Adams: Services for NY Taxpayers May Be Cut to Help Illegal Aliens

Adams: Services for NY Taxpayers May Be Cut to Help Illegal Aliens

December 20, 2022

After an interview with PIX11 News, New York City Mayor Eric Adams (D), a supporter of sanctuary city policies, said illegal immigration will soon threaten public services for taxpaying New Yorkers.

As some 31,000 border crossers and illegal aliens have arrived in New York City in recent months, Adams is again requesting about a billion dollars from the federal government for left-wing non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and hotel chains that have been aiding the city with housing new arrivals.

“We are communicating with the White House regularly,” Adams said . “It‘s unfair to everyday New Yorkers who are already dealing with their crises. We’re already dealing with the housing crisis, we’re dealing with so many crises. It is unfair to New Yorkers to carry this burden on their own.”

In a statement, Adams suggested that if illegal immigration skyrockets, taxpaying New Yorkers will see their public services cut in response so the city can free up funds for border crossers and illegal aliens.

“Our shelter system is full, and we are nearly out of money, staff, and space,” Adams said:

Truth be told, if corrective measures are not taken soon, we may very well be forced to cut or curtail programs New Yorkers rely on, and the pathway to house thousands more is uncertain. These are not choices we want to make, but they may become necessary, and I refuse to be forced to choose new arrivals over current New Yorkers. I’ll say it again — we need a plan, we need assistance, and we need it now.

Already, New York City residents — especially those in public housing — have trashed the Adams administration for throwing millions of taxpayer dollars at newly arrived border crossers and illegal aliens while leaving low-income New Yorkers behind.

“They are going to train a bunch of people coming into the country, but those already here who apply through hoops to get in, can’t get in,” Daniel Barber, who represents the city’s nearly 340,000 public housing tenants, said last month.

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