ニューヨーク・タイムズさんのインスタグラム写真 - (ニューヨーク・タイムズInstagram)「New York City has long been a magnet for new Americans. More than a third of its residents — over three million people — are immigrants. Before the pandemic interrupted migration patterns, the census tallied about 60,000 foreign-born people annually in the city who had been living abroad a year earlier.  What’s different about the 116,000 migrants who started arriving last year is how many came at once, heading straight into the city’s homeless shelter system, already near capacity. They scattered to over 200 shelters in repurposed hotels, former jails and schools, or enormous tented dormitories with cots so close together that they touch. New York’s migrant shelters have created a new kind of immigrant neighborhood: overnight villages where the town square is a parking lot or a hotel lobby. Many are on the city’s industrial fringes, inside office buildings in the densest commercial districts of Manhattan, and in empty schools in quasi-suburban residential neighborhoods.  Journalists with The New York Times visited more than a dozen shelters around the city, where they interviewed people in Spanish, French and English. Tap the link in our bio to read what they discovered. Photos by @heislerphoto」9月29日 4時09分 - nytimes

ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 9月29日 04時09分


New York City has long been a magnet for new Americans. More than a third of its residents — over three million people — are immigrants. Before the pandemic interrupted migration patterns, the census tallied about 60,000 foreign-born people annually in the city who had been living abroad a year earlier.

What’s different about the 116,000 migrants who started arriving last year is how many came at once, heading straight into the city’s homeless shelter system, already near capacity. They scattered to over 200 shelters in repurposed hotels, former jails and schools, or enormous tented dormitories with cots so close together that they touch. New York’s migrant shelters have created a new kind of immigrant neighborhood: overnight villages where the town square is a parking lot or a hotel lobby. Many are on the city’s industrial fringes, inside office buildings in the densest commercial districts of Manhattan, and in empty schools in quasi-suburban residential neighborhoods.

Journalists with The New York Times visited more than a dozen shelters around the city, where they interviewed people in Spanish, French and English. Tap the link in our bio to read what they discovered. Photos by @heislerphoto


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