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Hochul says 150 National Guard troops will help Venezuelan migrants get work permits

A woman in a royal blue shirt and navy blue blazer and pants sits among men and women in camouflage uniforms with the American flag on the left.
Susan Watts/Office of Governor K/Susan Watts/Office of Governor K
/
Office of the Governor
Governor Kathy Hochul announces deployment of 150 additional National Guard personnel to support response to asylum seeker crisis at the 369th Regiment Armory in Harlem Sept. 25, 2023.

Governor Kathy Hochul says 150 additional National Guard members will be deployed to assist with New York state’s migrant crisis. This time, they’ll be helping to process work permits for Venezuelan asylum-seekers who recently were granted the right to apply for jobs in the next 30 days.

On September 20th, President Joe Biden authorized Temporary Protected Status for Venezuelan migrants who entered the U.S. before July 31st. That gives them the right to apply for jobs and obtain work in as soon as a month.

Governor Hochul says the additional 150 National Guard troops, which brings the total number deployed to 2,200, will focus on helping the asylum-seekers complete the necessary paperwork to get them employed and out of overcrowded temporary shelters.

“(They’ll) be helping them get a job,” said Hochul. “Helping them support themselves, helping them leave these shelters. Because I believe they did not come all of these thousands of miles to live in a shelter with hundreds, if not thousands, of others.”

Hochul says the state is investing an additional $50 million to help the migrants with the paperwork. And she says it’s much easier than the more onerous process of applying for asylum status, which requires numerous documents and filling out complex forms. She says the new form asks just a few key questions.

“I literally went on to the app myself and clicked it on to see how hard it would be,” said Hochul who said the questions are limited to whether the person is form Venezuela and entered the country before August.

“The next step is is that you're now automatically qualified for work authorization,” the governor said.

The work permit form is then delivered in 30 days.

Many of the state’s industries, including farming, health care, and food service, are experiencing a worker shortage. Hochul says she hopes the Venezuelan migrants can help mitigate that.

Jackie Bray, the commissioner of the New York State Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Services, predicts that “many thousands” of the migrants will get jobs, but she can’t say for sure yet exactly how many.

“There is not a single database at this time that the city and the state can access,” Bray said. “But there is robust information-sharing about what they're seeing at the front door, and how many people are moving on, so that we can adjust our resources and make sure that we're targeting appropriately.”

Hochul had asked the Biden administration for months to grant the temporary work permits for the Venezuelans. She says she’d like all asylum-seekers to be eligible to work within 30 days, saying it would be a “huge salvation.”

Meanwhile, Utica-area state senator Joe Griffo remains critical of national and state immigration policies. According to a release, the Republican condemned the Biden administration and Governor Hochul following an announcement that 500,000 Venezuelan migrants will be eligible to apply for Temporary Protected Status and work permits. This follows a proposal late last week from Sen. Julia Salazar and state Sen. Jabari Brisport to increase state taxes to address the migrant crisis. Griffo has introduced legislation to “improve communication, accountability and transparency.”

Karen DeWitt is Capitol Bureau Chief for New York State Public Radio, a network of 10 public radio stations in New York State. She has covered state government and politics for the network since 1990. She is also a regular contributor to the statewide public television program about New York State government, New York Now. She appears on the reporter’s roundtable segment and interviews newsmakers. Karen previously worked for WINS Radio, New York, and has written for numerous publications, including Adirondack Life and the Albany newsweekly Metroland.