HUNDREDS of migrants flooded into NYC’s Roosevelt Hotel overnight to be processed – as the Big Apple becomes the epicenter of the crisis away from the border

Hundreds of migrants poured into The Roosevelt Hotel in New York City overnight to be processed and given shelter. while the city continues to bear the brunt of the asylum seeker crisis.

New York City has hosted at least 95,000 migrants so far in 2023, despite an apparent struggle against the massive influx. The city has welcomed more than twice as many migrants than Los Angeles, Miami and Houston since Title 42 was lifted in May after the pandemic ended.

“I was told that the migrants are coming in at a rapid pace and it is overwhelming the process. NYC will surely fall without the right help,” independent reporter Leeroy Johnson said Thursday evening.

It comes at a time when thousands of additional migrants currently crossing the U.S.-Mexico border at Eagle Pass, Texas, are expected to make their way to New York, where they are entitled to shelter, which has forced Mayor Eric Adams to open historic sites as emergency shelters to use.

Adams is facing an angry backlash after more than 110,000 migrants have poured into the city since spring 2022. Many of the migrants have been transported north from Republican border states in an effort to prove that Democrats’ open arms policy is a disaster.

Hundreds of migrants poured into The Roosevelt Hotel in New York City overnight

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The city has welcomed more than twice as many migrants than Los Angeles, Miami and Houston since Title 42 was lifted in May after the pandemic ended.

The Roosevelt Hotel, Paul Hotel and Paramount Hotel are among the hotels designated for migrant housing in Manhattan. Long lines of migrants, mainly men from Africa, are now often seen outside the legendary sites.

The Big Apple has taken in more than double the number of migrants than the next most popular cities. Adams has called for state and federal help as the migrant crisis will cost the city an estimated $12 billion over the next three years.

Houston was listed as the destination for 15,416 people, while 15,329 people documented heading to Los Angeles County and 11,081 to Miami-Dade County since May.

NTAs are issued to migrants who cross the border illegally and call for them to appear before a judge who will decide whether they stay in America or are deported.

All migrants legally released to the US to make an asylum claim will be issued the document.

The data is collected by the TRAC database and shows how many people are crossing the border and where they are going.

Conservative Queens Councilwoman Vickie Paladino addressed the situation Wednesday, arguing that the migrants crossing Eagle Pass will soon add to the crisis in New York City, where more than 113,000 asylum seekers have arrived since last spring.

Thousands of additional migrants currently crossing the US-Mexico border at Eagle Pass, Texas, are expected to make their way to New York, where they are entitled to shelter

Thousands of additional migrants currently crossing the US-Mexico border at Eagle Pass, Texas, are expected to make their way to New York, where they are entitled to shelter

New York City's migrant crisis is expected to cost the city $4.7 billion this year.  Above is a list of some of the landmarks that have been converted into emergency shelters as officials struggle to house nearly 60,000 migrants in the city's care

New York City’s migrant crisis is expected to cost the city $4.7 billion this year. Above is a list of some of the landmarks that have been converted into emergency shelters as officials struggle to house nearly 60,000 migrants in the city’s care

“They will most likely be in New York in less than a week,” Paladino said Wednesday. “This is not normal, this is not okay, this is not human, and we have absolutely no obligation to care for these people with housing, welfare or anything else.”

About 95,000 migrants have arrived in New York City since the start of the year, with more than 60,000 still in the city’s care across 210 locations. City officials have said they expect the number of asylum seekers to reach nearly 33,980 households this fiscal year.

The city currently pays about $385 per night per migrant family in need of housing and food. According to Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine, asylum seekers cost the city about $10 million every day.

Despite Mayor Adams’ cries for help from the state and federal governments, the city has not received any assistance to cover the additional costs, so the $4.7 billion would come from the city’s budget. That amount is equal to the budgets for municipal sanitary facilities, fire brigade and parks combined.

Adams has warned that the city’s services will be affected by the incredible extra spending in the budget. He has previously stated that the city plans to cut services such as library hours, meals for seniors and free day care for three-year-olds.

The situation has already led to several demonstrations by angry New Yorkers.

Earlier this week, chaos erupted outside a migrant shelter on Staten Island as protesters tried to stop asylum seekers.

About 10 protesters were arrested Tuesday outside a former Island Shores Assisted Living Facility in Midland Beach, where a crowd met with migrants with chants of, “Take them back, take them back.”

Footage from the scene showed protesters banging on bus windows as they tried to prevent the migrants from getting off and entering the shelter.