Daily Southtown

Illinois provides hotel housing for migrants in Chicago given latest influx

- By Lizzie Kane ekane@chicagotri­bune.com

The state of Illinois is temporaril­y providing hotel rooms to house up to 200 asylum-seekers in Chicago.

About 30 hotel rooms were available Saturday night, with additional rooms available Sunday.

The announceme­nt comes after the city of Chicago requested more resources given the latest increase in new arrivals from Texas. Illinois has seen thousands of asylum-seekers arrive since last year, with most people coming from Venezuela.

Illinois did not coordinate or receive advanced notice from Texas Gov. Greg Abbott as he sent “an unpreceden­ted number” of asylum-seekers in recent days, according to a Sunday news release from the state.

“(The Illinois Department of Human Services) continues to welcome our new neighbors with support services and assistance with work-permit applicatio­ns, which will ultimately hasten their journey to self-sufficienc­y,” said Dulce Quintero, a spokespers­on for the Illinois Department of Human Services.

As of Sunday morning, there were 14,554 migrants in 27 shelters across the city, according to Chicago’s Office of Emergency Management and Communicat­ions.

The city and state have been providing intermedia­te housing to migrants through shelters and hotels for months. Migrants are then able to apply for cityand state-funded rental assistance to move into more permanent housing.

Until recently, many migrants were sleeping on the city’s police station floors. The city faced mounting pressure to clear the stations as winter approached, moving new arrivals to city shelters.

Migrants receiving housing in the newly available hotel rooms will be moved to a former CVS in Little Village once constructi­on of that shelter is completed in January, according to the state news release. The state said additional sites for shelters are being explored.

The hotel housing for migrants is funded through the $160 million the state earmarked in November to address the influx of asylum-seekers, according to the news release. That investment adds to the $478 million in state funding provided for the humanitari­an crisis over fiscal years 2023 and 2024, which includes resources for shelter, food, medical care, rental assistance and support services.

 ?? EILEEN T. MESLAR/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? A migrant tent encampment sits in the field next to the police station in the Little Italy neighborho­od on Dec. 8.
EILEEN T. MESLAR/CHICAGO TRIBUNE A migrant tent encampment sits in the field next to the police station in the Little Italy neighborho­od on Dec. 8.

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