XPost: alt.government.employees, alt.politics.usa.republican, mi   
   c.immigration.usa   
   XPost: talk.politics.guns   
   From: crapped.your.own.bed@colorado.com   
      
   On 17 Sep 2020, Rudy Canoza posted some   
   news:rk06sv$1fsu$1@neodome.net:   
      
   > Denver is a self-declared left-wing woke shithole. Let them wallow in   
   > the sanctuary city invader turds.   
      
   Denver Mayor Mike Johnston on Friday said the city will be scaling back   
   Department of Motor Vehicle and Parks and Recreation services to cut   
   costs in the wake of the $42 million crisis sparked by the unprecedented   
   influx of immigrants arriving in Denver over the past 14 months.   
      
   Some DMV locations will also see rotating closures.   
      
   The belt tightening, Johnston said, will not require staff cuts but is   
   expected to save the city $5 million.   
      
   “This is a plan for shared sacrifice,” he said.   
      
   Last month, Johnston warned council members that the city had reached a   
   breaking point responding to the humanitarian crisis at the U.S.-Mexico   
   border, which now threatens the fiscal health of Colorado’s most   
   populous city.   
      
   Johnston has said that the costs could reach up to $180 million this   
   year.   
      
   He instructed department heads to find 10% to 15% in cuts.   
      
   At the time, Denver was seeing hundreds of new arrivals daily and was   
   sheltering nearly 5,000 immigrants.   
      
   While that wave has since receded — the immigrants have been arriving in   
   surges after illegally crossing the border — the cost to the city now   
   means direct cuts to services.   
      
   Johnston said during a Friday press conference the city will reduce DMV   
   hours and will eliminate in-person vehicle registration renewals.   
   Starting March 4, those will need to be done through the mail, online at   
   mydmv.colorado.gov or at kiosks in grocery stores around the city.   
      
   Denver’s five DMV locations will also have weekly closures on a rotating   
   basis every four weeks.   
      
   The Department of Parks & Recreation, meanwhile, will reduce operating   
   days starting on Feb. 20 from seven to six days weekly, according to the   
   mayor's office. While neighborhood centers will remain open six days a   
   week, their operating hours will be reduced.   
      
   The city will also pause new permit applications for public events,   
   special occasions and tournaments.   
      
   The city will also forgo planting flower beds this year.   
      
   Moreover, city officials are not expected to fill numerous open   
   positions and will review city contracts and programs.   
      
   Additional department cuts are expected.   
      
   Last month, Denver began reallocating funds for the immigrant influx   
   response, which included pulling $10 million from the city’s contingency   
   fund, as well as $15 million from the Richard T. Castro building   
   remodel.   
      
   This, combined with the $5 million savings from changes to DMV and parks   
   operations, means Denver will have roughly $30 million set aside for the   
   humanitarian response, officials said.   
      
   Johnston blamed Congress' failure to pass a proposal unveiled by   
   senators a few days ago. The proposal — which is practically dead —   
   sought to overhaul the asylum system at the border with faster and   
   tougher enforcement, as well as give presidents new powers to   
   immediately expel immigrants if authorities become overwhelmed with the   
   number of people applying for asylum. The new bill also sought to invest   
   in U.S. defense manufacturing, send $14 billion in military aid to   
   Israel, steer nearly $5 billion to allies in the Asia-Pacific, and   
   provide humanitarian assistance to civilians caught in conflicts in   
   Ukraine and Gaza.   
      
   “What is true now, is we're entering into a different stage, which is   
   without any federal support, without any work authorization, without   
   changes to policy,” Johnston said. “We are going have to make changes.”   
      
   Those changes include decreasing the number of immigrants served by the   
   city. Johnston provided no additional details, except to say the city   
   would not be “shutting the door” on new arrivals.   
      
   Others in Colorado put the blame squarely on the Biden administration.   
      
   "The Biden administration has placed the safety of all Americans at risk   
   with their open border policies," U.S. Rep. Doug Lamborn recently said   
   on Twitter. "(Homeland) Secretary (Alejandro) Mayorkas has been the   
   architect of this neglect. It's time for accountability."   
      
   As of Friday morning, the city was sheltering roughly 3,500 immigrants.   
      
   While Denver officials have been reticent to say what the city’s shelter   
   capacity is, Jon Ewing, a Denver Human Services spokesperson, has said   
   the city is tapped out at about 5,000 sheltered.   
      
   Denver has imposed length-of-stay caps to ensure enough shelter space   
   for new arrivals.   
      
   Over the past 14 months, Denver has welcomed more than 38,400 immigrants   
   from South and Central America, particularly Venezuela.   
      
   Early in the crisis, city leaders decided that Denver would feed and   
   shelter arriving immigrants and provide transportation to their final   
   destination.   
      
   That decision has come at a staggering cost: more than $42 million, and   
   counting.   
      
   To date, the state and federal government have reimbursed the city   
   roughly $14 million.   
      
   Johnston — along with the mayors of Chicago and New York City — has   
   become the face of the nation’s immigration crisis. He has repeatedly   
   advocated for federal assistance, saying the country also needs a   
   coordinated entry plan and work authorization.   
      
   Politically polarizing, a solution that addresses illegal immigration   
   and protects the nation’s southern border has eluded lawmakers for   
   decades.   
      
   While 600 miles from the international border in El Paso Texas,   
   officials have speculated immigrants are drawn to Denver because of its   
   relative proximity to the Mexico border while others believe the appeal   
   is its status as a so-called “sanctuary city.”   
      
   Generally speaking, a sanctuary city is a designation given to   
   municipalities and counties that establish policies discouraging local   
   law enforcement from reporting an individual’s immigration status to   
   federal authorities.   
      
   https://denvergazette.com/news/denver-immigrant-influx-causes-city-servic   
   es-cuts/article_89270388-c6fd-11ee-8bb6-0f94128edd5a.html   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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