Mayor Adams (00:00):
Two types of Americans, those who live in New York and those who wish they could. You got this.
Fabian Levy (00:30): Good morning everybody. Happy New Year. My name is Fabian Levy and I serve as Deputy Mayor for communications for the city of New York. We appreciate everyone joining us today for the first in-person media availability of 20 twenty-four. While the year may be different, our priorities remain the same; protecting the public, growing our economy, and delivering for working people every day. These efforts take all of us, which is why the mayor has once again convened senior leadership here at City Hall to answer your questions, address issues, and provide New Yorkers with crucial information about the work of their city government. So joining us today, we have Mayor Eric Adams, first Deputy Mayor, Sheena Wright, chief advisor to the Mayor, Ingrid Lewis-Martin, chief of Staff, Camille Joseph Warlick, deputy Mayor for Operations, Mayor Joshi, deputy Mayor for Housing, Economic Development and Workforce, Maria Torres-Springer, deputy Mayor for Health and Human Services, Anne Williams-Isom, deputy Mayor for Strategic Initiatives, Ana Almanzar and Chief Counsel, Lisa Zornberg. So without further delay, I'm pleased to turn it over to Mayor Adams.
Mayor Adams (01:28): Thanks. Thanks so much and thanks to all of you and happy New Year's to all of you. 2024. New Year really was excited to being in Times Square. There was so much energy in Times Square and it's sort of hard to believe that in 2022, when I took office, we had the fourth-lowest tourism in over twenty-something years. And last year, 2023, we had the fourth-highest tourism in history of over 60 million people visited. And every time I went to Times Square, walked the streets, you see a different energy out there, the excitement. When you add it to the fact that people come to this city because we're the safest big city in America. Crime is down, jobs are up. That's what I ran on and that's what I was committed to do every day. And the byproduct of a safe city is not only tourism, is that people are once again enjoying all that the city has to offer. (02:33) In 2023 overall crime went down. We saw a drop in five of the seven major crime categories, including a 12% decline in homicides and 25% decrease in shootings. And also in 2023, we saw something that is very dear to me. Many of you may not be aware of it, but I don't like rats. And we saw rat complaints go down, trash set out on the street for less time and we got on track to putting garbage in containers, 100% of the city's garbage. And we want to get black garbage bags off the streets of the city. And we have the right movement, right direction, and right team with our rat czar and Commissioner Tish, who is really focused. People told me it was going to take four years to do. We're doing it in a little over two years and I'm really excited about it because it's a change of the game on the landscape of our city. (03:38) We plan to continue making our city cleaner and safer in 2024. And really want to thank NYPD, FDNY, DOT, our subway system. If you really want to see the coordination, you could have hundreds of thousands of people at Times Square and within hours, the place was not only clean but safe. There were so many questions about how are you going to manage any form of protest or any form of disruption. We saw what happened. NYPD came with a real plan, executed that plan, and people felt safe being out celebrating the coming in of the new year. Our first responder spent days prepared and they did the right thing in the right time and executed a great plan. It's about executing plans. (04:27) Subway crime is down, subway safety plan, dealing with encampments on our streets, our encampment plan, dealing with public safety, even putting in place our anti-gun unit, shootings are down. Each time you put in a plan, coordinate and execute, we're seeing the results that we stated we were looking for. So I'm excited about 2024. I said 2023 was going to be my Aaron Judge year and it darn sure was. We hit it out the park. There was a number of records that we were able to break and now I'm looking towards 2024. I don't know if I'm going to do a Curry, Steph Curry or LeBron James. I haven't figured out yet, but it's going to be a real year to win some real championship for the people of this city. So why don't we open it up.
Speaker 1 (05:14): Yes, good morning everyone. Happy New Year. So Mr. Mayor, how are you executing the plan now that migrants are coming in by train and trying to circumvent your bus order? And number two, how will you execute the plan to eject the vendors from the bridge?
Mayor Adams (05:38): Okay, great, great. First, what Governor Abbott has done in his total reckless disregard for using people as pawns, he has shifted and he just wants to create chaos. And we can't be so stagnant that we don't respond to his shift. And that is what we are going to do. We're going to be extremely calculative in how we do it. Utilize our manpower resources, utilize our executive order's powers to not just be stagnant. We put out in executive order. If he's shifting, we're going to shift. And that is what the Corp Council and the City Hall's Council really at least it has been amazing and thinking one step ahead and we coordinated and communicated with the municipalities in the area and they should all do the same EO. They should look at everyone that has that train line that leads into the city. Everyone that has the municipalities around us, they should do the same EO. (06:43) This is what we learned from Chicago. He tried it in Chicago also. We are dealing with a person who just wants to disrupt. This is not about raising the attention on an issue. This is a mean dispirited way of using people and disrupting municipalities not only in this region and in other parts of the entire country. So we're going to pivot and shift and be prepared to send the right message to these bus operators. You should not participate in the actions of Governors Abbott, the Brooklyn Bridge. You have a photo of that Brooklyn Bridge?
Fabian Levy (07:18): I can get it. So you can keep talking.
Mayor Adams (07:22): I was driving across the Brooklyn Bridge, I think it was Saturday and I called Fabian. I said, can you get a photographer out here to take a picture of this bridge? People couldn't walk. It's not only a sanitary issue, it's a public safety issue. (07:38) People were jumping over the bridge onto the bike path because we came to a blockage. And so I'm not quite understanding those that are not clear that you can't have a bridge lined up on both sides with vendors selling all sorts of items. And it created this bottleneck. So you needed an emergency egress to get off the bridge. People would have trampled over each other. We need order in the city. That is one of our major landmarks. And Mary, you can go into what our initiative, what we have started. We're going to clear that bridge of vendors. Now, if other electors decide they want to counteract what we want to do, we can only do what we do.
Speaker 1 (08:32): So if they're still there tomorrow, right? They have until tonight, I understand. If they're still there tomorrow, are you physically picking up their stuff and moving it out? How are you enforcing?
Mayor Adams (08:45): Hold on for one moment. I want to get this clear. This is a very important point that we need to understand in the city. NYPD locks up people, the other parts of the criminal justice system on serious crimes, they determine if they're going to stay in. We're going to clean up the bridge. If other forms of our legislative body decides we don't want the bridge cleaned up, we can only do what's in our power. And I'm saying to New Yorkers that the policies that are being implemented by a small numerical minority of electors in this city, they are implementing policies that have been implemented in other cities. And we are witnessing the just dismantling of public safety in those cities. We have been successful in here in holding back some of those policies. But the policies that are being implemented on public urination, public injection of drugs, vendors everywhere, crime. (09:44) We've been fighting back this administration. But if we're saying that we want our city to go down the route of other cities, there's not much we can do. We're going to confine with the law. But New Yorkers need to be clear. Look at other cities and we need to ask ourselves, is this what we want for our city? And I say no to that. And I think the overwhelming of New Yorkers embrace my belief that we don't want our cities to look like some of the other cities and the policies that were put in place to create that environment and the vendoring on our bridge is a symbol of the type of policies that people are trying to implement. Go ahead. Deputy Mayor.
Speaker 2 (10:26): Thank you. I just want to follow up and highlight what the mayor was talking about around safety. The Brooklyn Bridge is a major pedestrian thoroughfare. New York City is back. People want to be in public space. They celebrate the public space. It's where communities are made. It's part of our social economy. In 2021, on an average weekday, we'd have about 17,000 pedestrians cross that bridge. By 2022 that had gone up to thirty-four thousand and the numbers continue to rise. This is something that's extremely positive and is real sign of life in New York City, but it's also a safety concern. At its widest point that bridge is 16 feet, at its narrowest, it's five feet. It's crowded on a regular day. If there's an emergency, it's a life-threatening experience. We have to make sure that our major pedestrian thoroughfares are there for pedestrians so that the public can use them. (11:27) So they're there for the greater good. And we are certainly understanding that some people have been vending on that bridge for a while. We fliered, we let them know the rules were initially published in October. There was a lot of press, thanks to many people in this room about the current conditions and what the rulemaking would do. And it's been several months. We've gone through the administrative rulemaking process. Flyers went out. DOT will be holding property if it's left on the bridge at a safe and convenient location so people can come by and pick it up. And it's absolutely about education, showing people where they can vend legally in the city. And there are many streets in the city where people can vend legally and making sure that they understand this transition is happening and we will not tolerate disobedience. But we certainly are not going to be surprising anyone in terms of the fact that the transition's happening. (12:25) And we will help accommodate you getting your stuff off the bridge. But we're not going to tolerate continued vending on the bridge after the rule goes into effect. And I think New Yorkers are going to really appreciate the change. They're going to appreciate being able to walk across that bridge, have the freedom to move freely. I was joking early, literally stretch their arms out because there is space finally. And it is really one of the most iconic and beautiful structures in the city. And it's time for us to be able to celebrate it and see it for what it is.
Mayor Adams (12:58): And Julia, I just cannot emphasize enough that the overwhelming number of New Yorkers, they want clean streets. They want an organized city. There's a small number of people, they want a legalized prostitution. They think it's all right for someone to put a camp in front of your house. They think it's okay for people to deal with serious mental health illness and they should be allowed to stay on the streets, although they can't take care of themselves. There's just a philosophical difference in the city that I said it a few weeks ago, and I'm going to say it again. The overwhelming number of New Yorkers, wanting organized clean street and not any and everything goes. When we went to clean up the plaza on Roosevelt Island where you saw brothels, you saw prostitution, you saw people selling food under pigeon droppings. We went out there to clean it up. There was a small number of electors that were saying, no, leave it alone. (14:09) This city is too diverse, too complicated and too many different ways of life for us not to have clear directions on what we expect from our neighbors and what we expect from the residents of the city. And that's the clarity I'm going to represent. I can do it within my power. And a small number of people are going to push back, but we're going to push hard to fight for this city to be a city that's orderly run. We shouldn't have mopeds driving up and down the blocks, going up one-way streets, driving on sidewalks. I mean, you look at these quality of life issues that we are fighting for. A small number of people are trying to fight to not stabilize this amazing city that we have. And I'm just not going to surrender to the loudest. The loudest, not the majority.
Fabian Levy (15:05): The photos that I was just showing, we'll send it around as well. And I would just want to show this one video that we saw on Twitter.
Speaker 5 (15:12): Can you hold it up?
Fabian Levy (15:12): Yep. There's four here. Hold on. I'm just getting it up for you. Look at the danger of this. Someone literally climbing up on a barrier and then jumping off from the pedestrian walkway onto a bike pathway. We'll send around this tweet. This is just a public tweet.
Speaker 5 (15:36): Send it to us?
Fabian Levy (15:37): Yes. We'll send it around.
Mayor Adams (15:38): Imagine someone yells, a fire, someone hear a car backs fire and think it's a shot. You have a stampede on that bridge. Idealism can't collide with realism. Just throwing out these policies without understanding how would it impact public safety? I have to think that through.
Speaker 3 (16:05): Marshall.
Speaker 4 (16:06): Mr. Mayor, I know that you signed an executive order to keep the buses from coming into New York City at certain times. I know that you've asked people in the surrounding communities to sign similar executive orders, which they have not done, but people are still being let off in New Jersey communities and coming into the city. Have you thought about the idea of sending NYPD police officers to stop the buses from letting people off at these places in New Jersey at the train stations to keep them from coming into New York?
Mayor Adams (16:37): And Lisa, can you go into what our strategies around that? But we are going to really make sure we utilize all of the resources we have within the law. We're not going to do anything that goes against the law, but we have done a great job of communicating with the municipalities around us. I got a call
Mayor Adams (17:00): I'm going to do with the governor of New Jersey who just has been a real partner with us and we want to continue to utilize all resources that we have. Lisa, you want to go into some of our strategies?
Lisa (17:12): First, just one correction. The town of...
Speaker 6 (17:15): Can you speak a louder in the microphone?
Lisa (17:17): You bet. I've never been accused of speaking too low, so that's great. The town of Clarkston, just for clarification-
Fabian Levy (17:24): Clarkstown.
Lisa (17:25): ... Clarkstown, did issue an EO, that's in the county of Rockland County. So whether the town supervisor there knows it or not, he joined the city's coalition and the city has in fact called upon and encouraged all surrounding counties in New York, New Jersey, elsewhere, to issue similar EOs to what New York City has done. So we may be seeing others after the new year coming out of other locations. What's happening right now is bonkers. What Texas is doing is bonkers. It is financing a state operation to send hundreds and thousands of migrant individuals, recent arrivals to the United States, to New York City. The governor of Texas has proudly broadcast tens of thousands. He will not stop until national immigration policy is changed. Will Texas coordinate in telling us when buses are departing or arriving? No. (18:34) Particularly since September 2023, they have tried to shut off communication so that we have ghost buses, buses that are arriving en masse any time of day, anytime of night, on the weekends, when we are at least able as a city to staff and meet any emergent needs of people coming off the buses. So New York City responded similar to what Chicago did, very commonsensical law and order to help us manage this humanitarian crisis executive order. Give us 32 hours advance notification, tell us that the bus is coming into New York City. Let us know how many children do you have on board? How many adults? Families do you have on board? Since we issued that executive order, not one bus from Texas has complied. Not one. The strategy, which we believe is being directed by the state of Texas, is purposely to try to evade the executive order. (19:39) And now what you're seeing is the same buses from Texas paid for by the state of Texas that were previously dropping off at Port Authority are now dropping off at train stations in New Jersey, at Trenton, at Secaucus, other places in Jersey and reportedly providing tickets, one-way tickets, from those train stations to come into Penn Station. So as the mayor said, we're going to explore every possible option, but just to be clear, our goal is not to hold any of this chaotic tactic against the migrants who are arriving. We're going to continue to be decent and humanitarian. This is a humanitarian crisis. But to be able to manage this crisis, we have to do everything we possibly can, and the bus companies themselves really need to take notice that they are exposing themselves if they purposely seek to evade this executive order and harm New York City by participating in what really is a bad faith plan at this point, to hoist thousands of vulnerable individuals onto buses, on trains, to bring them to a city without any coordination whatsoever.
Marsha (20:59): Mr. Mayor, I want to make sure I understand this. Basically what you're saying is that you are going to explore the possibility of using NYPD police officers to stop people in New Jersey, from coming into New York?
Mayor Adams (21:12): And I use this term often, everything is on the table that is in conformity with the law. We're dealing with a bully right now and everything is on the table that conforms with the law. Our legal team at court counsel and my special counsel here, they have spent the entire holiday weekend looking at every option that is available to us.
Marsha (21:41): Can NYPD officers go to New Jersey and get New Jersey police officers to help them to stop the buses from coming in? What's legal? You talk about what are the options? What are the options?
Mayor Adams (21:52): That's what we're exploring. This is new territory and we are looking over every authority that we have and really have to commend my special counsel and the court counsel. They are looking over every authority we have because we're dealing with an unprecedented situation of a person that's trying to destabilize cities. Chicago, well, it's Denver, New York City, Massachusetts. And so this is unprecedented. And what I'm pleased about that our voice was a single voice in '22, and now there's a chorus that's building that people are realizing that this administration we're doing the right thing, but they're realizing that you can't ignore this problem. This is a real problem. (22:42) And the governor of Texas continuously state that, "Well you guys are a sanctuary city." That has nothing to do with this, these people are paroled into the country, they're legally here, and being a sanctuary city, it has nothing to do with this at all. These are people who are paroling into the country and while they're here, we are obligated by what the city has pushed. And that's why we're in court now to say that the right to shelter should not have an impact on this migrant crisis.
Marsha (23:18): It seems like a bizarre case of poker where you say, I'm going to issue an executive order that's going to prevent only have buses coming in a certain time, and he says, "I'll see that bid and now I'm going to send him to New Jersey." It keeps going.
Mayor Adams (23:35): You do until he throws in his hand. We're going to win because we're on the side of right. We're on the side of right, that human beings should not be treated in an inhumane manner and so he's not on the side of right. Our country has always been a country of immigrants, a country of rules and regulations, and we will utilize those rules and regulations to stop what he's doing to cities in America. New York is a city where we fight bullies and others are joining us.
Lisa (24:09): And this cries out, this cries out again for a federal response.
Mayor Adams (24:14): Yes.
Lisa (24:16): It's high time that the federal government step in with a national decompression strategy.
Fabian Levy (24:21): Let me just jump in one thing. One thing that you just said Marsha about, it's this game of poker, it's going back and forth. The mayor always talks about... And every time someone asks me about this, this is what I think about. The mayor always talks about his love for Madam Secretary. I like comic book movies and Dark Knight, this line that always comes to my mind when I think about Greg Abbott. Alfred is talking to Bruce Wayne about the Joker and his evil tactics, and there's a line in it that some men can't be reasoned with or negotiated with. Some men just want to watch the world burn. Greg Abbott is that man. He can't be reasoned with. He can't be negotiated with. He just wants to watch this country burn.
Speaker 7 (25:00): Yes, in the same form as Marsha's questions, I wanted to ask about the executive order. It seems to be backfiring and not going the way you wanted. Instead of coordination, it seems to be getting more chaotic. Is there any thought that maybe the executive order could have been written differently? I'm also wondering the communication with these New Jersey municipalities, what does that look like? What is their understanding of how the executive order works and what type of prior communication you had with them before the order went into effect? And then separately, can you talk about the earthquake that happened in Queens earlier today? Any information you can give us about that?
Mayor Adams (25:34): Yes. No, the executive orders is not backfiring. We spoke with our colleagues in Chicago who told us that this is what Governor Abbott did in Chicago. He started dropping people miles away and telling them that you are in Chicago proper. And so we are continually anticipating the move of his actions. And what I am really excited about is that we are not willing to be just stationary. If we have to change the EO, we would change the EO. We have to alter the EO, we have to alter the EO. Because this is who we're dealing with right now. We're looking at a person who is focused on disruption. And if we don't address it based on his goal, we have to be clear on his goal. His goal is to disrupt. And so the EO is only the first level that we're going to continue to modify, shift, procedures, processes, to really push back on what Governor Abbott is doing. Who can talk about the earthquake? I didn't feel it.
Sheena (26:52): It was 1.7.
Speaker 8 (26:52): I think what we generally know is we thought that there was an explosion on Randall's Island, but it turns out that it was an earthquake probably along the lines of 1.7. And so we're waiting to get additional information.
Speaker 9 (27:05): Randall's or Roosevelt?
Speaker 8 (27:06): Roosevelt.
Lisa (27:07): Roosevelt.
Speaker 8 (27:07): Roosevelt Island, not Randall's Island. Just to be clear.
Speaker 7 (27:09): So there wasn't an explosion then?
Sheena (27:10): No.
Mayor Adams (27:10): No.
Lisa (27:10): No.
Speaker 8 (27:12): Correct.
Speaker 9 (27:15): Good morning, Mr. Mayor. Happy New Year to the team. I was going to ask a question along the same lines as Marsha, because two Saturdays ago I hosted a end-of-the-year gala for the Reset Talk Show, and the big talking point was about the migrant crisis. And a few people stated, listen, if the mayor at least try to push back one bus, it'll make us feel better. And then it's reported that there's this executive order. So I'm glad you could expound on that a little bit simply because it'll make some of the New Yorkers feel better if they know that you're fighting for them. And my second question is the minimum wage, it's a new law. Is it across New York City?
Mayor Adams (28:04): Yeah, the... Maria can go into the minimum wage. But listen, I am blown away at some of the most intelligent New Yorkers in the city, when I'm moving around the city. I say this over and over again. Who are not aware that we can't stop the buses from coming in. Who are not aware we do not have deportation status. Who are not aware that we cannot turn those who commit crimes over to ICE. They're just rules that everyday New Yorkers are not aware of and we need to really continue in 2024, educating New Yorkers on the fact that over 57% of those who came in, we were able to self sustain. That we have been educating the countless number of children, that we are operating within the restrictions of not only federal law but city and state law. (29:03) So we were dealt a hand using Marsha's poker analogy, we were dealt a hand and we played the hell out of that hand. What this administration has done of international and national leaders have looked at it and said, it's amazing what you have done in this administration. And so this is the hand we were dealt. And everyday New Yorkers who are struggling to make ends meet, they're not weeding through all the layers. All they know is we have a mayor and we have a migrant crisis, and the mayor did not fix that migrant crisis. We have to show them that the national government has dropped us into our lap. (29:48) Let Deputy Mayor Maria Torres-Springer-
Maria (29:51): Sure. On your second question. Thanks for that and Happy New Year to everyone in the room. So the minimum wage did increase as of January 1st from $15 to $16. That's obviously really good news for New Yorkers. More money in the pockets of workers, and I think in many ways part of what has been a concerted effort from day one of this administration to make sure not only do we grow jobs in New York and if anyone followed the job numbers from last month, we are now at 4.132 million private sector jobs. That is the most number of private sector jobs in this city's history. But part of that work in terms of our economic recovery isn't just the number of jobs, but also making sure of the quality of jobs and the increase in wages. (30:44) And so the increase of the minimum wage is a good thing. It really complements other efforts like all the work that we have done. For example, for app-based delivery workers to make sure that they are now earning a more sustainable wage. All of the work in terms of free tax prep, all of the work in terms of consumer protection, really a panoply of different tools to make sure that we're getting money into the hands of New Yorkers. And that will continue in this year so that we not only increase jobs, but really increase opportunity for families across the five boroughs.
Mayor Adams (31:23): Crime is down, jobs are up, tourists are back. That's what I ran on.
Speaker 10 (31:29): Mayor, you've said you want all these other municipalities to do their own EO.
Mayor Adams (31:34): Yes.
Speaker 10 (31:34): You also said to a couple folks that the idea of outsmarting Abbott is that eventually he'll fold his hand. But until and unless those other two things happen, the net effect of your EO so far is that the migrants who are coming here have a longer journey. They're on a bus, they get off in Secaucus, now they have to take a train as well. You said at the outset that it wasn't your intention to punish the asylum seekers, but right now, isn't that what's happening?
Mayor Adams (32:01): No, I don't think so. I think there's a process to getting to an end result. The first order of business was to demand a coordination with Governor Abbott and the bus companies. Demand these bus companies comply. That's the first line. We're saying, if you're coming into our city, you are going to comply with these rules. Clarity is the key. Now we get our other municipalities to put in place the same order. Clarity. If you're coming here, coordination. That's all we're asking. We're not stating that if a migrant or asylum seeker comes here, we're not going to do what we have done for this period of time. But we must lay down the rules of if you come to our city, this is what's expected of you. (32:49) And I keep saying this over and over again on everything we do in this city. New York City is a place of rules. It's a place of law and order, not unlawfulness and disorder. And this is no different. We're saying that if you come to our city, you're a bus operator, this is what you must comply with. And if you try to go to other municipalities outside of our region, we want them to join us like they're doing in Chicago.
Speaker 10 (33:17): Just a follow-up, you're saying you're talking to Governor Murphy, is that today and are you asking him to maybe do some kind of statewide EO that would obviate the need to go to every single municipality?
Mayor Adams (33:29): The team, Tiffany Raspberry, our IGA, she's reaching out to the governor's office and we are seeing how we could collaborate together because we don't want to spill over into another part of the city or our neighboring states. And so we think there's a real room for collaboration like we've done with the other cities. Our goal was very clear. We want to build a coalition of mayors and governors
Mayor Adams (34:00): Like the Massachusetts governor has been strong on this issue. That's our goal. And I'm going down to the Associations of Mayors and we're going to raise it as well. We all need to be responding to this, and I think that we're making a big mistake, that we are looking at the sink that's overflowing and not to force it. The national government needs to fix this problem. We got 3,000 migrants of asylums last week, 3,000. The national government must fix this problem, and I'm surprised our attention is not on the fact that this should not be happening to New York City, Chicago, Denver, Houston, El Paso, Brownsville, Texas. This should not be happening to cities. And I'm clear on that. It's not about just New York. No city should be going through this and it's not sustainable.
Speaker 11 (34:59): Happy New Year, Mr. Mayor and everyone else.
Mayor Adams (35:00): How are you?
Speaker 11 (35:01): I'm good, thank you. So I just wanted to ask you a question about something you said last week, something you said this morning on our air on Fox 5, and something that you said just a few moments ago.
Mayor Adams (35:12): Yes.
Speaker 11 (35:13): You said that migrants are responsible for some crime here in the city. So I just want to be very clear, do you believe that migrants are committing crime here in the city? And what data are you using to back that up?
Mayor Adams (35:25): Do I believe that there are some migrants who are committing crimes in the city? Yes. Yes. There are people who are committing crimes in all walks of life. It is not just migrants and asylum seekers. I think that we have a number of migrants who have committed crimes. We have a number of non-migrants who are committed crime. And so I do not want to walk away with anyone saying that the GLA increase we saw in the city was just migrants. No, it's not. It was long-term New Yorkers who committed GLAs also. But are there some crimes that migrants have committed? Yes, there are. But remember what I said last week. You place a person in an environment where they can't work, can't provide for themselves, they have to just sit around all day, that's not a good scenario. That's not a good scenario. And that is what we need to focus on, what environment are we creating in these cities?
Speaker 11 (36:32): And what data are you using to back it up? What data points?
Mayor Adams (36:35): There was a robbery pattern for instance, that when we looked at it, we identified that robbery pattern, there were some migrants that participated in that robbery pattern. Every robbery pattern we have in the city is not done by migrants, but we identified that this was a robbery pattern and there were migrants who participated in that robbery pattern.
Mike (36:58): Happy New Year.
Mayor Adams (36:59): Hey Mike. How are you?
Mike (37:01): I'm good. So I had a couple of questions. The first one has to do with sanctuary city status. You talked about this a bit earlier today, and you said something to the effect that the law isn't being used the way it was intended. So this is with Rosanna Scott, I believe. So from your point of view, could you clarify that? How was it intended to be used from your perspective? How should it be used and do you feel, excuse me, that it's time that the sanctuary city law and the city be suspended? So that's the first one. The second one real quick is-
Mayor Adams (37:45): Can you repeat that question, Mike? Yeah, I know what you said, but I got-
Mike (37:49): Should it be suspended?
Mayor Adams (37:54): Okay.
Mike (37:54): So the second one has to do with, I was out on break for this, but Phil Banks was I think referring to clown hour, clown time, something with clowns came up while I was away. I want to ask you, I mean it seemed a bit ad hominem to me.
Mayor Adams (38:13): I'm sorry [inaudible 00:38:14].
Mike (38:14): It's just like an attack against a person rather than kind of a disagreement over the thing. So do you feel like that sort of thing is appropriate, that kind of decorum, and do you feel like there's some onus on the administration to foster a decorum that's not along those lines?
Mayor Adams (38:40): No, and I think that is a great point that you raised. First, let me deal with, I was talking about right to shelter. If I said sanctuary city, I want to be clear. I'm talking about right to shelter. We don't believe right to shelter should apply to a humanitarian crisis. That's what we believe. And we're in court right now clearly articulating that, the forefathers and forewomen, mothers of that law, did not think that one day we were going to talk about a hundred sixty-something thousand people showing up at our door. That is what I believe we need to modify. And so if I use the term a sanctuary city, that's not what I was talking about. I was talking about right to shelter.
Lisa (39:27): Can I just jump in there-
Mayor Adams (39:28): Yes.
Lisa (39:29): ... to provide what I think is a purposeful mixing up of terms sometimes that you see, for example, from Governor Abbott and others. When Governor Abbott tweets out that he's going to direct busloads or planes with asylum seekers to sanctuary cities, let's be clear just for a moment. I think he's trying to confuse that with right to shelter. So in New York City, we have the Callahan Decree that we're in court about, which imposes certain obligations under a decree. Chicago, as far as I know, Illinois has no right to shelter. Denver, as far as I'm aware, has no right to shelter. So you have a situation, and I think there's an intentional conflating of terms, but when we talk about chaos and we talk about humanity, let's be clear, the state of Texas is purposefully sending thousands of migrants to cold locations who have no system or legal requirement to provide a right to shelter. And I just think that we should be clear about what the terminology is.
Mayor Adams (40:56): And responding to... Listen, we should always show the proper decorum, proper communication. We should not be mean-spirited on what we do. And I know it's hard for many people who are sitting in the seats where you are to clearly identify that some of you have been very mean to this administration. Some of you have distorted what we've said. There are days that I will leave press conferences and I'll ask myself, "Were we not at the same press conference?" And so there's some people in the administration who have been fighting on behalf of New Yorkers. They express themselves, and I think that some of the meetings that we've had where people just look at the comparisons of what we have done, and they walk away of saying, what is the mission here? What are we attempting to do? What are we trying to display? How do you walk away after two years of me being in office and not realizing how I manage this city? (42:02) I mean, how do you not see? I ran on bringing down crime, crime is down. I ran on returning our economy, the economy has returned. More private sector jobs in the history of the city. Education, our education numbers outpacing the state. Tourism, fourth highest in history. I mean, so when you get someone like a Phil and many of our others, I think the patience that this team has shown of just the unwillingness to say, okay, let's critique this administration, but darn it, part of that critique should be that they inherit COVID. They inherited 165,000 migrants, a city larger than Albany. And in spite of that, our numbers on housing, our numbers on jobs, earned income tax credit, getting stuff done in Albany. So when you get a response like that, no matter who we are, we're still human beings and people respond differently of how people treat them. (43:12) So I don't know if the decorum has been 100% even on the side of who's reporting this administration. I remember the story that you did when you talked about the fact that... What do you call that list? The DMO list. You didn't even mention that the other elected officials were on that list. It's like you guys are conveniently, conveniently... Okay, I'm sorry. You did the story?
Lisa (43:43): My colleague did.
Mayor Adams (43:45): Okay. Okay. My apologies to you. But your paper conveniently missed the other electives on that list. So it as though I'm trying to figure out the goal. Sometimes we sit down and we talk and we're like, "What's the goal here? Is the goal to say that my administration is incompetent?" When all the data shows not only are we competent, but we have weathered the storm that what other administration has gone through this, and we have weathered the storm and look at my other cities and my other colleagues. When I speak to my other mayors, they say, "Eric, how the heck are you guys doing this?" But you pick up the dailies and you would not think that. You would think from picking up the dailies that this is a group of people that are not doing the job and we're doing the job. So we need to have decorum. And that's something that I believe in. I joke and kid with you guys, there's nothing personal here. Our job is to be critiqued. But I know this administration is doing a great job under difficult circumstances.
Speaker 12 (45:02): Mayor Adams, happy New Year to you and the team.
Mayor Adams (45:03): Happy New Year.
Speaker 12 (45:07): Thank you. Have you considered a push to reverse sanctuary status?
Mayor Adams (45:11): I'm sorry?
Speaker 12 (45:12): Have you considered a push to reverse sanctuary status or do you believe in the tenets of that...
Mayor Adams (45:16): Sanctuary city status? No, because this is not the case here. These people are paroled into the city. They don't fall under sanctuary city status.
Speaker 12 (45:28): Send a signal to those who seek to come to the city though [inaudible 00:45:30].
Mayor Adams (45:31): I don't think... When I went down to the Darien gap, it was clear to me the desire, the people coming to America, the propaganda that's being used, one of our colleagues was saying that they were on a plane coming from Arizona and almost 80% of the people on the plane were migrants and asylum seekers taking pictures of themselves saying, "We are here in America." And so I don't know if that's the answer. The answer is for our national government to resolve this issue. That's the answer. Tinkering around the edges is not going to, I believe, going to do the job.
Speaker 13 (46:15): Happy New Year, Mr. Mayor and everyone. Mr. Mayor, I want to pivot to education and to this upcoming legislative session. So first question on education is are you planning on seeking any changes to that unfunded class size mandate law? Because it's already starting to have an impact and a very negative impact, and it's unfunded. And then my second question, Mr. Mayor, with regards to mayoral control, what are you seeking with renewing mayoral control? And are there any other changes to the current governance system that we have that you are seeking, perhaps changing the number of members? It's a bit unwieldy right now. And then last but not least, what are your legislative priorities, your other legislative priorities for this session?
Mayor Adams (47:13): Yeah, I met with the team, Tiffany Raspberry, Ingrid, Diane Savino, former state senator. We had a conversation over the last few days about focusing and zeroing in on that. Number one, mayoral control. I want the same thing that my former mayors had. We have two public school, we have a public school man, a public school chancellor. We understand the importance of the quality of education. And both of us had two different experiences. So I would like the same thing they had, they were allowed to turn around the school system. We're seeing some real productivity in the Department of Education, everything from giving our children quality food, to what we've done with Summer Rising, to the test scores outpaced in the state. So we're seeing some real W's, I think give us the opportunity to continue like we gave to other mayors. (48:08) Second cannabis enforcement. It needs to be localized. We need to be able to close down these cannabis shops. I stated, if I'm giving the enforcement opportunity, we will close down these shops in 30 days. They're making a mockery of the process and we need to make sure that we close them down. Housing, everyone talks about the need of housing, yet we got nothing out of Albany last year in housing. That just can't happen. We have to deal with the inventory issue that we are facing. We're doing our part here with Dan Gorodnik and Deputy Mayor Maria Torres-Springer. We're going to do our part and we're going to push through, but we need help in this issue around housing, and they're migrants and asylum seekers. (48:55) We need the support on the state level to make sure that we can manage this crisis that's impacting the economic engine of the state, which is New York City, of, if you look at the four huge areas, those are huge areas for us. And as you said, with the class size manner, I think that the ideal of that legislation gets in the way of the wheel of making sure we're not taking resources from those schools that are in greater need. And that's going to be part of our agenda when we go to Albany.
Speaker 14 (49:30): Hi, Mayor Adams.
Mayor Adams (49:30): How are you?
Speaker 14 (49:31): I'm great. Happy New Year. I wanted to ask you, I know you had mentioned previously you planned to go down to DC taking some faith leaders with you. I want to know when you do plan to visit DC next. And my second question, I guess related to what other people had asked, when you announced this executive order, did you not foresee that people would kind of circumvent the rule? And have you been in conversations with, I know you said you're kind of anything's on the table, but were you surprised? I don't know if Ms. Norbert wants to answer, but were you surprised to know? Because I think even hearing the executive order that the thought is okay, they're just not going to come into the city. They're going to find other ways. I don't know what your initial reaction was.
Mayor Adams (50:07): First DC, I'm going to DC I think on the 17th or 18th to meet with the mayors across the country because I want them to get more engaged in this. And we learned about the layers of doing this from Mayor Johnson in Chicago. And he stated that they started, after he put in his EO, they started dropping off outside. And so we knew there was going to be layers and we're going to continue to respond based on the layers. This is a diabolical plan by this governor, and we're going to have to respond based on what he's doing. And we did have communications with our other municipalities in the region. We did speak with
Mayor Adams (51:00): ... with them, communicated with them, and we want to encourage them all to put in a similar EO. That's our goal. We had 164,000, almost 165,000 people who have come here. 57% have been able to get stabilized because of the job that this team is doing. (51:18) And so Governor Abbott and the bus companies need to coordinate to make sure we can use our manpower correctly, make sure we could have the space correctly and do it in an organized timeframe that we could do it correctly so we don't have disorder in our city.
Speaker 15 (51:34): And Katie, I would add again to the point the mayor made. We were in contact with officials in both New Jersey and in New York State and the surrounding counties before the EO was issued, specifically because we knew what he did in Chicago. So, we wanted to make sure that did not happen. (51:49) That's why the mayor has been very clear. Every town, every county on a Metro North line, on a New Jersey Transit line should be issuing a similar EO right now to stop Abbott from ... No, we've spoken ... No, no ... to a number of counties and towns in Jersey and in New York state both right around here and even upstate to make sure that if he wants to go to Albany, for example, that we are ready for that.
Mayor Adams (52:13): And the one that was issued-
Speaker 15 (52:15): We've spoken to a bunch.
Mayor Adams (52:17): The one that was issued, he doesn't realize it, but he joined our team. We want everyone else to do what he's doing. So, he blames me that he's issuing the EO. Actually, he can blame me as much as he wants. Just get more EOs. Call others to do it as well.
Speaker 16 (52:36): And Katie, sometimes people don't realize the magnitude, the scale of what's about to hit them until it hits them. So, now that we've issued our EO and the other states have been impacted by it, maybe they'll understand the magnitude and the scale and they will join with us.
Speaker 17 (52:53): Hi, Mr. Mayor.
Mayor Adams (52:54): How are you?
Speaker 17 (52:54): Good. Two questions. First, then, is it fair to say that the goal of the EO is to spark a like large web of similar EOs across the region in a way that will somehow ultimately stifle the Abbott bussing? Is that the idea? And do you plan to also seek an EO that would apply to planes coming through the Port Authority and whatever other means of transportation people use? (53:21) And then second question is, you've talked a lot about how average New Yorkers seem not to understand that you can't just deport migrants. If you could deport them, would you?
Mayor Adams (53:33): Let me peel back each level. One, the goal of the EO is to coordinate people coming to our city so we can utilize our manpower better, so that we could utilize how to have spaces for people. So, that's the goal. The goal is not to have this cascade of EOs go out. That's a byproduct. The goal is to coordinate so that I don't wake Deputy Mayor Williams‑Isom up at three in the morning saying, hey, a bus was just dropped off at a location in the Bronx somewhere. That's the goal. (54:13) The second is that what people didn't understand, what are my abilities? And so when I talk about the list of things, it's because people came to me and said, "Hey, why don't you deport people?" I don't have that authority. The federal government has that authority. "Why don't you stop the buses from coming in?" I don't have that authority. (54:32) So, my goal is to answer the questions that people are giving to me, that everyday New Yorkers have been giving to me and some of them are very knowledgeable but not aware of my authority. (54:42) So now, would I deport or not? I'm not going to respond in hypothetical. If you do something that's harmful to the city repeatedly, I don't think you should be in our city. Our city should be a place of safety. It should be a place for those who appreciate being part of the American experience.
Speaker 18 (55:02): Mr. Mayor.
Mayor Adams (55:03): How are you?
Speaker 18 (55:03): Good. Circling back to your meeting with Governor Murphy in the coming days or today. So Governor Murphy and a growing number of New Jersey towns are saying they're not going to welcome migrants. Aside from this executive order, what will you ask them to do? And why hasn't this united coalition been created prior to this, 'cause now we seem like we're in this whack‑a‑mole situation of going to different train stations and there's no executive orders. And just to circle back with Fabien saying that you guys have been in contact with all these towns. Was it before or after the executive order was issued?
Speaker 15 (55:35): Before.
Mayor Adams (55:35): You said before?
Speaker 15 (55:38): Yes. And more after, but before.
Speaker 18 (55:40): But coming in back to, are you looking to expand the executive order further as building off what Dan was asking. In Chicago already, they're bypassing the executive order by sending people on planes. So what power does the city have and what are you exploring differently?
Mayor Adams (55:54): And that is so important because New Yorkers have continuously asked, " Why is this happening to us?" And people have said, "Hey, mayor, why are you allowing them to do this to us?" That's why we're in this important communication and education to let New Yorkers know I'm angry. They're angry. And where we need to have the anger pointed to. Because they didn't know. I mean, this is so new to everyday people watching their city being consumed like this. (56:27) And our goal is to educate New Yorkers where your anger should be pointed to and how we're going to use everything within our powers to make sure that, if there's things we can do to stop planes, like I said there was a plane that was diverted to Philadelphia because of smog. But it was coming here. (56:49) So, those who, like Governor Abbott, who they want to do things that are disruptive, they're finding different ways to do it. So, we have to find different ways to stop them and fight on behalf of the city. (57:02) Oh, no, let him finish. Go ahead.
Speaker 18 (57:04): So are you looking to expand the EO to cover things like planes, and what are you going to ask Governor Murphy to do and what can New Jersey do to help?
Lisa (57:11): Let me just jump in here. We are exploring together with our partners every legal option. And I think that's all we can say at this time. You used the word whack‑a‑mole. I used the word bonkers. Maybe another way to say it is wake up federal government. Because it should not be. There are people's lives at stake here. And to use the term whack‑a‑mole, which is what the state of Texas is looking to do, doesn't that just feel weird and out of alignment when we're talking about families with children? Just pause for a moment on that. (57:56) But as New Yorkers, we're not going to take this lying down. We are going to continue to pursue and consider every legal option to maintain order and our ability to manage a humanitarian crisis.
Speaker 19 (58:07): Happy New Year, Mr. Mayor.
Mayor Adams (58:11): Happy New Year to you.
Speaker 19 (58:14): I wanted to ask about New Jersey and just in general this idea that you called for which is a decompression strategy. Now, the governor of New Jersey last year rejected the idea of creating an emergency shelter in Atlantic City. Given what's happening now, are you disappointed that he's not stepping up in this way to accept some migrants? (58:39) And I wanted to also ask if there was an update on the outcomes of migrants who went upstate and whether you would like to ask the governor if she would do more in that regard and whether that's another option, which she did last year, which is relocating some people to other parts of the state who might need jobs?
Mayor Adams (59:02): And you said the magic term, who may need jobs. That's why we've been fighting for allowing people to work. When I look at any municipality ... And we have many communications. We've had a great deal of communication with our colleagues across the state, and they're saying, "Eric, we don't have a problem with taking migrants and asylum seekers. We just want them to be able to work." I'm not angry at the governor who is saying let's let people work. We're all saying the same thing. The challenge of this policy, which I think is just so anti‑American. We allowed the Ukrainian citizens who came here, we allowed them to work. We allowed our immigrant communities to come here, we allowed them to work. This is so anti‑ American. And if we don't get to the corner of this, okay, you could keep expanding this, but it's not sustainable. And we want to go to fix the problem while we are dealing with what Governor Abbott is doing. We want a strategy of dealing with the court strategy of the entire right to shelter. That's why we're in court tomorrow. (01:00:22) We're going to deal with the strategy of how do we get people to be self‑sustaining. That's what Deputy Mayor Williams‑Isom is doing. But we also need a federal strategy to slow this down. We have to turn off the faucet. So, Governor Murphy, I'm sure if we had people with the right to work, he'd be more than willing to accept people into the state of New Jersey.
Speaker 20 (01:00:47): I wanted to just ... Hi Liz. Happy New Year. I have a cold. Everybody, make sure to test yourself. COVID and flu is going around, so make sure that everybody stays well. (01:00:58) I wanted to talk about Governor Hochul. So, I think yes, the folks that have been resettled up state are doing well and we have from the very beginning talked about needing to really resettle 1,250 families upstate. I think thus far Camille it's 80 families who have moved.
Speaker 21 (01:01:19): Eligible that are waiting to move up.
Speaker 20 (01:01:20): That's a problem because we can't be the only one that have to be on demand and provide shelter and do everything with the mandates that we have right now. And so I think it would help a lot if there was some way that the state could expedite that, even moving people up who are eligible until they find the housing. I understand that it's a challenge, but I think all of us have to be in this together.
Speaker 22 (01:01:44): What exactly is the hold up that you're told?
Speaker 20 (01:01:47): You want to Camille?
Speaker 21 (01:01:49): Yeah. I think you would have to ask the state and I would encourage you to do that. But we have clearly created the pipeline that is necessary. They gave us criteria. They said that individuals needed to have completed their asylum application. Again, there are 300 families that are ready and willing to go upstate. Even if they need additional assistance, it's not assistance that any other county, any other city could not provide. What we're doing here is not unique.
Speaker 22 (01:02:16): Would you be paying for the shelter as you did last year?
Speaker 23 (01:02:17): We're going to do the last one so we can wrap it up and then, I don't know, if you have something, yeah.
Lisa (01:02:19): Just [inaudible 01:02:20] there have been a few questions to the mayor about New Jersey and I want to publicly thank the authorities in New Jersey who all weekend and since we entered our executive order and since before we entered the executive order, have been coordinating and completely cooperative with the City of New York, and it is greatly appreciated.
Speaker 24 (01:02:40): Hi, mayor. Just a quick question about the Gowanus emergency shelter at 103 3rd Street. Just want it to be clear that the administration was aware that the site itself was being investigated by the DEC for soil vapor intrusion. And if that's the case, why make that decision and, lastly, are there any plans to either move migrants or find a new shelter if it's found that the air has contamination that's above the state standards?
Mayor Adams (01:03:14): Anne?
Speaker 25 (01:03:15): Yeah, you could start in off.
Speaker 20 (01:03:17): That shelter, from what I understand, I don't know if it was particularly for migrants, I have to look back at my notes, but it would go through the regular process, all the regulatory precautions that we would need to, including an environmental one. And if it was not fit for people being sheltering there, we would not have people there.
Speaker 25 (01:03:36): Yeah, I was just, and essentially saying that's the requirements we have with all of our regulatory agencies. All of the centers have to go through the checklist to ensure that it's habitable. And if it's not, then we take it off the list.
Speaker 23 (01:03:54): Okay, thank folks.
Speaker 20 (01:03:54): Thank you. (01:03:54) (singing)