and Councilmember Joann Ariola, a Queens Republican, have staunchly opposed the Floyd Bennett Field shelter, citing concerns about spending.
“Turning our federal parks into encampments for unvetted migrants from all over the world is unfair to surrounding communities and the taxpayers who are being forced to foot the bill while our mayor bankrupts our city and slashes services from our citizens,” Malliotakis said in a statement last year, when she announced legislation to prevent migrant housing on federal land.