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A shelter-limit fight looms

POLITICO's must-read briefing informing the daily conversation among knowledgeable New Yorkers
Oct 05, 2023 View in browser
 

By Jeff Coltin, Emily Ngo and Nick Reisman

With help from Jason Beeferman

Newly arrived asylum seekers wait in a holding area at the Port Authority bus terminal before being sent off to area shelters and hotels. New legislation aims to prevent the city from limiting the duration of migrant Shelter stays. | Spencer Platt/Getty Images

With the battle over homeless vouchers still unsettled, progressive New York City Council members are picking another fight with the Adams administration over his newest shelter policy.

Council Member Shahana Hanif plans to introduce a bill today that would block the city from imposing a time limit on shelter stays for migrants — or for anyone.

“This is essentially an eviction notice,” Hanif told Playbook of the mayor’s plans, “and we're saying the mayor is not allowed to put out directives that are basically kicking folks out. … It sets dangerous precedent.”

Mayor Eric Adams announced in July that single, adult migrants would only be able to stay in a city shelter for 60 days. In September, the limit was dropped to 30 days.

After the date, they’re not blocked from shelter entirely — that would be a violation of the city’s right-to-shelter mandate that requires housing anyone out on the streets — but they have to go through the intake process again.

City Hall says it’s focused on “exit strategies,” and that everyone who gets a notice — 15,600 so far — also gets “aggressive case management” to get them on their own two feet.

And by the way, 30 days is generous, Deputy Mayor Anne Williams-Isom said in a Wednesday briefing on the migrant crisis. “Most of what you’ll see on the border is people get 24 hours, 72 hours,” she said.

If Adams actually has a list of haters, like he claimed Tuesday, Hanif would be on it, along with some of her cosponsors: Council Members Lincoln Restler, Jenifer Gutiérrez, Carmen De La Rosa, Crystal Hudson, Pierina Sanchez and Sandy Nurse.

And City Hall is taking aim at them with their typical retort, noting to Playbook that most of their districts host few to no emergency shelters for migrants, suggesting they’re not feeling the crisis. Hanif’s Brooklyn district, they say, has just one.

It’s two, Hanif responded, and that’s emblematic of City Hall preferring finger pointing to solutions: “As a legislator, as the chair of the Immigration Committee, as the daughter of immigrants, I have the right to call out their bullshit and their xenophobia.”

“This bill would be disconnected from the reality our city is dealing with every single day,” Adams spokesperson Kayla Mamelak said in a statement, which said the city is proud of its response, but resources are strained. They haven’t seen the specific language, but blocking the 30-day rule “would hurt the city’s response to this crisis.”

Could this be another veto override fight, like over providing housing vouchers? Time will tell.

That would need Speaker Adrienne Adams’ support, and her office just gave Playbook their standard answer for new legislation: She’ll be reviewing it. — Jeff Coltin

IT’S THURSDAY. Meaning it’s almost Friday. Got news? Send it our way: Jeff Coltin, Emily Ngo and Nick Reisman.

WHERE’S KATHY? In New York City with no public schedule.

WHERE’S ERIC? In Mexico where he will meet with the head of a local migrant shelter, participating in a roundtable with Mexican business leaders, talking with the CEO of AT&T Mexico in a fireside conversation, traveling from Mexico City to Puebla, meeting with the state of Puebla’s local assembly, receiving an honorary degree from the Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, receiving an award during a meeting with Puebla’s governor, community leaders and migrants, holding a virtual media briefing on his trip, returning to Mexico City, meeting with the Mexican Minister of Foreign Affairs — and, finally, appearing on a Mexican news show.

QUOTE OF THE DAY: “History, by its nature, is complex” — the City Council’s Italian Caucus in a statement arguing that Monday’s holiday should still be known as Columbus Day.

 

GO INSIDE THE CAPITOL DOME: From the outset, POLITICO has been your eyes and ears on Capitol Hill, providing the most thorough Congress coverage — from political characters and emerging leaders to leadership squabbles and policy nuggets during committee markups and hearings. We're stepping up our game to ensure you’re fully informed on every key detail inside the Capitol Dome, all day, every day. Start your day with Playbook AM, refuel at midday with our Playbook PM halftime report and enrich your evening discussions with Huddle. Plus, stay updated with real-time buzz all day through our brand new Inside Congress Live feature. Learn more and subscribe here.

 
 
ABOVE THE FOLD

Former gubernatorial candidate Lee Zeldin is confident Republicans can gain ground in New York's local races even in off-year elections. | John Minchillo/AP Photo

GOP-MENTUM: Republicans want to expand on last year’s successes in New York, counting the local-level races as a potentially key building block going into 2024.

Former Rep. Lee Zeldin believes a combination of issues, including the sustained concerns around crime as well as the fresh worries over the migrant crisis, will help the party even in the off-year elections.

“It’s the top issue that people are concerned about on the national level,” Zeldin said of the migrant crisis, speaking Wednesday with Playbook. “They see the impact on the state where they live, and now there’s more of a local concern as conversations continue to ramp up about busing migrants to other areas of the state.”

Zeldin, the 2022 Republican nominee for governor, spent the summer on the campaign trail in a bid to boost GOP candidates in municipal races.

This week, he’s back on the hustings for Republicans in Monroe County running in legislative elections. He'll also headline fundraisers, including an event in Columbia County for local Republicans.

But to be successful, Republicans will need to be competitive in the city, not just upstate. Zeldin expects that's possible.

“There’s fatigue and very important local issues that are creating an opening for the Republican challengers,” Zeldin said. “We’ve gotten active in New York City Council races and will continue to stay engaged in those City Council races where we have an opportunity to win.” — Nick Reisman

GOROFF WENT OFF: Nancy Goroff raised about $325,000 Wednesday after launching her campaign for NY-1, the Democrat’s team told Playbook. — Jeff Coltin

WHAT CITY HALL IS READING

The Adams administration is supporting their argument to change the city’s right-to-shelter rule with a four-decade-old New York Times article. | Emily Ngo/POLITICO

BRINGING THE RECEIPTS: City Hall is using news archives to make the case that the right-to-shelter provision of yesteryear was not meant to accommodate the demand for the shelter of today.

Their receipts? A New York Times article from 1981, when the Callahan v. Casey consent decree was agreed to.

“It was reported that the immediate effect was for the city to find 125 beds right away,” Adams’ chief counsel Lisa Zornberg said Wednesday. “And where was it reported that the city would find those beds? Upstate in the Catskills.”

Compare that to the 63,000 migrants now in the city’s care and the 600 people who’ve been arriving here each day, officials said.

The Adams administration is seeking to suspend right-to-shelter requirements in times of emergency.

The Legal Aid Society is fighting the move.

“You never want to be in a position where you have to stand up in court and say that the City of New York should not be permitted to put people into the streets where they could die from exposure to the elements,” said Joshua Goldfein, an attorney at the Legal Aid Society. — Emily Ngo

More from the city:

— Tuberculosis cases are rising in New York, but budget cuts and understaffing mean the city is struggling to keep up. (POLITICO)

— The MTA released its 20-year list of needs to protect against flooding, electrify buses and repair bridges. (POLITICO Pro)

— Adams hasn’t hired the “extreme weather coordinator” promised after Hurricane Ida. (Daily News)

WHAT ALBANY'S READING

The MTA has dramatically improved the state of its finances, but a new report shows ridership must improve to keep the agency fiscally healthy. | AP Photo/Richard Drew

JUST CHUGGING ALONG: The MTA has balanced its budget thanks to a new tax increase on city employers, but sluggish ridership numbers need to return to near pre-pandemic levels if the agency wants to achieve long-term financial health, according to a report from state Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli set to be released today.

The report details how the MTA now rakes in more than $1 billion annually from an increase in the Payroll Mobility Tax on large city employers. The tax has enabled the MTA to balance its budget in its five-year financial plan.

At the start of this year, the MTA was looking at a $600 million budget shortfall.

“This newfound fiscal stability gives the MTA the opportunity to make improvements that will ensure a safe, clean and on time transit system that riders want to use,” DiNapoli said in a statement.

Despite the momentary good news, current ridership numbers are dwarfed by pre-pandemic numbers. The MTA has just 69 percent of the passengers it did in pre-pandemic years. That number is expected to increase to 80 percent by the conclusion of 2026, current projections show.

Fares and tolls only make up 39 percent of current revenue, when in pre-pandemic years they brought in more than half of all revenue. About 44 percent of the MTA’s revenue is now made up of state taxes, an increase from 37 percent in 2019, the report said. — Jason Beeferman

More from Albany:

— MTA boss Janno Lieber owns a stake in a Manhattan lot that Silverstein Properties and Parx Casino are bidding to build a casino on. (Daily News)

— Gov. Kathy Hochul joined a UAW picket line in Rockland County as the autoworkers’ strike continues. (POLITICO)

— The governor is extending the deadline for bars to apply for special licenses to serve on Sundays. (NY1)

 

Enter the “room where it happens”, where global power players shape policy and politics, with Power Play. POLITICO’s brand-new podcast will host conversations with the leaders and power players shaping the biggest ideas and driving the global conversations, moderated by award-winning journalist Anne McElvoy. Sign up today to be notified of new episodes – click here.

 
 
AROUND NEW YORK

— Nearly one third of 2022 shootings occurred on 3 percent of city streets. (Gothamist)

— A $100 million state housing voucher program saw just $3 million used in its first year. (Times Union)

— Drunk driving deaths continue to increase in New York, prompting questions about the state’s blood alcohol concentration limit for drivers. (LoHud)

— The fastest swim ever recorded around the entirety of Staten Island took this man 14 hours and 24 minutes. (SI Advance)

ON TV: State Inspector General Lucy Lang will be on PIX 11 at 7:30 a.m.

SOCIAL DATA BY DANIEL LIPPMAN

IN MEMORIAM: Attorney and former NYPD Captains Endowment Association President Roy T. Richter died by suicide Tuesday. (New York Post)

HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Jon Banner … James Hamblin … S. Andrea (Sigrid) Samuelsen … Will Keesee … Caitlin Offinger … Sloane Potter 

WAS WEDNESDAY: Lee Goldberg

Real Estate

— Manhattan home prices are holding steady after median sales prices have dropped for the last four quarters. (Crain's New York Business)

 

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