Second migrant commits suicide in NYC-run shelter as border crisis rages

A second migrant who arrived in New York City from the southern border and was living in a city-run shelter has committed suicide, city officials told The Post. 

The 26-year-old man was found in a bathroom of the shelter last week in Queens and was pronounced dead after being transferred to an unnamed hospital, NBC 4 reported on Monday.

Sources told the outlet he likely came to the Big Apple from Venezuela along with a child and the youth’s mother. 

“This is an absolutely heartbreaking tragedy, and we are working closely with the family to support them during this incredibly difficult time,” said a city Department of Social Services spokesman.

“These families are coming to New York City after a months-long harrowing journey, in some cases, still reeling from the trauma they experienced along the way We recognize the very unique challenges asylum seekers are facing and we remain committed to continuing to build on our ongoing efforts and interagency coordination to connect these families and individuals to mental health supports as we help them stabilize their lives in a new country.”

The agency would not confirm further details tied to the incident.

It’s the second known suicide of a migrant, after officials confirmed a mother of two took her own life at the Hollis Family Shelter in Queens earlier this year.

The 26-year-old man was pronounced dead after being transferred to an unnamed hospital.
Stephen Yang
migrant
Authorities believe the man came from Venezuela.
J. Messerschmidt/NY Post
Migrants from Del Rio Texas arrive in Manhattan, NY’s Port Authority on Dec. 19, 2022.
J. Messerschmidt/NY Post

Nearly 200 more migrants flooded into the Big Apple from Texas on Monday as officials braced for the tidal wave that’s expected to accompany the lifting of pandemic-related restrictions at America’s southern border.

The city has already received over 31,000 migrants and officials expect more than 1,000 new arrivals each week if Title 42, as expected, is lifted later this week.

If you are struggling with suicidal thoughts or are experiencing a mental health crisis and live in New York City, you can call 1-888-NYC-WELL for free and confidential crisis counseling. If you live outside the five boroughs, you can dial the 24/7 National Suicide Prevention hotline at 988 or go to SuicidePreventionLifeline.org.

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Principal and cronies secretly demand steep rent from Dominican teachers

Bilingual teachers brought from the Dominican Republic to work in New York City public schools have been treated like indentured servants by educators acting as their slumlords, The Post has learned.

Bronx principal Emmanuel Polanco and a group of fellow Department of Education administrators have put nearly a dozen teachers recruited from the DR in an apparently illegal boarding house in The Bronx — and charge the instructors $1,450 each month for the privilege, multiple sources say.

Polanco and his associates threaten to say “adios” to anyone who doesn’t go along, several teachers told The Post.

“If you leave, you might get in trouble,” teacher Rafael De Paula, 39, said the recruits were warned. “You can leave, but if you go, you go back to the Dominican Republic.”

Bronx principal Emmanuel Polanco, along with fellow DOE administrators has put a dozen teachers from the DR in an apparently illegal boarding house in the Bronx.
Richard Harbus

Several teachers who balked at the terms or insisted on finding their own housing — including one who wanted to live with his brother in NYC – were terminated and sent packing, their colleagues said. Others fear they may lose their J-1 visas, which allow foreigners to work or study in the US if they disobey.

“It’s a big embarrassment,” said a DOE insider informed of the lucrative scheme. “It also has the potential to damage the relationship between New York City and the DR if they don’t do right by these teachers.”

Since most of the newcomers lost their jobs in the DR when they joined the DOE program, they can’t afford to be expelled because they support families left behind.

“Right now, if I went back to the Dominican Republic, the only thing that I would find there, other than my family, is financial problems,” said Neylin Puello, 31, who teaches aviation at JHS 80 along with other recruits — where Polanco is their boss.

“Right now, if I went back to the Dominican Republic, the only thing that I would find there, other than my family, is financial problems,” said teacher recruit Neylin Puello.
J.C.Rice

Under city rules, a financial relationship between a superior and subordinate, including the leasing of property, is prohibited.

Polanco, 39, was quietly ousted from the Norwood middle school and “reassigned pending resolution of a personal matter,” District 10 Superintendent Maribel Torres-Hulla said in a Nov. 2 email to families.

The Special Commissioner of Investigation for city schools said it is “aware of, and looking into,” the matter.

The rentals are run by Polanco and a group of DOE administrators, the Association of Dominican-American Supervisors and Administrators, known as ADASA NY. 

Polanco, described by the teachers as their main contact, is the past president and current first vice president. Treasurer Daniel Calcaño, a DOE administrator in the Bronx, collects the payments, they said.

Polanco and the other administrators have been charging the instructors $1,450 each month, according to multiple sources.

“There is no organization in our public schools that means more to me than ADASA,” Chancellor David Banks gushed at a September 15 press conference announcing the recruitment of 25  teachers to help with the influx of Spanish-speaking migrants. Echoing Mayor Adams’ mantra, he added,  “ADASA gets stuff done.”

But a Post investigation found ADASA could be stuffing its pockets.

Ying Qing Li of Fox River Grove, Ill., bought the duplex in July for $810,000 as an investment, she said. Her agent, Elsa Ni, said the house was leased to ADASA, which pays $6,900 a month for both units. Ni understood the building would house teachers from the DR but said she had no idea how many would move in.

ADASA charges 10 teachers $1,450 a month, and one $1,300, each for single rooms, the teachers said. The $15,800 in rent collected would net a monthly profit of $8,900. Another Bronx building run by ADASA houses eight teachers, and a third is rented by three teachers, sources said.

Puello said he is charged $1,300 a month, not $1,450 like the others because his room is the smallest, furnished only with a full-sized bed, a  dresser, and a wall-mounted TV.

Four male teachers occupy the third floor of the building, sharing a kitchen and full bathroom. Seven female teachers rent rooms on the first floor and second floors. They also share a kitchen and bathroom, the tenants said.

Four male teachers occupy the third floor, sharing a kitchen and a bathroom.
J.C.Rice

Each rented room has door locks, they said. Housing lawyers and the city Department of Buildings said that would constitute a single-room occupancy, or SRO, which is illegal in NYC — and possibly dangerous in an emergency — unless previously approved. The building has no record of preexisting SRO units, said DOB spokesman Andrew Rudansky, adding that officials would inspect the premises and possibly issue a vacate order.

The Dominican teachers said they get roughly $1,800 after taxes and other deductions in twice-monthly DOE paychecks. They are paid as substitutes — roughly $199.27 per day — pending NY state certification. Long-term subs may earn slightly more and get some sick or vacation days.

Several teachers who spoke to the Post fumed at the rental cost. “We know we can get it cheaper somewhere else,” Puello said. “I have to support myself and my family at home. I’m working for rent.” 

The teachers were first assured they could bring their families, but “at the last minute,” were told to come alone for the first year or so. Puello said. Missing his five-year-old daughter’s birthday this month “was the hardest thing ever.”

Puello (left) said he is charged $1,300 a month because his room is the smallest, furnished only with a full-sized bed, a dresser, and a wall-mounted TV.
J.C.Rice

DOE officials did not respond to a request for comment. Socorro Diaz, the director of English-language instruction in the Bronx and ADASA president, also did not reply.

A spokeswoman for the state Attorney General’s office said the “charitable organization” has failed to register or file the required financial records. The agency wrote to ADASA last week, asking it to comply.

Polanco refused to speak with a reporter.

Craig DiFolco, a spokesman for the principals’ union, CSA, had no comment on the rentals, but said of Polanco, “Our union will vigorously enforce his due process rights as well as defend him against any false or unsubstantiated allegations.”



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White House urged Texas officials not to declare migrant emergency: Sources

The White House pressured the Democratic mayor of El Paso, Texas, to not declare a state of emergency over the city’s migrant crisis due to fear it would make President Biden look bad, The Post has learned.

At least three of the El Paso City Council’s eight mayors have urged Mayor Oscar Leeser to issue an emergency declaration in response to the thousands of migrants who’ve filled the city’s shelters and are being housed in local hotels, sources familiar with the matter said.

But Leeser admitted during a private phone conversation last month that he’d been directed otherwise by the Biden administration, one of the officials told The Post.

“He told me the White House asked him not to,” Councilmember Claudia Rodriguez said.

Councilmember Claudia Rodriguez shared that they were advised by the White House.

Rodriguez also said Leeser has repeatedly assured her that he’d declare a state of emergency “if things got worse” — without saying what that meant.

US Rep. Tony Gonzalez (R-Texas), whose district covers rural areas and border towns near El Paso, also said he heard similar accounts from other city officials.

“It is a sleight of hand what the administration is doing — pressuring the local government to not issue a declaration of emergency, to say as if everything is going OK,” he said.

Gonzalez also alleged that the White House has done “the same thing in other parts of my district,” which have also seen huge numbers of migrants seeking refuge.

Leeser declined to speak with The Post but said in a prepared statement, “I don’t bow to pressure from any side.”

At one point over 2,100 migrants were crossing the border at El Paso.
New York Post

“I make decisions based on current circumstances and in the best interest of the citizens of El Paso,” the statement said.

Leeser also praised the federal government for providing his city with “critical” assistance.

The White House pressured El Paso’s mayor to not declare a state of emergency over the city’s migrant crisis.
New York Post
Congressman Tony Gonzalez shares it was not the first time they’ve received pressure regarding migrants seeking refuge.
Congressman Tony Gonzalez

At a Sept. 27 City Council meeting, Mayor Leeser also addressed the issue, saying Congresswoman Veronica Escobar (D-Texas) had urged him not to declare a State of Emergency, adding: “The White House has asked, at this point, for us not to do that and they’ll continue to work with us and continue to give us … money through [the] Federal Emergency Management Agency.”

Figures posted on El Paso’s official website show the city has received only $2 million in federal reimbursements toward the $8 million it has spent dealing with the migrant crisis.

The total cost could end up being much more, with ElPasomatters.org reporting in September the city was spending as much as $300,000 a day to shelter, feed and transport asylum-seeking immigrants.

At least three of the El Paso City Council’s eight mayors have urged Mayor Oscar Leeser to issue an emergency declaration.
City of El Paso

In May, The Post first reported how officials in El Paso were considering declaring a state of emergency ahead of the expected ending of pandemic-related expulsions of border-crossers under Title 42 of the federal Public Health Services Act.

The move would have made the city and county eligible for state and federal funding to open additional shelters for housing migrants.

But the following day, El Paso County Judge Ricardo Samaniego said that “the mayor and I backed off,” telling The Post that “we found out that there’s very little difference between the funding we’re getting now and the funding that we would get if it went up to the governor and the governor sent it to President Biden.”

At the time, about 700 migrants a day were arriving in El Paso.

But that number topped 2,100 a day last week before dropping down to around 1,600 a day, according to the latest information posted Monday on the city’s website.

Between April and mid-September more than 62,000 migrants had crossed the border at El Paso alone.

El Paso has relocated more than 10,000 migrants by bus to New York City since August, with Lesser revealing at a public meeting last month that he got a green light to do so from Mayor Eric Adams.

The increase of migrants has been an ongoing issue for the El Paso community.

El Paso has relocated more than 10,000 migrants by bus to New York City since August.

Between April and mid-September more than 62,000 migrants had crossed the border at El Paso alone.

The city has received only $2 million in federal reimbursements toward the $8 million it has spent dealing with the migrant crisis.

Adams has denied that assertion and publicly called on Leeser to end the program earlier this month, saying “New York cannot accommodate the number of buses that we have coming here to our city.”

The Oct. 7 appeal came the same day Hizzoner declared a state of emergency in the Big Apple over its migrant crisis.

But the buses have continued rolling to the city from El Paso, most recently on Sunday.

Leeser has said that most of the migrants flooding El Paso come from Venezuela.

In recent days, migrants have been able to simply walk across the dried-up Rio Grande, surrender to US Customs and Border Protection officials and get released after saying they intend to seek political asylum.

Last week, the US and Mexican governments announced a deal under which Venezuelans who cross into the US would be sent back to Mexico.

But border sources told The Post that the agreement was only being enforced in a small number of cases.

The White House didn’t immediately return a request for comment.

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Migrants bused to NYC hotel going door-to-door asking for help

Migrants bused into New York City have been walking through the streets of a Staten Island neighborhood asking for food, clothes and work after they were put up in hotels there.

The migrants — many not ready for the colder temperatures of the Big Apple — are staying at a property in Travis-Chelsea that includes the Staten Island Inn, Holiday Inn, and Fairfield Inn and Suites Marriott, sources and workers told the Post.

The Staten Island Inn is completely booked with migrants, one worker claimed. The Holiday Inn Express was expecting another drop-off at some point Saturday night.

One migrant, Geraldine Silva, told The Post outside of the Inn that she arrived there about a week ago after she was bussed from El Paso. The Venezuelan native was wearing only a t-shirt, sweatpants and flip flops on a night when temperatures dropped into the 40s.

“We do not have clothing and are not eating well. We need a place to work,” Silva, 31, told The Post.

Hotel employees are concerned for the migrants who don’t have proper clothing or a plan once they arrive in NYC.
Steve White

“We are waiting for clothes,” the mother said, shivering beside a handful of kids and other migrants.

A Holiday Inn employee said the migrants first arrived a week ago.

“[The hotel management] didn’t tell anyone anything. They weren’t taking any reservations … and people were bugging out,” the worker said. “The front desk has to do the dirty work. They had to call them and tell them we are closed. We sold out to the city. I guess the city owns the building.”

“Why do we have 50,000 people when you could have given them to a different state….we are 10 minutes from New Jersey. There is nothing here,” he fumed.

There have been reports that migrants are going door-to-door asking for assistance.
Steve White

“There is no laundry service here. There is nothing. There is nothing for them to shop, for them to do their laundry. I have no idea how they are going to do it,” he said about the neighborhood, a middle class enclave of Staten Island.

The Marriot is expected to house incoming migrants soon as well, he added.

A worker, who said he works for a company called Garner, was on scene handing out paperwork to migrants. He said he has worked at various migrant hotels throughout the city but Saturday was his first day at the Staten Island site.

“They were dressed for 100-degree weather” and not the cold Big Apple weather.
Steve White

“We are here to get them started. To get them in their room. We are here to make sure they get where they need to fill out their paperwork,” the worker told The Post.

“We just make sure they fill out their paperwork and then the state takes over.”

The sudden influx of migrants has overwhelmed local residents, who said the newcomers have been going door-to-door knocking on homes, asking for clothes and other necessities.

Terrence Jones, a Staten Island resident and business owner, said he was caught off guard when some migrants rang his doorbell multiple times.

“They were speaking Spanish. I just said I only speak English. It was like three times,” Jones, 56, told The Post.

He said one person was wrapped up in a blanket.

“They were underdressed – had slippers on, a Red Cross blanket. I thought it was weird.”

Andrew Wilkes, a computer programmer who also lives near the hotels, also received multiple knocks on his door.

 “I’ve had it happen three times. The fourth time was today and [a woman] handed me a paper” identifying herself as a migrant, he said.

These migrants were bussed up from El Paso to NYC and dropped off on Staten Island instead of Midtown Manhattan.
Steve White

“They were dressed for 100-degree weather,” he said, also stressing their lack of warm clothing. 

He said his wife was looking for any extra clothes she had around their home to donate.

“What gets me is desperate people do desperate things. That’s what worries me,” he added.

“It’s not the right thing to do for the neighborhood, to overload it. Where are they going to go to school? There’s only one school in the neighborhood.”

Sebastian Bongiovani, 51, co- owner of Verde’s Pizza and Pasta House, has provided free food to the migrants since they arrived. He said the neighborhood was never informed that the busloads would be coming.

“What we’ve seen is pregnant women, little children starving,” he said. He said he’s watched the famished migrants wolf down a whole slice of pizza “in a second.”

Places like the Staten Island Inn, Holiday Inn, and Fairfield Inn and Suites Marriott are being used as migrant refugees.
Steve White

“What I’ve experienced is people come to my [pizzeria] and ask for food. I tell them to come back at the end of the day. [A man] came back with his pregnant wife and five or six kids,” Bongiovani said.

“At the end of the day these people are just hungry. It’s a good neighborhood but they don’t seem to have a plan,” he added.

“People walking around hungry is f—ing not good,” he said, noting that migrants had allegedly stolen food off the shelves of a nearby store.

Bongiovani was planning on dropping off food Saturday night to someone at the hotel. He said he was “touched” after one migrant woman came back the next day to thank him for a large amount of free food.

Mayor Eric Adams declared a state of emergency Friday over the deluge of migrants into the Big Apple, calling it “unsustainable.” He warned that the sudden influx is pushing the city’s shelter population to an all-time high and will cost taxpayers $1 billion for housing and social services.

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At least 15 migrants dead after two boats sink off Greece

At least 15 people have died after two boats carrying migrants sank in Greek waters, and rescuers were looking for dozens still missing, authorities said early Thursday. The coast guard said 15 bodies had been recovered near the eastern island of Lesbos after a dinghy carrying about 40 people sank. Five people were rescued and three had been located on a rocky outcrop near the site of the sinking. A second rescue effort was launched several hundred miles to the west, near the island of Kythira, where a sailboat carrying about 100 migrants sank late Wednesday.

Officials said 30 people had been rescued after that boat hit rocks off the village port of Diakofti on the east of the island. Winds in the area were up to 45 mph.

“We could see the boat smashing against the rocks and people climbing up those rocks to try and save themselves. It was an unbelievable sight,” Martha Stathaki, a local resident told The Associated Press. “All the residents here went down to the harbor to try and help.”

Fire service rescuers lowered ropes to help migrants climb up cliffs on the seafront. Local officials said a school in the area would be opened to provide shelter for the rescued. Navy divers were also expected to arrive Thursday.

First responders had to lower ropes down a cliff to rescue the survivors.

Officials said a nearby school may be used as a shelter, once the rescue attempts are finished.

Most migrants reaching Greece travel from neighboring Turkey, but smugglers have changed routes in recent months in an effort to avoid heavily patrolled waters around Greek islands near the Turkish coastline.

Kythira is some 250 miles west of Turkey and on a route often used by smugglers to bypass Greece and head directly to Italy.

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