New York Gov. Kathy Hochul is supporting the city’s effort to suspend a unique legal agreement that requires it to provide emergency housing to homeless people, as a large influx of migrants overwhelms the city’s shelter system.

Hochul endorsed the New York City’s challenge to the requirement in a court filing this week, telling reporters Thursday that the mandate was never meant to apply to an international humanitarian crisis.

The city has for months sought to roll back the so-called right to shelter rule following the arrival of more than 120,000 migrants since last year. Many of the migrants have arrived without housing or jobs, forcing the city to erect emergency shelters and provide various government services, with an estimated cost of $12 billion over the next few years.

  • @[email protected]
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    11 months ago

    $12B divided by 3 years divided by 120,000 people is a whopping $3,333 per year to shelter someone. In NYC. That’s less than a lot of people’s monthly rent. (Edit: Wrong math, see below $33k.) And while they may show up without jobs, immigrants generally want to work so they’ll pay back their support in taxes quickly enough.

    Mayor Cop-Liar and Governor Could-Barely-Win-New-York-as-a-Democrat just can’t help that centrist impulse to get tough on the wrong people to save a shiny nickel.

    • @testfactor
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      1411 months ago

      That math sounded wrong to me, so I ran it.

      Twelve billion is a 12 with 9 zeros after it. Lop off 4 from the 120,000 leaves you with 5 zeros, and the twelves cancel, so 100,000 per person. Divided by 3 is $33,333 per person per year.

      So, yeah, your math didn’t math I’m afraid. Probably still a good bit cheaper than most people’s rent in NYC, but still very expensive.

      • @[email protected]
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        211 months ago

        Yeah, you’re right, I missed a decimal point. $33k is cheap for NYC, but a much more significant cost.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 months ago

        The average rent, per person, in NYC is $2k-$4k. I do not believe most people have the money to support migrants, and neither are most people planning their finances with that expectation that a larger portion of their income is going to migrants.

        Remember even $120k is around $84k take home. Minus rent ($24k low end apartment rent), you are left with $40k (after 401k and healthcare). Adding migrant costs, what is the point of living in NYC at that point…

        • @SheeEttin
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          311 months ago

          what is the point of living in NYC at that point

          More social services, opportunities for work, probably a hell of a lot better living conditions than wherever they left.

          • PugJesus
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            211 months ago

            Honestly, any real solution would need to be Federal. But gobermint bad, according to 33% of the population, and another 33% are too timid to contradict them.

          • @[email protected]
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            211 months ago

            I’m saying what is the point for the average New Yorker. The migrants are putting a strain on people who live in NYC legally, imagine out of the blue you are losing a huge portion of your paycheck in an already expensive city. Waves of migrants showing up in a city is unfair to the people.

            • @aegis_sum
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              211 months ago

              How is the average New Yorker all of a sudden losing a huge portion of their paycheck due to migrants? Does their rent immediately increase? Do taxes unexpectedly balloon overnight? I don’t see your point.

              • @[email protected]
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                11 months ago

                Let’s see, hospitals are backed up, social services are overwhelmed, and supplemental housing is already full of homeless. Where does all this money come from. The mayor of NYC went to Mexico to beg people bit to come… pretty unprecedented for a city mayor to even be involved in foreign politics and Mexico isn’t even where most migrants are coming from. It doesn’t make you a bad person to think illegal migrants are bad for the economy.