NYC migrants refuse to leave midtown hotel, citing inhumane conditions at new Brooklyn shelter

Protest sign in front of migrants camping out in front of the Watson Hotel in NYC
(Image credit: Michael M. Santiago / Staff/ Getty Images)

New York City officials are in a standoff with a group of migrant men who refuse to be relocated from a Midtown hotel into the recently opened barracks-style shelter at the Brooklyn Cruise Terminal, The New York Times reports.

The men have been camping out in front of the Watson Hotel in protest, citing inhumane conditions at the Red Hook facility. Some men refusing to leave said they heard the shelter has no heat and lacked privacy or a safe place to put their belongings, per the Times. Earlier this month, Mayor Eric Adams announced that the temporary shelter in the cruise terminal would open with 1,000 beds and have similar services as other emergency relief sites, like the short-lived tent facility on Randall's Island that shut down after only a month.

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Theara Coleman, The Week US

Theara Coleman has worked as a staff writer at The Week since September 2022. She frequently writes about technology, education, literature and general news. She was previously a contributing writer and assistant editor at Honeysuckle Magazine, where she covered racial politics and cannabis industry news.