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“We’re not just saying we’re out of room as a soundbite,” he emphasized. “We’re out of room, literally. People are going to be eventually sleeping on the streets.”
The mayor explained that his ability to act and solve the crisis was limited, noting, for example, that he can’t notify Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
“I cannot break the law and enforce the law,” he said. “I can’t deport. I can’t stop people from coming in, repeated criminal behavior. I can’t report to ICE for deportation.”
Adams also took aim at the city’s right-to-shelter law, which was passed in the 1980s, saying it “wasn’t meant to be for migrants and asylum seekers.” His administration is currently engaged in legal battles to enforce that rule.
He has long sounded the alarm over the impact the migrant crisis was having on his city. During a town hall in September, for example, he said in no uncertain terms that it “will destroy New York City.”
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