Current:Home > InvestFreezing temperatures complicate Chicago’s struggles to house asylum-seekers -Secure Horizon Growth
Freezing temperatures complicate Chicago’s struggles to house asylum-seekers
View
Date:2025-04-19 16:26:33
CHICAGO (AP) — As temperatures hover below freezing in Chicago, dozens of asylum-seekers are staying in the lower level of a library until the bitter cold gripping much of the country lifts.
But after that, Chicago’s plans for offering immediate shelter to the growing number of migrants arriving in the nation’s third-largest city remain murky.
For more than a year, Chicago has wrestled with how to house new arrivals until shelter space is free, utilizing measures that city leaders insist are a stopgap. Last week, it was parked city buses. Before that it was police station lobbies and airports. The makeshift approach has frazzled volunteers, nonprofit groups and migrants wary of the lack of a long-term plan, particularly during the city’s long winters.
“The city’s favorite word for everything is ‘temporary,’” said Vianney Marzullo, a volunteer who has helped migrants staying at O’Hare International Airport. “It’s their new choice of Band-Aid word. Everything is temporary, temporary, temporary.”
Chicago has struggled, like New York and Denver, to deal with the crisis that started in 2022 when migrants began arriving in Democratic-led cities, largely at the direction of Texas Gov. Greg Abbott. The winter weather has further complicated efforts. Last week, New York, which has received more than 170,000 migrants, evacuated a massive tent camp ahead of a storm. Big city mayors have asked repeatedly for more federal help.
Chicago’s response has stood out for its haphazard approach with a heavy reliance on volunteers who have spent more than a year providing medical care, food and donated items.
City leaders say the situation keeps changing and there have been snags along the way.
Mayor Brandon Johnson floated the idea of a heated tent encampment, but construction was scrapped over the risk of contaminants at the former industrial site.
The city had instituted a 60-day limit for shelter stays, but pushed the first batch of notices off to next week because of the weather. Meanwhile, the city has been heavily criticized for conditions at its shelters and the death of a young boy whose family stayed at one.
The political fight has also heated up and spread to the suburbs.
Texas Gov. Abbott’s busing operation has been dropping off migrants at all hours in different Chicago area cities without coordination. When the city began fining bus companies and filing lawsuits, Abbott fired back with chartered planes. Johnson had planned a summit for this week with suburban mayors to discuss the problem; it was canceled by the weather. His office didn’t return a request for comment Wednesday.
“This is an international crisis that requires federal intervention of which local government is subsidizing that work. Never designed to do it, but yet here we are still standing,” Johnson said last week ahead of the storm.
Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker also wrote to Abbott last week asking to suspend buses until the temperatures rise and with many migrants arriving without winter coats or shoes. But Abbott rejected the notion, saying the federal government needs to step up.
More than 33,000 migrants, mostly from Venezuela, have arrived in Chicago since 2022. Currently, nearly 15,000 migrants are living in 28 shelters and the city is continually opening more. Many migrants have gone elsewhere or live with family and friends in the area. Chicago, like other cities, has offered bus tickets out of the city.
The city wound down its much-maligned use of police stations to house migrants, but O’Hare International Airport is still being used, with some asylum-seekers staying for weeks at a time as they await shelter. More than 200 were there Wednesday, according to the city.
Until the weather turned, the city was keeping migrants aboard eight city buses that were running continuously and parked near a downtown highway in an area designated “the landing zone.”
Six heated tents are under construction nearby, which the city says will be used for intake and services, such as medical care. It’s unclear if they will also be used for housing.
Marylin Gonzalez, 34, slept on the buses last week along with her husband and three children, ages 15, 16 and 18. The buses were crowded with sicknesses spreading quickly.
Gonzalez described the atmosphere aboard as tense with many worried about where they would go. She said it made her feel like a prisoner.
“The children are stressed. People get stressed, they argue, they are already desperate,” she said. “Sometimes we have to sleep sitting up because there is no space to lay down.”
Outside the buses, many would take up activities, like throwing around a football, to keep warm.
The landing zone was cleared of people and vehicles on Monday, but by Wednesday morning, the empty warming buses were parked there again, a signal that the city intends to return to using them. The city’s Office of Emergency Management didn’t respond to questions Wednesday about the city’s plans when the weather warms.
Roughly 50 migrants were staying in the lower level of the Harold Washington Library Center, the city’s flagship location downtown during the cold snap, according to people staying there. Migrants, including those who came in on their own to avoid the cold, were living with others facing homelessness. According to the city’s tally, 5 migrants at the library site were on lists for shelters. An Associated Press reporter was not allowed inside.
Angel Alberto Chourio, 30, slept there over the weekend, saying he was trying to figure out his next steps. He and a friend arrived from Venezuela last year. The promise of work out of state didn’t pan out so they came back to Chicago recently. Without any place else to go, they came to the library.
He said Wednesday he was nervous about the shelter stay limits and was not on a waiting list for one.
“We are not used to this. The cold is too much, since it is already below zero,” he said, looking for a silver lining. “At least they give one a chance to continue living.”
veryGood! (6954)
Related
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- Third GOP debate will focus on Israel and foreign policy, but also on who could beat Donald Trump
- US plans to build a $553 million terminal at Sri Lanka’s Colombo port in rivalry with China
- Israel's war with Hamas rages in the Gaza Strip despite mounting calls for a cease-fire
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Croatia recommends people drink tap water after several fall from drinking bottled drinks
- Sandra Oh and Awkwafina are perfect opposites in 'Quiz Lady'
- October obliterated temperature records, virtually guaranteeing 2023 will be hottest year on record
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- Stock market today: Asian shares mostly slip ahead of China-US meeting
Ranking
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- Islamic State group claims responsibility for a minibus explosion in Afghan capital that killed 7
- Will Levis named Tennessee Titans starting QB, per Mike Vrabel
- Starbucks increasing wages, benefits for most workers, those in union won't get some perks
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Lawsuit alleges ‘widespread’ abuse at shuttered youth facility operated by man commuted by Trump
- Massive World War II-era blimp hangar burns in Southern California
- Timbaland Apologizes for Saying Justin Timberlake Should've “Put a Muzzle” on Britney Spears
Recommendation
Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
Where the Republican presidential candidates stand on climate change
Cambodia deports 25 Japanese nationals suspected of operating online scams
Russell Brand accused of sexually assaulting actress on set of Arthur
Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
What stores are open on Thanksgiving and Black Friday 2023?
'Awe-inspiring:' See 5 stunning photos of the cosmos captured by Europe's Euclid telescope
College football bowl projections after Week 10: It's crunch time for playoff contenders