Res 0532-2023
Governor Hochul to declare an emergency under Section 2-B of NYS Executive Law to direct funds, administrative resources and services to aid asylum seekers forcibly transported to the city by the governors of other states.
ResolutionFiledCommittee on Immigrationintroduced 2023-03-16
Filed — closed without being enacted.
Official record · Legistar
Agenda: 2023-03-16Passed: 2023-12-31
Committee on Immigration — Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs and other matters affecting immigration.
How it compares
40% of similar bills passed
20 passed · 30 died
This bill: 290 days in committee
Similar bills: median 252 days · 61 days when passed
Compared against 50 Resolution bills in Committee on Immigration.
Ranked by how closely each matches this bill's topic — closest first:
Res 0134-2024
Establishing a coordinator for asylum seeker services. (A.7493/S.8558)
672dFiled
Res 0850-2023
Establishing a coordinator for asylum seeker services. (A.7493)
25dFiled
Res 0365-2022
United States Department of Health and Human Services to prioritize refugee settlement resources to New York City.
430dFiled
Res 1188-2025
New York State ICE-free zones act (S.8539).
13dFiled
Res 1399-2020
Allow for state agencies, municipalities, and authorities to provide state or local public benefits regardless of immigration status. (A10433/S5167)
490dFiled
Res 1648-2021
New York for All Act (A.2328 / S.3076)
218dFiled
+ 44 more comparable bills
Sponsors (9)
Lifecycle
IntroducedIntroduced by Council
2023-03-16 · City Council
ActionReferred to Comm by Council
2023-03-16 · City Council
HeardHearing Held by Committee
2023-04-28 · Committee on Immigration
ActionAmendment Proposed by Comm
2023-04-28 · Committee on Immigration
HeldLaid Over by Committee
2023-04-28 · Committee on Immigration
HeardHearing Held by Committee
2023-04-28 · Committee on Governmental Operations
ActionAmendment Proposed by Comm
2023-04-28 · Committee on Governmental Operations
HeldLaid Over by Committee
2023-04-28 · Committee on Governmental Operations
ClosedFiled (End of Session)
2023-12-31 · City Council
Heard at (5)
Committee on Governmental Operations · 2023-04-28 · 1:00 PM · Council Chambers - City Hall
Committee on Immigration · 2023-04-28 · 1:00 PM · Council Chambers - City Hall
Committee on Governmental Operations · 2023-04-17 · 1:00 PM · Council Chambers - City Hall
Committee on Immigration · 2023-04-17 · 1:00 PM · Council Chambers - City Hall
City Council · 2023-03-16 · 1:30 PM · Council Chambers - City Hall
Attachments (8)
- Res. No. 532
- March 16, 2023 - Stated Meeting Agenda
- Hearing Transcript - Stated Meeting 3-16-23
- Minutes of the Stated Meeting - March 16, 2023
- Proposed Res. No. 532-A - 3/30/23
- Committee Report 4/28/23
- Hearing Testimony 4/28/23
- Hearing Transcript 4/28/23
Full text
Whereas, Since August 5, 2022 the governors of Arizona and Texas have put thousands of asylum-seekers recently arrived in their states from across the international border with Mexico on chartered buses sent out of state to various locations, including New York City; and
Whereas, reports indicate the asylum seekers were not told where Texas authorities were sending them nor allowed to leave the buses; and
Whereas, Texas authorities did not provide the asylum seekers any resources or information on how to secure food, housing, legal aid, education or employment upon arrival in New York City; and
Whereas, a recent report contended that the federal Department of Homeland Security has been encouraging migrants to travel to New York City, and providing often incorrect information about where to receive services; and
Whereas, as of March 19, 2023 more than 52,700 asylum seekers been provided with at least one night of shelter, and more than 31,900 are currently in the city's care ; and
Whereas, Asylum-seeking New Yorkers are facing hardship as changes to the asylum system strain New York courts, resulting in an almost four year backlog of legal immigration cases and necessitating more resources from local legal and social service and City agencies; and
Whereas, New York City social service agencies and community based and nonprofit organizations have struggled to accommodate thousands of new arrivals who do not have families or friends in New York City to support them and are in dire need of food, clothing, housing, education, medical care and other critical resources and services; and
Whereas, New York City welcomes these asylum seekers and is ready, willing and able to support them but does not have unlimited resources and needs the assistance of the federal government to ensure their safety and well-being; and
Whereas, New York City's homeless shelter system currently houses approximately 60,000 people, near all-time highs not seen since the Great Depression and an increase of more than ten thousand since just this past July, straining the system beyond its capacity; and
Whereas, Existing challenges to timely shelter placement include staffing issues and a complex application process that often results in placement delays; and
Whereas, a Declaration of Emergency for Asylee Services and Shelter was issued to enable the City to move quickly to procure additional service providers and create an Asylum Seeker Service Referral Center to assist asylum seekers in securing housing and other social services; and
Whereas, under Section 2-B of New York State's Executive law, the governor has the authority to declare an emergency to direct funds and state resources to ameliorate man-made threats to life; now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the Council of the City of New York calls on Governor Hochul to declare an emergency under Section 2-B of New York State Executive Law to direct funds, administrative resources and services to aid asylum seekers forcibly transported to the city by the governors of other states.
LS #10735
3/30/2023
AY/JG