VIDEO - Adams says migrants could be put in 20 NYC gyms

Mayor Eric Adams on Tuesday said 20 city public-school gyms are now being eyed to hold migrants, although he claimed it’s just a possibility — despite photos this week showing beds set up in two of them and principals warning parents about the move.

Adams maintained that the city has not yet become so inundated with migrants that they need to be housed in the gyms, saying those who were photographed in a Brooklyn gymnasium over the weekend were there for only “a few hours.”

In the wee hours Tuesday at another Brooklyn school gym, a small busload of migrant men was dropped off to stay there for a few hours before being whisked off again, a source with direct knowledge of the situation told The Post.  

“We have 20 stand-alone gymnasiums throughout the city that are not part of the school building. They are on the list of potential locations we may have to use,” Adams told PIX 11.

“We’re not there yet, but we need a list to be prepared so that if this influx continues, we can accommodate.”

About 4,200 migrants arrived in the Big Apple last week, and another 15 buses are expected this weekend.

Adams’ claim of “potential locations” comes after at least 75 migrants were temporarily held at PS 188 in Coney Island on Sunday and ​Tuesday’s pre-dawn drop-off of ​10 others at MS 577​/PS 17​ in Williamsburg.

The principal of the Coney Island school had alerted parents in a letter Friday that the school was chosen as one of the “emergency, temporary sites to house individuals and families who are seeking asylum” in the city.

Adams maintained that the city has not yet become so inundated that migrants will have to be housed in school gymnasiums, even as migrants were photographed on cots inside a Coney Island school gym. Gregory P. Mango Adams said 4,200 migrants arrived in New York City last week and another 15 buses of migrants are expected this weekend. Ed Reed/Mayoral Photography Office. The abandoned Richard H. Hungerford School in Staten Island was prepared to receive 300 single migrant men Saturday. Twitter @SamForNYC

Migrants were photographed laying across green cots and milling around outside the stand-alone Brooklyn gymnasium before they were apparently whisked away to an old abandoned school in Staten Island.

“The one in Brooklyn, we were able to find other locations for those migrant asylum-seekers,” Adams said. “The time frame we needed was a few hours. We needed a few hours and were able to shift them to a different location.

“While we’re waiting to do that shifting you need a place to put people.”

It’s unclear how long the migrants were held on Coney Island this weekend and if the outrage their presence caused was part of the reason they were quickly sent off to Staten Island.

Parents at PS 17 (pictured) are outraged over migrants being put in the school’s gymnasium. Gabriella Bass

“The building on Staten Island was a closed school that was about to be demolished. The school was closed,” Adams said.

The former Richard H. Hungerford School on Tompkins Avenue in Staten Island was set up to receive at least 300 migrants Saturday, though it’s unclear if that is the location the migrants housed at Coney Island were taken Sunday.

The MS 577/PS 17 source told The Post that the 10 migrant men who were temporarily held in the schools’ shared gym overnight spent roughly two hours there, from 1 to 3 a.m., before being bused to Staten Island.

In the time they were held in the gym, the migrants relaxed on the roughly 50 cots set up, charged their phones and brushed their teeth, the source said.

MS 577 and PS 17 are among the six other Brooklyn schools that have prepped to start temporarily housing migrants inside their gyms.

The others include PS 18 and PS 132 in Williamsburg, PS 172 in Sunset Park and PS 189 near Prospect-Lefferts Gardens.

PS 17, 18, 132 and 172 all house kindergarten through fifth-grade students, while PS 189 has students from kindergarten through eighth grade.

At least six Brooklyn schools have been prepped to start temporarily housing migrants inside their gyms. Robert Mecea PS 17 parents are throwing a rally in front of their school to protest migrants possibly being kept in the gymnasium. Gabriella Bass

Dozens of incensed parents rallied outside the Williamsburg and Sunset Park schools Tuesday, including some who lashed out at the mayor’s suggestion migrants would only be held at the gym sites for several hours.

“I don’t trust the mayor,” Sheldon Austin, PS 172’s PTA co-president, raged to The Post, adding Hizzoner should have communicated the gym shelter plan much earlier.

“The fact that you did this on the weekend, on Mother’s Day, snuck everything in,” Austin said, addressing Adams.

“That tells me I can’t trust you. So I’m not going to believe nothing you say. Whether you are telling the truth or not. You lost our trust.”  

Another PS 172 parent who didn’t want to be named said they, too, were skeptical of the temporary plan.

“I’m very suspicious of a plan of temporary timing when, as parents, we were told with less than 24 hours [notice],” the parent said.

Brooklyn school parents are expected to protest migrants being processed in their gym. Gabriella Bass

Adams has repeatedly said the city is running out of options as migrants continue to swarm the city after last week’s termination of Title 42, a Trump-era policy that allowed for the quick expulsion of some asylum-seekers over COVID-19 concerns.

As of May 14, nearly 41,000 migrants were staying at the 150 emergency sites scattered across the Big Apple, according to figures released by City Hall on Tuesday.

More than 65,000 asylum-seekers have filtered through the system since last spring.

City Hall has also faced uproar over its plan to bus migrants staying in city shelters to hotels just outside of the five boroughs, in Rockland and Orange counties. More than 80 migrants – all single men — were shipped to Newburgh hotels in Orange County last week.

Orange County Executive Steven Neuhaus filed lawsuits Friday to stop the hotels from housing migrants, and Rockland County also took legal action to halt the city’s plan.  

-Additional reporting by Bernadette Hogan

https://nypost.com/2023/05/16/adams-says-migrants-housed-in-nyc-school-gyms-is-only-possibility-as-photos-show-cots-set-up/