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ICYMI — New York Has Thousands of Open Jobs at Businesses Willing to Hire Migrants and Asylum Seekers with Work Permits

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Washington, DC — A recent article in Spectrum News underscored the need to expand work authorizations for migrants and asylum seekers, highlighting the thousands of open jobs in New York that could be filled by asylum seekers and migrants with work permits.

Spectrum News reports that more than 1,000 businesses have signaled they will hire migrants and asylum seekers who have work permits, emphasizing the need for the federal government to step up and expand work authorizations. 

As the article notes, New Yorkers know that including migrants in the workforce will strengthen the economy in multiple ways: “immigrants populate low-populated areas; they buy homes; they spend money at stores; they contribute to the economy in much-needed ways.” 

Read highlights below: 

Spectrum News: DOL: Nearly 40K jobs identified for NY migrants

“The state Department of Labor has identified 39,456 jobs open to migrants and asylum seekers in New York, but does not keep track of who is hired, as state officials wait for the federal government to reach a deal on immigration reform.

Thousands of employment opportunities available to migrants in each region of the state feature openings in the health care, manufacturing, retail, food service, construction and cleaning or janitorial industries, according to the department.

To date, 1,016 businesses statewide responded to an inquiry the department made earlier this fall for employers willing to hire undocumented New Yorkers with legal work status.

[…]

People who arrive in the United States from other countries have one year to file a federal application seeking asylum, but then have to wait at least 150 days, or five months, to apply for a work permit.

More than 150,000 migrants have arrived in New York City since spring 2022, including about 67,000 that remain in the city’s care and a few thousand who relocated upstate.

Gov. Kathy Hochul directed the Labor Department to connect with businesses to identify job openings for asylum seekers to reduce the burden on shelters and social services — particularly sapped in the city and downstate metropolitan communities.

Labor officials work with immigrants with approved work permits to complete a work-readiness intake form, which is sent to DOL career counselors, who help people with their job search and leads.

“The state is actively helping asylum seekers with work authorization and with job-matching services,” Duffy said.

Community organizations and nonprofits around the state work to connect new arrivals to legal assistance they need to file a case or for work permits, but a shortage of immigration attorneys is leading to long delays.

[…] 

Lowry’s office, based in Albany, helped bus about 400 migrants to the Capital Region from the city this summer. It took two full-time attorneys in the office two years to work through a waitlist of about 400 evacuees from Afghanistan, she said, who arrived between February and October 2021.

“We’ve added some more as the time goes on, and more support help, but it took us two years,” Lowry said. “So you multiply the same by other nationalities and different language barriers, it’s going to be a long wait list.”

Elected officials in New York have pushed for the work authorization process to change and put migrants to work more quickly, but the decision rests with the federal government.

In September, the federal government granted Temporary Legal Status to more than 15,000 Venezuelans in New York and more than 400,000 across the country, expediting the process.

Senate Labor Committee chair Jessica Ramos says state officials and members of New York’s congressional delegation must fight louder to expand Temporary Legal Status to people arriving from more countries.

“Not only is the federal government not giving them working papers, now, they’re being left to fend for themselves on the street,” the senator said Monday.

Ramos wants to see New York City create a registry of new arrivals and a street vending system to help more people qualify to work. The senator will push for legislation to be included in the next budget to address these issues, including more funding to help migrants afford an attorney and expand workforce development programs for asylum seekers.

[…]

“Immigrants populate low-populated areas; they buy homes; they spend money at stores; they contribute to the economy in much-needed ways,” she added. And so if we wanted to look at it that way, they are huge assets to our community and to be welcomed.”

[…]