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Overwhelmed El Paso releases 600 migrants onto streets – until Biden admin pays $7M

Thousands of migrants are once again overrunning El Paso, Texas, but the city says it can’t help them – until the federal government steps up to pay for the border crisis and the money it owes El Paso.

The city has become one of the nation’s most overwhelmed border crossings, processing over 6,000 migrants in some weeks and spending $8.9 million so far this year providing meals, beds and transport for asylum seekers – all of which came out of its city budget.

About 600 immigrants were released in downtown El Paso since Friday, the agency told The Post in a statement, saying it did so “after exhausting all other decompression options for the custody of migrants.”

Maria, left, hugs her daughter Angie and her 7-month-old grandson in front of the Tornado bus station in Downtown El Paso on Monday, Nov. 7. Angie and her baby had been released to an area shelter a day earlier. Cindy Ramirez / El Paso Matters

El Paso’s deputy city manager says the Border Patrol asked the city to reopen its welcome center, but it refused.

“We’re waiting on $7 million in reimbursement and we’re going to need to see some approval or some advanced funding before we start any other operations,” said El Paso Deputy City Manager Mario D’Augostino at a city meeting Monday.

“They asked us to please set up a welcome center; we held [our] ground,” he added. “We’ve been very clear with Border Patrol, all the state and local partners that we’re not going to go operational until we get secured funding.”

He added the city has requested $3 million in emergency federal funds that, if approved, would allow the city to set up its welcome center for a month.

The last time immigrants in El Paso were released to the streets was Sept. 15 when a wave of Venezuelan asylum seekers overwhelmed resources in the border town. REUTERS
In the September immigrant surge, immigrants were forced to sleep on the streets of downtown El Paso — something locals don’t want to happen again. KFOX-TV

“I feel sorry for them because they don’t have a place to stay,” said Mariana Hernandez, who works across the street from the bus depot where many migrants head Tuesday, adding she was relieved no one has had to sleep on the streets yet — as happened during a migrant surge in September.

Mayor Oscar Leeser has resisted calls from city council members to ask for help by declaring a state of emergency – which would provide access to state and federal funds — saying in meetings the White House had instructed him not to as it would make President Biden look bad.

Although Leeser had been told to wait for federal reimbursement, so far the city has only received $2.2 million, according to figures published Tuesday.

Leeser also used $3.6 million of city funds to bus 10,000 migrants to New York and 3,200 to Chicago, to ease the influx on the city.

Even families with children were forced to sleep on the streets during the September surge in El Paso. Getty Images

The buses stopped and the welcome center was closed in October after Venezuelan migrants were ordered expelled from the country under Title 42, a pandemic-era health restriction, and the number of people admitted across the border decreased.

Three council members had urged Leeser to declare an emergency in September to prepare for the next surge of migrants. “We’re being very reactive to this when we should have been proactive,” city councilwoman Claudia Rodriguez said at the time.

“We should have been declaring that disaster declaration a lot sooner and had the resources available, [then] we wouldn’t be in this situation.”

Thousands of asylum seekers rejected from the US are also amassing on the Mexican side of the border in a hastily erected tent city, with many saying they were hopeful they would have an opportunity to re-enter the country again — and some indicating they would resort to illegal means such as people smugglers if they became desperate enough.

Leeser has previously told The Post: “I don’t bow to pressure from any side,” and insisted, “I make decisions based on current circumstances and in the best interest of the citizens of El Paso.”