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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
National
Kaitlin Washburn

Another plane of migrants arrives in Chicago area as Mayor Brandon Johnson continues call for federal help

Asylum-seekers get off a bus at 800 S. Des Plaines St., Friday, Nov. 24, 2023. The mayors of Chicago, Denver and New York have called for additional federal resources to address the influx of migrants. (Pat Nabong/Sun-Times)

Hours after a plane from Texas carrying 355 migrants arrived early Sunday morning in Rockford, Mayor Brandon Johnson repeated his plea for more federal support to address the ongoing migrant crisis.

The plane landed about 1 a.m. at Chicago Rockford International Airport, then the migrants onboard were immediately put on buses headed for Chicago, escorted by Winnebago County sheriff’s deputies, the city of Rockford said on Facebook.

They were taken to Chicago’s “landing zone,” a Facebook post said, but Rockford officials did not share an exact address. A city spokesperson declined to answer specific questions about the flight, including who chartered it and where in Texas it originated.

In a statement, the city of Chicago said a private Boeing 777 from San Antonio, coordinated by Eastern Airlines, landed in Rockford carrying 350 people seeking asylum.

After landing, the passengers were put on eight buses chartered by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, according to a city of Chicago spokesperson. The buses dropped the migrants in the surrounding suburbs, and they are now making their way to Chicago via trains and other means, the spokesperson said.

Rockford and Winnebago County officials learned Saturday the plane was headed to the city. The Facebook post said the plane was landing in Rockford because of Chicago’s new ordinance cracking down on buses bringing migrants to the city.

The Chicago City Council passed new rules that allow officials to fine bus companies that disregard the city’s drop-off protocols. Only two buses can arrive each hour at the landing zone, at 800 S. Des Plaines St., between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.

Rockford officials said on Facebook that the city is not aware of any other flights coming to Rockford from Texas, but they remain in contact with the Texas Department of Emergency Management.

Earlier in December, migrants arrived in Chicago on a privately chartered flight from Texas. More than 120 people were on that flight from El Paso.

Abbott has begun redirecting buses and planes to cities near Chicago because of the new requirements, according to the Rockford Facebook post.

Some counties in the area have begun preparing for the potential arrival of these buses and planes.

A McHenry County spokesperson in a statement on Friday said the county would facilitate the transportation of migrants who arrive there to Chicago.

“While there is no advance notice as to when and where asylum-seekers may arrive, McHenry County representatives and Emergency Management have been in regular communication with municipal mayors, managers and law enforcement to discuss the coordination of responses,” the spokesperson said.

Abbott began busing migrants from Texas in 2022 in response to President Joe Biden’s move to end Title 42, a Trump-era policy that allowed for migrants crossing the border to quickly be returned to Mexico.

In an appearance Sunday morning on “Meet the Press,” Johnson reiterated the need for more help from the Biden administration. He was joined by Denver’s mayor, Mike Johnston.

“Now [Abbott] has taken on this very dangerous task of placing individuals on airplanes and flying them into our various cities,” Johnson said. “This is certainly a matter of not just our national security, but it’s the type of chaos that this governor is committed to administering.”

When asked about the death of Jean Carlos Martinez Rivero, the 5-year-old boy who recently died in a Pilsen shelter, Johnson criticized the Texas governor for not providing health screenings and vaccinations at the U.S.-Mexico border.

Johnson, Johnston and Eric Adams, New York City’s mayor, joined together this past week to call for more federal support. Their three cities have received hundreds of thousands of new arrivals since Abbott began sending migrants and refugees to cities with Democratic mayors.

As of 8 a.m. Sunday, 14,585 new arrivals are staying at 27 shelters, according to the Chicago Office of Emergency Management and Communications. About 572 are awaiting placement, including 241 at O’Hare International Airport and 278 at the city’s landing zone.

Contributing: Emmanuel Camarillo

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