يحاول ذهب - حر
In Line at St.Brigid
February 26 - March 10, 2024
|New York magazine
THE CITY'S CAMPAIGN TO PUSH MIGRANTS OUT HAS TURNED THEIR LIVES INTO AN INTERMINABLE LOOP.
In October, a line started to form outside St. Brigid, a former Catholic school on the corner of East 7th Street at Tompkins Square Park. No one in the neighborhood really knew what it was. Soon, hundreds of people—almost exclusively men, almost exclusively underdressed for the freezing weather—began arriving around five every morning and staying until evening. The line became longer as the year ended, and by mid-January, as temperatures dropped into the 20s, it was more of a throng.
St. Brigid had been quietly transformed into what City Hall describes as a “reticketing center,” the first in the city: a place where migrants can be processed into a new shelter after their stay in another one runs out. Shelter stays never used to be time-limited. The city’s “right to shelter” decree, which has been in place since the 1980s, technically guarantees every person in need, including migrants, a safe place to stay. But as the migrant surge has continued—178,600 have arrived since the spring of 2022 with a notable recent influx of Africans who have flown to Central America and crossed the southern border—the Adams administration has been working to subtly push single migrants out of the system entirely. Over the summer, the city instituted a 60-day limit on shelter stays for single adult migrants. In September, that limit narrowed to 30 days. Adams seemed to hope the inconvenience of reprocessing would discourage applicants, and, in fact, the city offers anyone at St. Brigid a free plane ticket to anywhere in the world. The length of the line— with a wait time that can stretch to two weeks—reflects a colossal civic miscalculation.
هذه القصة من طبعة February 26 - March 10, 2024 من New York magazine.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من New York magazine
New York magazine
What’s an Artist Worth?
A wave of New York dealers are leaving galleries to start their own agencies with new ideas about how to build their clients’ careers.
6 mins
June 15–28, 2026
New York magazine
Joyce Carol Oates Can’t Quit
The octogenarian is on her 66th novel and 15th year as an X power user.
9 mins
June 15–28, 2026
New York magazine
Faux Is a Real McNally Restaurant
George McNally is building his first business without his famous dad. He's putting steak-frites on the menu anyway.
1 mins
June 15–28, 2026
New York magazine
Who Is Obama's Megalith For?
His presidential center in Chicago is a nice gesture, but it’s too centered on him.
5 mins
June 15–28, 2026
New York magazine
Days Not Left Behind Paul McCartney's new album feels like an elegant Beatles prequel.
EACH YEAR OR SO, a fresh occasion arises to gather in excitement about the Beatles.
5 mins
June 15–28, 2026
New York magazine
MOTHER F*CKER
After becoming a single mom, I began compulsively dating in order to figure out what kind of woman I wanted to be.
15 mins
June 15–28, 2026
New York magazine
Rom-coms Need an Update Jennifer Lopez and Brett Goldstein's Office Romance gets stuck in old ideas.
WHATEVER MAKES the romantic comedy worthwhile and delightful has been lost in Hollywood.
3 mins
June 15–28, 2026
New York magazine
Jesse Genet
The entrepreneur turned stay-at-home mom extols the joys of running her household with an ever-multiplying staff of AI agents.
6 mins
June 15–28, 2026
New York magazine
YOUR DIGITAL LIFE
We're each attached to years of texts, Slacks, searches, and pictures, an archive of self-incrimination and humiliation that could detonate at any time.
30 mins
June 15–28, 2026
New York magazine
Sam Bankman-Fried's Prison Experiment His life behind bars and his desperate campaign to get free.
SAM BANKMAN-FRIED IS INCARCERATED at a federal prison in Lompoc, California, which sits northwest of Santa Barbara and is dubbed “the City of Arts and Flowers.”
39 mins
June 15–28, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

