In the last few weeks the number of buses arriving a day has increased from two to four, sometimes five, sometimes late at night, exhausting donations and exceeding the ability of volunteers and mutual aid networks in the city to respond. In response, members of the council are asking Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D) to use local resources and work in coordination with the council to ensure the federal government is fully responsive to the existing needs.
“With the number of buses arriving every day increasing rapidly, we encourage you to mobilize your administration to coordinate with other jurisdictions in the region to step in and assist with the response. If the District truly is a sanctuary city, we must stand up against the hateful rhetoric of Gov. Abbott and provide a dignified welcome to the arriving migrants,” said the letter, which was signed by 10 council members, including Brianne K. Nadeau (D-Ward 1), who chairs the council’s human services committee.
The letter, which was dated July 14, asks Bowser to release the city’s contingency funds, provide city staff members to assist migrants’ arrival, create respite centers near Union Station, ensure buses arrive during daylight hours, and provide coronavirus tests, protective equipment and isolation hotels for those who have been infected with the coronavirus.
In response to the letter, Bowser said the responsibility to help the migrants lies with the federal government.
“We are dealing with a federal issue that the District of Columbia won’t be able to bear,” Bowser said in a news conference Monday after acknowledging receiving the council members’ letter. “We have to be very focused on working with D.C. residents who are homeless and have a right to shelter in our city, especially as we prepare for the winter months. We know that we have a federal issue that demands a federal response.”
In an interview Sunday with CBS News’s “Face the Nation,” Bowser also said the influx of buses arriving at the city represents a “significant issue” and that her administration has called on the federal government to work across state lines to prevent people from “being tricked into getting on buses.”
Bowser said the city worked with the White House to provide a Federal Emergency Management Agency grant to assist SAMU First Response, the international humanitarian nonprofit that is officially assisting migrants.
The office of Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-D.C.) was not available to comment, and FEMA did not immediately respond to requests for comment Monday.
SAMU told The Washington Post last week that the organization does not have capacity to coordinate all the buses arriving in the city every week. Tatiana Laborde, SAMU’s managing director, said in an interview that the organization can fund 30 percent of onward tickets for those migrants going to other destinations, and the organization’s shelter in Montgomery County only allows migrants to stay up to three days.
SAMU’s FEMA grant is enough to provide emergency aid for about 2,000 migrants a month, but with the number increasing in recent weeks, the council said more needs to be done.
“The current FEMA grants are not nearly enough, and it is critical that we take advantage of any additional federal resources that are available. We must call on the federal government to work with the District in being fully responsive to the existing need, and would be glad to join you in doing so,” the letter read.
The Migrant Solidarity Mutual Aid Network — a coalition of D.C. grass-roots organizations heavily involved in aiding the migrants — and SAMU estimated that 10 percent to 15 percent of the migrants, including families with children who arrive with no connections in the country, are seeking to resettle in the Washington region.
Local leaders with the Region Forward Coalition at the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments, which is chaired by Nadeau, will convene this week to determine what officials and nonprofits, including SAMU, can do to increase support for those arriving in the city.