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NYC Expands Debit Card Initiative for Migrants, Sparking Debate

Mona Davids by Mona Davids
July 4, 2024
in Metro

Pharmacist accepting credit card by contactless payment. Woman purchasing products in the pharmacy. Pharmacist hands charging with credit card reader.

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New York City is expanding its controversial program, providing pre-loaded debit cards to migrant families staying in city-funded accommodations.

The Adams administration plans to distribute cards to over 7,300 migrants in the next six months at an estimated cost of $2.6 million. 

This expansion follows a pilot program launched in March earlier this year with Mobility Capital Finance, which served about 3,000 migrants.

Migrants residing in hotels converted into shelters via the city’s 28-day housing voucher program are eligible for city-funded debit cards.

According to the reports, the pilot program is expanding to include 14 additional hotels, raising the total to 17 hotels capable of accommodating around 1,230 migrants each month. 

This represents about 2% of the over 65,000 migrants supported by the city’s shelter system.

The program’s expenses could reach as high as $53 million.

Deputy Mayor for Health and Human Services Anne Williams-Isom defended the program, stating, “When we empower people, we help them achieve self-sufficiency and access the American Dream.”

The administration argues that the debit cards allow migrants to make their own choices and support local businesses.

Mayor Eric Adams has characterized the program as a cost-saving measure, replacing the previous system of providing non-perishable food boxes to families in city-funded accommodations. 

City officials claim the cards cost about half as much as delivering food boxes and project savings of $4 million on migrant costs by year-end.

Under the program, migrant families of four, with children younger than five, are eligible to receive up to $350 weekly, which amounts to approximately $18,200 annually.

The program, however, has faced criticism from some city council members and Congressional Republicans. Joseph Borelli, a New York Council member, argued that the debit cards are “fundamentally unfair” to the city’s working poor. 

Some others remarked that the city’s debit card program is a recipe to attract more migrants.

Staten Island Councilman David Carr said, “We have no obligation to do anything. We have no obligations to house, feed, or clothe these individuals, as we have been saying for almost two years now. The actions of the city are creating incentives for these migrants to come here.”

Criticism of the program has also reached the federal level, with Republican Representatives, including Darrell Issa of California and Lauren Boebert of Colorado, questioning the funding sources and the program’s fairness. 

They noted that the weekly $350 provided to migrants through the debit card program exceeds the average monthly $291 allocated to low-income, elderly, and disabled U.S. citizens under the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), known as food stamps. 

New York City has received over 190,000 asylum seekers in the past year, spending more than $1 billion on migrant care. 

The city expects to spend about $10 billion on migrant costs in the coming years.

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