Mayor Eric Adams’ administration is still doing the math, quite literally, on how it’ll get migrants newly eligible for temporary protected status enrolled, processed and out of its care. Hundreds of staff are conducting “in-depth, in-person surveys” of working-age adult migrants in city shelters, a census that launched just three weeks ago to supplement basic intake data. Perhaps illustrative of how the preparations are going, there was brief confusion Wednesday over how many migrants in the city’s care will be TPS-eligible under the expansion announced last week by President Joe Biden’s administration. How many Venezuelan nationals here arrived in the United States on or before July 31? Is it about 15,000 as Adams noted on a whiteboard last Thursday? Or 22,000 as Ted Long, senior vice president at NYC Health + Hospitals, repeatedly cited Wednesday at the administration’s weekly update on the crisis? Closer to 15,000, press officials eventually clarified, saying that Long misspoke but also issuing the caveat that the number could grow once the census is done. (It’s about 70 percent complete now.) With the expansion of TPS and work authorization, Adams finally has one important tool he said he needed to begin turning the tide in the migrant crisis. Whether he’ll be ready to use it remains to be seen. “We have a strong infrastructure in place to help us identify and figure out who the eligible asylum seekers are and help them to fill out the proper paperwork once the federal government finalizes a rule,” Deputy Mayor Anne Williams-Isom said. That paperwork can include three forms — TPS, work authorization and waiver applications — that are dozens of pages long and require photocopies, supporting documents and translation, she said. There’s also a fee. “We’re going to have teams ready to leap into action,” Long vowed. Some were dubious. “I don’t have any faith because they haven’t proven they have the apparatus to run the system as it is now,” City Council member Diana Ayala, a fellow Democrat and the deputy speaker, told Playbook, calling the administration’s overall migrant response “reactionary.” The New York Immigration Coalition said it has been asking for coordinated case management from the beginning. “We believe the city has the systems to do this appropriately,” the group’s executive director, Murad Awawdeh, told Playbook. “We don’t know if they have the staff, partners or contractors to do this at scale since they’re playing catch up.” IT’S THURSDAY. Got news? Send it our way: Jeff Coltin, Emily Ngo and Nick Reisman. WHERE’S KATHY? In New York City and Albany with no public schedule. WHERE’S ERIC? Appearing live on La Mega 97.9 FM and 77 WABC’s “Sid & Friends in the Morning, going to the NYC Department for the Aging’s talent show, attending the NYPD Influential Women of New York City Luncheon, touring the New York City Department of Records and Information Services’ city archives, speaking at the opening ceremony for a replica of the Vietnam War Memorial and celebrating the Mid-Autumn Moon Festival in Gracie Mansion. QUOTE OF THE DAY: “Republicans have no solutions for immigration.” — Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, posting on social media with a video of her exchange with state Assemblymember Jaime Williams, who is actually a fellow Democrat.
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