Tag Archives: Paso

El Paso prepares to start busing migrants again — and NYC could see surge in arrivals – New York Post

  1. El Paso prepares to start busing migrants again — and NYC could see surge in arrivals New York Post
  2. Cops ‘babysitting’ migrants in Lori Lightfoot’s Chicago as police sound alarm: ‘They have no plan’ Fox News
  3. South Shore residents decry city’s plan to use shuttered school as migrant ‘respite center’ CBS Chicago
  4. Migrants sent to Chicago by Texas Governor Greg Abbott to move into park district fieldhouses, unused South Shore school building WLS-TV
  5. Of buses and race: Mayor Adams is wrong to claim that Texas Gov. Greg Abbott is only sending migrants to cities with Black mayors New York Daily News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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NYC’s Eric Adams to tour migrant shelters, visit southern border during El Paso trip

Mayor Eric Adams has a stacked schedule Sunday in El Paso, Texas — where he’ll set eyes on the border crisis that has his own city stretched to the absolute limit.

Hizzoner will spend the day visiting migrant shelters, touring a border patrol processing facility and meeting with local officials including El Paso Mayor Oscar Leeser before flying back home to the Big Apple.

He and Leeser — who’s bussed thousands of migrants to New York City — will meet to discuss how the border crisis has affected the local community there, according to Adams’ office.

Adams will visit a local migrant shelter, a facility that provides services to them and a Customs and Border Protection processing facility. He’ll also visit the southern border.

Adams will then hold a press conference later in the day.

His jaunt to the Lone Star State comes two days after he projected the migrant crisis would cost New York City as much as $2 billion — double what he initially estimated.

Over 36,000 migrants have landed in New York City since the spring.
James Keivom

“We have to ask ourselves, where we [were] already dealing with a potential $5, $6 billion budget deficit in the outyears. Where does that money come from?” said Adams during a Caribbean Power Jam Radio interview on Friday, a day after he announced cuts to just about every city agency.

“That money comes from our schools. It comes from our public safety, our hospitals, our infrastructure, our ACS services, those are our tax dollars that it’s coming from and we got to see an impact in every service we have in the city,” Adams continued, calling it “irresponsible” that there has been no federal response to the border crisis yet.

Adams said last week that over 36,000 migrants have landed in New York City since the spring.

Adams estimated the migrant crisis could cost NYC up to $2 billion.
Paul Martinka
A child is passed over a chain-link fence at the southern border.
James Keivom

On Friday, he called on Gov. Kathy Hochul — who not once mentioned the migrant crisis in her State of the State address last week — to immediately take 500 migrants off his hands via an “emergency mutual aid request.”

“We are at our breaking point. Based off our projections, we anticipate being unable to continue sheltering arriving asylum seekers on our own,” Adams said.

The Adams administration has been forced to pay $275 million in a contract with the Hotel Association of New York City to house at least 5,000 migrants as waves of asylum seekers continue to land in the city from the southern border.

The “emergency” agreement between the city Department of Homeless Services and the Hotel Association puts the city on the hook for as much as $55,000 per migrant.

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El Paso mayor declares state of emergency over influx of migrants from Mexico border

Dec 17 (Reuters) – The mayor of the Texas border city of El Paso declared a state of emergency on Saturday, citing the hundreds of migrants sleeping on the streets in cold temperatures and the thousands being apprehended every day.

Mayor Oscar Leeser, a Democrat, said the emergency declaration would give city authorities the resources and ability to shelter migrants who have crossed the Mexican border.

“We wanted to make sure people are treated with dignity. We want to make sure everyone is safe,” Leeser told reporters.

The move comes as El Paso, a Democratic stronghold with a history of welcoming immigrants, has struggled in recent months to deal with tens of thousands of migrants crossing the border with Mexico. The city is bracing for a possible jump in migrant arrivals after a U.S. judge ordered COVID-era border restrictions known as Title 42 to end by Dec. 21.

A record number of migrants have been caught crossing the U.S.-Mexico border under President Joe Biden, a Democrat who took office in January 2021, fueling attacks by Republican opponents who favor tougher policies.

U.S. border agents have encountered an average of more than 2,400 migrants per day in a 268-mile stretch of the border known as the El Paso Sector over the past week, according to figures published by the city, a 40% increase compared with October.

Even as government officials move migrants in El Paso to other U.S. cities, local shelters are beyond capacity and migrants have been sleeping on the streets as temperatures dip below freezing.

Mario D’Agostino, El Paso’s deputy city manager, said the emergency declaration will also provide the city with extra transportation options to bus migrants to other locations, and extra help from state law enforcement.

As migrant arrivals increased in late August, the city launched a busing program that sent nearly 14,000 migrants to New York and Chicago, saying many Venezuelans were arriving without U.S. sponsors.

The city halted the program in October when the Biden administration began expelling Venezuelans back to Mexico under Title 42, but could restart it if Venezuelans again are allowed to cross into El Paso, D’Agostino said on Thursday.

The U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia on Friday denied an attempt by a group of U.S. states with Republican attorneys general to intervene in a lawsuit to keep Title 42 in place. The states could appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Reporting by Tim Reid and Ted Hessen
Editing by Chris Reese and Michael Perry

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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El Paso mayor declares state of emergency in response to migrant surge



CNN
 — 

El Paso, Texas, Mayor Oscar Leeser declared a state of emergency on Saturday evening following a surge of migrants who have recently arrived in the community and he says are living in unsafe conditions.

The mayor, who had previously declined to issue a state of emergency, said “hundreds” of migrants are on the streets in unsafe conditions while temperatures are beginning to drop, and things could get much worse when a Trump-era border policy is lifted Wednesday, which federal officials expect will lead to an increase in migrant arrivals.

“We know that the influx on Wednesday will be incredible,” the mayor said in a news conference, adding later some officials have estimated the number of arriving migrants could more than double after December 21.

Considering all those factors, “we felt it was a proper time today to call a state of emergency,” he added.

Earlier this week, a senior Border Patrol official said more than 2,400 migrants crossed into the US near El Paso daily over the weekend, describing the number as a “major surge in illegal crossings” in the area.

While those numbers climb and the region’s resources are already severely strained, Wednesday will also mark the court-ordered end of Title 42, a policy which has, since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic, allowed officials to turn away migrants encountered at the southern border.

The deadline has federal officials bracing for a further increase in border crossings.

El Paso’s mayor said he previously did not call an emergency because local leaders and other partners had been able to respond to the arrivals, but, he added, it is no longer the case.

“I said from the beginning, that I would call it when I felt that either our asylum-seekers, or our community, was not safe,” Leeser said Saturday. I really believe that today our asylum-seekers are not safe as we have hundreds and hundreds on the streets and that’s not the way we want to treat people.”

The declaration will allow local leaders to request additional resources from the state like personnel shelters and transportation, the city said in a news release.

An Emergency Operations Center will also be activated and emergency management plans will be put in place to help “protect the health, safety and welfare of the migrants and our community.”

The city added teams have already been deployed in the downtown area who are helping migrants arrange transportation and offering them shelter.

Speaking with CNN’s Boris Sanchez on Saturday morning, before the mayor’s news conference, one El Paso official said the city’s resources were already strained, and he worried what the lifting of Title 42 on Wednesday would mean.

About “a few hundred” migrants daily have recently been getting released on the city’s streets, said Mario D’Agostino, El Paso’s deputy city manager.

“As Title 42 goes away, how’s that going to add to it?” D’Agostino said.

Many of the migrants who are coming into El Paso are not looking to stay, he said, but the city’s infrastructure was struggling to support the crowds pouring in and trickling out.

“We do have a moderate-sized airport, we have a couple of smaller bus terminals, but that’s not enough to keep up with normal holiday traffic,” D’Agostino said.

Now on top of that traffic, hundreds of migrants are looking to leave the city daily. “We don’t have the infrastructure – the flights out of El Paso, the buses out of El Paso – to keep up with this flow.”

During the evening news conference D’Agostino said the declaration will allow city officials to tap in to larger sheltering operations, work with nonprofit organizations who are looking to assist, and help provide them with appropriate facilities, among other things.

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El Paso Mayor Oscar Leeser declares state of emergency ahead of Title 42 lifting

The mayor of El Paso declared a state of emergency Saturday ahead of Wednesday’s deadline to lift a COVID-era policy that is expected to result in more than 6,000 migrants crossing the border a day into an already overwhelmed city where hundreds are already sleeping on the streets.

“Our asylum seekers are not safe,” said El Paso Mayor Oscar Leeser at a specially called press conference to announce the emergency measures. “We have hundreds and hundreds on the street and that’s not the way we treat our people.”

Temperatures have dipped into the 20s in the city, he said, and migrants who have been released into the city are sleeping on downtown streets.

“I want to make sure that people are treated with dignity,” Leeser said, adding that he made the decision to call a state of emergency after a conference call with federal, state and municipal officials. The city government is working with local non-profits that are helping newly arrived migrants travel to other parts of the country where many have family.

Temperatures in the city have dipped into the 20s.

Title 42 allowed border authorities to turn back almost all apprehended migrants to Mexico.


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Migrants who have been released into El Paso are sleeping on the streets.

More than 1,500 migrants have already been crossing the border into the Texas city daily.


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“We all talked about what was best for our community,” he said, adding that more than 1,500 migrants have been crossing the border daily into the city ahead of the Dec. 21 lifting of Title 42, a Trump-era policy that saw migrants sent back into Mexico.

The sober press conference was in sharp contrast to the one called on Thursday. Leeser walked off with the microphone to avoid answering questions after he was challenged about not calling a state of emergency to cope with the migrant influx. At the time, he said that the federal government had promised the beleaguered city $6 million to help it cope with the crisis.

El Paso Mayor Oscar Leeser did not rule out using a military base to house some of the migrants.
James Keivom

“We were able to get the funding without having to [declare an emergency],” Leeser claimed Thursday.

On Saturday, Leeser did not rule out using a nearby military base to house some of the migrants, and that the city was cooperating with state and federal authorities to address the situation.

“This is bigger than El Paso,” said Leeser. “Everyday the situation changes. We have to adapt to different things day in and day out.”

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El Paso Health official discusses what first confirmed Monkeypox case means for El Paso

EL PASO, Texas — Health experts discuss what the first confirmed case of Monkey Pox means for El Paso.

“We knew this was gonna happen eventually just like with SARS-COVID 2 it happened in a lot of places around the country and eventually got to El Paso,” said Ogechika Alozie E.O at Sunset West Health.

Monkeypox is a viral disease that can be spread through skin-to-skin contact. It resembles a rash with blisters it can be painful or itchy. Symptoms of Monkeypox include rash, fever, chills, swollen lymph nodes, and exhaustion.

Now that it’s made its way to El Paso health experts say the general public should not be worried.

“This is not airborne this is close physical contact up till now 98 to 99 percent of the person’s who’ve gotten this have been men// the majority of El Pasoans aren’t at risk for this,” said Alozie.

Still, some El Pasoans were concerned.

“I think that’s pretty crazy I mean we aren’t even really out of the woods with covid yet we’re still getting cases with that and then now we have Monkeypox coming up so it’s honestly kind of scary,” said El Pasoan Scott Turner.

Doctor Alozie says on average a person with Monkeypox can be contagious for up to 21 days, The lesions and bumps can last another 3 weeks. As long as those are present a person is contagious. He offers this advice if you catch Monkeypox.

“If you’re sick take yourself out of circulation if you have lesions take yourself out of circulation go see your physician and try to figure out what it is and if you’re in contact with somebody that may have lesions its best for you to avoid them for a while,” said Alozie.

“I feel like we just got over one and now we’re going through another one so it is kind of overwhelming but I mean all we can do is keep going forward and have trust,” Selena Abdalla.

Alozie added Monkeypox unlike COVID is spread through tighter social networks with close physical contact on average of 3 hours.

According to a news release:

“Public Health officials confirmed that a female in her 50s is the community’s first confirmed Monkeypox case. She is currently recovering at home and the City’s epidemiology team has begun an investigation and contact tracing.”

An epidemiology team is working to identify close contacts to offer them vaccines.

El Paso received 200 doses of the Monkeypox vaccine earlier this month.

“Monkeypox continues to be a global threat and for this reason, we strongly recommend everyone continue practicing safety precautions to keep themselves and their family, especially our most vulnerable loved ones, safe from all diseases, whether it is COVID, Monkeypox, or the flu,” said City-County Health Authority Dr. Hector Ocaranza.

This is a developing news story. Download the KVIA news app to get alerts the moment news breaks.

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Police say two arrests made in fiery, deadly crash in east El Paso; drivers went over 110 mph

EL PASO, Texas – A 19-year-old woman and 24-year-old man were arrested Wednesday for the deadly multi crash on I-10 at Hawkins.

Police say Saul Miguel Gutierrez of Horizon was driving a Corvette that lost control and hit the center median.

According to investigators, Kayla Nunez of Chaparral was driving a Tahoe that slammed into the back of a Pontiac Vibe.

The impact of that collision caused the Pontiac Vibe to lose control, hit a cement barrier and burst into flames.

Police say both drivers were driving more than 110 mph at the time of the crash.

On Monday, ABC-7 spoke to a woman who said it was her brother who died in that crash. Yvonne Delgado identified the driver as Raymond Barron.

Police say the victim’s identity is still pending. Delgado said the body was so badly burned, he can’t be recognized.

Police say there was a 23-year-old passenger in the Corvette. He was identified as Javier Lechuga of El Paso.

Police say there was a 16-year-old male passenger in the Tahoe. That passenger’s identity was not released.

Gutierrez and Nunez remain in jail. They both face two charges, manslaughter and accident involving death. Their bonds total $1.6 million each.

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Fire prompts mandatory evacuations for a neighborhood east of Colorado Springs off Curtis Road in El Paso County

EL PASO COUNTY, Colo. (KKTV) – Mandatory evacuations were in place for a neighborhood east of Colorado Springs on Sunday due to a fire.

The following message went out to residents in an area near Curtis Road and Patton Drive:

“This is the El Paso County Sheriff’s Office. Today is 04-10-2022. W to Curtis Rd, E to Peyton Hwy, N to Falcon Hwy, S to Hwy 94 is under a Mandatory Evacuation Notice due to a fire in the area of N Curtis Rd / Patton Dr. Evacuate the area immediately. Call 9-1-1 only if you are in immediate danger. Tune in to local media for updates.”

An estimated size of the fire was not available.

The evacuation area was updated to the following at about 6 p.m.:

At about 5:15 p.m. the El Paso County Sheriff’s Office tweeted the following:

Click here for updates from Peak Alerts.

Copyright 2022 KKTV. All rights reserved.



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New BA.2 subvariant has arrived in El Paso: what you need to know

EL PASO, Texas — The BA.2 subvariant of COVID-19, which has caused surging cases in Europe and parts of Asia in recent weeks, has been detected in El Paso, health officials said. 

BA.2 made up a third of new cases in the United States as of Tuesday, and will soon overtake the original omicron subvariant as the dominant variant in the United States, according to Dr. Anthony Fauci, chief medical advisor to President Joe Biden. 

The omicron subvariant known as BA.1 swept through the Borderland in early 2022, causing a spike in local cases, staffing shortages and disruptions to daily life. BA.2 is another subvariant of omicron, differing in its genetic sequence from BA.1, and is considered a variant of concern by the World Health Organization.

It’s not the time to declare victory against COVID-19, Fauci said during an interview Sunday on ABC’s This Week while discussing the BA.2 subvariant. 

“This virus has fooled us before, and we really must be prepared for the possibility that we might get another variant and we don’t want to be caught flatfooted on that,” he said.

El Paso City-County Health Authority Dr. Hector Ocaranza confirmed that the BA.2 subvariant has already been detected in El Paso, but the extent to which it will affect the region or cause a new surge in cases is uncertain. El Paso has seen a steady decline in new COVID-19 cases in recent weeks, and is currently at the lowest rating for the COVID-19 community scorecard with less than 15 cases per 100,000 people per day. 

El Paso Matters spoke with Ocaranza and local infectious disease expert Wendy Walker to find out what we know and can expect of the latest strain of coronavirus. 

What we know about BA.2

Although much is still unknown about the BA.2 subvariant, experts say that it is approximately 50% more transmissible than the BA.1 version of omicron that caused spiking case numbers in recent months. 

Walker, an infectious disease researcher and assistant professor at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center El Paso, said although the BA.2 subvariant is more transmissible, evidence doesn’t suggest that it’s more virulent.

“The good thing is that the preliminary evidence for both (BA.1 and BA.2) indicates that they don’t cause more severe disease in a person who is infected,” she said. “Though the viruses have become able to evade the antibodies induced by the vaccine, the vaccine is still very effective at preventing severe infection.” 

Ocaranza explained that, by and large, BA.2 bears many similarities to the original omicron. 

“The omicron variant has about 30 mutations, particularly in the spike protein, and the BA.2 has some other mutations,” he said. “But (BA.2) shares a lot of the genetic similarities of the omicron, and that’s why they call it a subvariant.” 

He said the largest source of concern with BA.2 is its ability to infect large numbers of people.

It’s unlikely to be reinfected with the BA.2 subvariant shortly after having been infected with the BA.1 subvariant of omicron, according to a February preprint research study. That means those who got omicron in recent months may have some added protection against the new subvariant. 

Walker said that while preprint studies can be useful for understanding emerging dynamics, they should be taken “with a grain of salt” because they are not peer reviewed.

“Normally (information) doesn’t go from scientists to the public until it’s been peer-reviewed and other scientists have looked at it … and we can be very confident then in those findings,” she said. “But of course, nowadays with COVID, we need the information sooner, so people look at the preprint studies.”

What’s in store for El Paso

Ocaranza expressed optimism for El Paso’s outlook given high local vaccination rates and a protective effect caused by the large number of people recently infected with the original omicron subvariant. 

He said he does not anticipate a massive surge in cases caused by BA.2 in El Paso, “hopefully, let me knock on the wood here.”

“We’re still gonna see some, but it’s not gonna be a very sharp, large surge of cases,” Ocaranza said. 

Dr. Hector Ocaranza, El Paso City-County Health Authority (courtesy City of El Paso)

Walker agreed with Ocaranza and anticipated that a potential BA.2 surge will be tempered by the low likelihood of reinfection within a short period of time from having been infected with the original omicron. 

“Of course, nobody can predict the future, but it might be that the surge is not as bad because we did have so many people infected by BA.1 omicron, the original omicron,” she said. 

But in the longer term, she said El Pasoans should be prepared for new variants and more surges in COVID-19 cases, where reinfection is possible. 

“I think that we can continue to anticipate additional surges of COVID, both nationwide, and in our area — this virus doesn’t seem to be going away,” she said. 

Ocaranza cautioned against using the term “herd immunity,” given the tendency of COVID-19 to mutate and change, and the potential for reinfection among those who have already tested positive in the past. 

“Initially we needed to have a goal set, and the virus had not mutated, had not changed,” he said. “So as the virus continues to change and mutate we cannot achieve herd immunity. And that’s why we don’t use that term anymore.” 

He and Walker both encouraged El Pasoans to expect that COVID-19 will not completely go away. Walker compared it to the flu, for which Americans receive annual vaccines, and said the hope is that COVID-19 will become more mild as it mutates. 

“There’s always gonna be the risk, the risk is not gonna be completely zero,” Ocaranza said. He encouraged vaccines as the best tool for combating serious illness from COVID-19.

The future of vaccines

With the newly dominant subvariant, vaccine manufacturers Pfizer and BioNTech have sought emergency authorization for a second booster dose for adults who are 65 and older. Moderna has asked the Food and Drug Administration to authorize a second booster shot to all adults. But with stalled coronavirus relief funding in Congress, the future of additional vaccine supplies in the U.S. are in question. 

U.S. Rep. Veronica Escobar, D-El Paso, said that consistent testing and vaccinations are among the best tools for protection against COVID-19.

“I remain committed to working with my colleagues in Congress to invest as quickly as possible in providing more funding for the testing that keeps us safe and make sure we have sufficient funds to bring the pandemic to a close,” she wrote in an email to El Paso Matters. 

Veronica Escobar

Ocaranza declined to comment on how stalled congressional funding for coronavirus may impact the availability of testing and vaccines in El Paso, but he encouraged El Pasoans to get vaccinated now if they haven’t yet, and to use the city’s free testing sites. 

“Take advantage of the testing, take advantage of the vaccination while it’s widely available,” he said. “If they see that they don’t have the demand for all that then it’s gonna go away. Why would you have it available if people don’t come?”

Walker said she would not be surprised if a fourth dose of the vaccine is recommended in the future, and also expects that a booster will become recommended for children ages five and up. 

“Viruses do evolve, that’s the normal state of things,” she said.  

“I think we will continue to see the evolution of this virus, new variants evolving and additional surges. The best thing people can do is get vaccinated, even though they’re not as effective at preventing transmission of BA.2 as they were with the original coronavirus strain, they’re still extremely effective at preventing severe disease or hospitalization.”

Feature photo: A computer generated representation of the COVID-19 virus (SARS-CoV-2) under an electron microscope. (Felipe Esquivel Reed/ Creative Commons)

This article first appeared on El Paso Matters and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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El Paso Walgreens pharmacist mistakenly gives woman Covid vaccine, not flu shot

(Editor’s note: Martin initially said it was a pharmacy tech who administered the shot, but later indicated that she learned it actually was a pharmacist.)

EL PASO, Texas — El Pasoan Becky Martin went to her local Walgreens store for a flu shot but left with the Covid-19 vaccination shot instead.

Martin posted her story to social media about what happened and also spoke with ABC-7 about the mishap.

“The pharmacy tech gave me the shot then said ‘oh no,'” Martin explained.

She said the pharmacist apologized profusely and the store manager told her, “this has never happened in the 20 years I have been here.”

Martin said she is now worried about possible side effects from the Covid vaccine injection as she prepares to go on a planned trip later in the week.

In response to questions from ABC-7, Walgreens issued the following statement:

“Due to privacy laws, Walgreens can’t comment on specific patient events, but know that patient safety is our top priority. Generally speaking, such instances are rare. However, we take these matters very seriously. In the event of any error, our first concern is always our patients’ well-being. Our multi-step vaccination procedure includes several safety checks to minimize the chance of human error and we have reviewed this process with our pharmacy staff in order to prevent such occurrences.”

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