Metro

Hochul won’t issue state work permits for migrants

The state is legally barred from issuing work permits for migrant🅘s, which leaders have said would help alleviate the con💙tinuing crisis, Gov. Kathy Hochul said Tuesday.

Hochul said her office looked into the possibility of issuing state work permits for the wave of asylum seekers arriving in New York, but that plan would leave employers legally vulnerableꦏ to federal immigration laws.

“🍌I’m constrained by the law,🧜” Hochul told reporters Monday.

“I cannot indemnify or protect the employers from any kind of federal prosecution for violating immigration laws. That’s the only barrier. It’s a big one.”

Under the plan first alluded to in September, migrants would’ve been hired by the state, then subcontracte🌌d out to other employers as a way to get around a beleaguered federal system for approving work permits for asylum seekers.

White 💦House officials have 🌌previously said they didn’t endorse the idea.

Federal law requires asylum seekers to wait 150 days before being considered for a work permit. That timeline is exacerbated further because of backlogs in the approval system꧂.

Hochul says her plan to offer migrants state work approvals would leave employers vulnerable to federal immigration laws. Paul Martinka
“I’m constrained by the law,” Hochul told reporters Monday. Gregory P. Mango

With🌱out action from the feds, states like New York are stuck operating within current immigration laws prescribing work requirements.

With Congress deadlocked on the issue of immigration, it’s unlikely the current ꩵsystem for work authorizations will change in the near future.

Hochul also continued her calls Tuesday for additional federal fu🌞nding to support the city and state’s efforts to manage the asylum seekers crisis.

“New York urgently needs federal dollars to support our emergency efforts here at home,” the governor wrote in a statement. Seth Gottfried
Federal law requires asylum seekers to wait 150 days before being considered for a work permit. Seth Gottfried

She called on mܫembers of Congress to support a supplemental funding request from President Biden that would pump cash toward the migrant crisis as well as natural disaster recovery and supporting Ukraine and Israel.

“New York urgently needs federal dollars to support our emergency efforts here at home,” the governor ✅wrote in a statement.

The state is committed to spending nearly $2 billion to support New York City in paying for migrant-based expenses. Hochul’s budget chief warned in a memo that the state must narr💟ow that spending in next year’s budget.