Greene County declares state of emergency over ‘asylum seekers’

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By Melanie Lekocevic

Capital Region Independent Media

The Greene County Legislature on Wednesday declared a state of emergency over New York City’s decision to relocate and house migrants seeking asylum in upstate communities.

“The State of Emergency has been declared do [sic] to failed Federal Policy(ies) together with New York City’s mismanagement and/or underestimation of the impact of inviting ‘asylum seekers’ to the city, resulting in New York City planning to relocate many migrants and asylum seekers to counties outside of and nearby New York City, including Greene County,” according to the declaration.

On the heels of the state of emergency declaration, the county issued another declaration banning municipalities in the county and county hotels and motels from transporting or housing migrants, and stated that businesses or municipalities that do so will face a fine of up to $2,000 per migrant for each day the order is violated.

The state of emergency declaration came two days after the Legislature issued a statement opposing Gov. Kathy Hochul’s executive order to deploy more than $1 billion in taxpayer monies for asylum seekers entering New York City after federal funding under Title 42 expired on May 12.

Greene is one of several rural upstate counties opposing the move.

“The implications of this order are causing significant concern among rural county officials,” according to the Legislature. “The arrival of increased numbers of migrants seeking shelter in the city and state of New York is expected to exacerbate an already large-scale humanitarian crisis and create a disaster emergency to which local governments are unable to adequately respond, creating a threat to health and safety, which could result in the loss of life or property.”

New York City declared itself a “Sanctuary City,” but Greene County is not a “Sanctuary County,” legislators said.

“Most rural counties like Greene are not equipped to handle an immigration influx,” according to the statement. “Transferring the responsibilities that NYC has as a Sanctuary City to rural upstate counties is wrong and amounts to human trafficking. Greene County already has a housing and homeless crisis and we’re out of capacity to house our own homeless population.”

The county does not have the capacity to house large numbers of migrants sent to the county, legislators said.

“We do not have the physical rooms or supporting capacity to house an influx of asylum seekers,” according to the Legislature. “Greene County does not have a city or large urban area with the typical inventory of buildings and supporting services. Greene County does not have a homeless shelter or congregate facilities capable of temporary housing.”

The county also does not have a hospital and emergency medical transportation is limited, the statement continues. Public transportation and social service capacity are also limited and overtaxed, the county said.

“It would be inhumane to knowingly send asylum seekers here out of desperation,” according to the statement. “Without proper consultation, funding, resources and housing capacity, we would have no choice but to put asylum seekers who require significant services back on a bus to the closest Sanctuary City, such as Albany, Kingston or Hudson. This is an example of how lack of planning at the Federal and State levels are causing emergency actions and forcing unfriendly relations between counties.”

Other counties, including Rockland and Orange, have also declared states of emergency over the issue.

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