Denver releases 'playbook' to help other cities accommodate migrant 'newcomers'

A new guide released by Denver outlines ways cities can accommodate migrants by providing them with health care, shelter, food, legal services and pathways to work.

Officials prepare to help transport people to shelters or housing from the largest migrant encampment in Denver on Jan. 3, 2024. (Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)

"Our efforts include helping people with onward travel as needed, offering temporary shelter, facilitating the search for permanent housing, and providing vital support in terms of medical and mental health, work authorization, legal assistance, school enrollment, and more," the guide’s introduction reads.

The guide provides cities with information on how officials can provide shelter, offer "onward transportation," and set up intake centers where migrants can get access to free food, clothing, medical care and legal advice.

Other tips include setting up information databases on new arrivals, the importance of having Spanish-speaking staff working with migrants, and establishing a city budget that will track expenditures and monitor funding.

Johnston says the manual, called the "Newcomers Playbook: A Guide to Welcoming Newcomers into Your City," provides other localities with the tools they need to help migrants "regardless of how they entered the country."

"We're proud this playbook will help newcomers resettle in cities with more opportunities, help cities across the country successfully welcome newcomers and reinvigorate workforces," Johnston said in a statement announcing the document late last month.

He said Denver has been a "national leader" on the topic, having taken in around 42,000 migrants and provided them with essential services and resources.

The guide explains that it refers to migrants as "newcomers" in order to recognize that the border crossers are "new to our city and embracing a more inclusive language."

A migrant on the sleeping pad at a makeshift shelter in Denver on Jan. 13, 2023. (Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)

In March, city officials pleaded with property owners to "house" migrants after it scaled back some of its migrant services to reduce the budget deficit.

Johnston also announced last month that nearly $46 million would be slashed from the budget to help fund a $90 million package funding migrant aid and housing for the rest of the year, Fox31 reported.

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The release of the manual came just weeks after a Denver official, Andres Carrera, was heard on video telling migrants that the city’s shelters can no longer help them, and they must go to other cities or they "will suffer."

"The opportunities are over," Carrera reportedly tells the group in Spanish. "New York gives you more. Chicago gives you more. So I suggest you go there, where there is longer-term shelter. There are also more job opportunities there." 

Michael Dorgan is a writer for Fox News Digital and Fox Business.

You can send tips to michael.dorgan@fox.com and follow him on Twitter @M_Dorgan.

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