New York shelter curfew for immigrants: Times and penalties for non-compliance
Story by Daniela Barrera,Greg Heilman •
19h
New York City Mayor Eric Adams has imposed a curfew for migrants living in the city’s shelters. According to his office, the measure comes as a response to the increase in street violence and crime, as well as the high number of people asking for charity on the streets and going from door-to-door at all hours of the night.
The curfew will come into effect this Tuesday, January 16. At the moment, the measure applies only to four shelters in the city: Judo Center (35th Avenue) and JFK Center (North Boundary Road) in Queens, as well as Stockton Center (Stockton Street) in Brooklyn and Lincoln Manhattan Center (Central Park North) in Manhattan.
However, Adams’ goal is to spread the curfew to many of the 200 shelters and respite centers in New York.
“The mayor has asked us to take a hard look at figuring out how we do it across the system. The question is to whether it makes sense to do it across the system,” said the Commissioner of Emergency Management of New York City, Zach Iscol, at the time of publicizing the new measure. “One of the things we’re always looking to do is figure out what can we do to keep people who are in our care safe, what can we do to have less of an impact on the communities where some of these shelters and respite centers are placed, and one tool of ours to do that is curfews.”
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/new-york-shelter-curfew-for-immigrants-times-and-penalties-for-non-compliance/ar-AA1n5hiQ?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=HCTS&cvid=d697294ad5d549bbbf8ecab6fae19e98&ei=18