City of San Antonio to seek $6.5M in federal money to keep funding local migrant services

Published: Fri, 03/10/23

City of San Antonio to seek $6.5M in federal money to keep funding local migrant services


Catholic Charities of San Antonio is one of several groups and agencies that have been helping asylum seekers traveling through San Antonio. The city of San Antonio is requesting an additional $6.5 million in federal money to offset local costs incurred in serving migrants crossing through the area.
(Courtesy Catholic Charities of San Antonio)

Community Impact
By Edmond Ortiz
Updated 

San Antonio City Council voted March 9 to allow the city to ask the federal government for $6.54 million to reimburse costs related to aiding migrants traveling through the community.

The city's Human Services Director Melody Woosley said the city seeks reimbursement through the National Board of the Emergency Food and Shelter Program's Shelter and Services Program.

Throughout 2022, the city spent $10.7 million on overseeing local agencies and organizations providing a variety of services to migrants who traversed San Antonio, according to city staff.

In June 2022, the council authorized the city to seek reimbursement from EFSP for a maximum amount of $12.7 million for migrant service-related expenses that would be incurred all of 2022. But to date, the city has been reimbursed $1.55 million, local leaders said.

On Dec. 15, 2022, the council authorized the city to seek out reimbursement for a maximum of $3.03 in expenses that the city would incur between Jan. 1 and March 31, 2023. Local officials said the city did receive $2 million in reimbursement funds covering expenses for the first two months of this year.

 
“We are constantly pushing for reimbursement,” City Manager Erik Walsh said.

It has been nine months since the city opened a Migrant Resource Center on San Pedro Avenue, south of North Star Mall, to help take in many of the migrants who have been passing through San Antonio.

Local officials said the city has served more than 380,000 asylum seekers since January 2021, but that migrant arrivals decreased 71% in January 2023 over the previous month. City staff attributed the drastic drop in arrivals to a number of immigration policy changes that the federal government made regarding asylum seekers from specific countries.

Local leaders said they plan to keep the Migrant Resource Center open through May. This is about the same time U.S. President Joe Biden’s administration is expected to end Title 42, a policy that has allowed the federal government to use the COVID-19 public health emergency declaration as a means to quickly expel asylum-seekers trying to cross the U.S.-Mexico border.
By Edmond Ortiz - Edmond joined Community Impact as a reporter in August 2021, helping to launch new editions in the San Antonio market. Edmond covers various beats in the North San Antonio coverage area. He previously was the main reporter for Local Community News, covering several areas in and around San Antonio, first as a freelancer and then staff member. Prior to that, Edmond was a community news reporter for Prime Time Newspapers and the San Antonio Express-News, including editing two community weeklies. He's a San Antonio native, and studied mass communications at San Antonio College and Texas State University.
 


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