migrant crisis

Mass. adding new requirements for migrants, opening Chelsea Soldiers' Home site

Migrants staying at Massachusetts safety-net sites will need to show they're working on getting authorized or trained to work in the country, apply for jobs, take English classes or search for housing every month in order to stay at the housing sites

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The former Chelsea Soldiers’ Home will now be used to house migrants, the Healey administration announced Monday. The former home is currently empty and scheduled to be demolished. Now that a new facility has opened, that site will be able to accommodate about 100 families.

Massachusetts will soon require migrants staying in the state's at-capacity shelter system to begin showing they're trying to get work or housing, according to an announcement from the Healey administration Monday.

The state also announced Monday that it will be opening a new so-called safety-net site at a vacant building at the Chelsea Soldiers' Home that's been slated for demolition.

The moves come as Massachusetts continues to contend with an influx of migrants — lawmakers on Beacon hill are working to add hundreds of millions of dollars to the state's budget to help address the issue.

How should Massachusetts  fix the migrant crisis? The House, Senate and Gov. Healey all agree on an amount of money to be spent, but how to spend it remains up for debate. Follow NBC10 Boston on... Instagram: instagram.com/nbc10boston TikTok: tiktok.com/@nbc10boston Facebook: facebook.com/NBC10Boston X: twitter.com/NBC10Boston

Under the new requirements, effective May 1, migrants staying at safety-net sites will need to show they're working on getting authorized or trained to work in the country, apply for jobs, take English classes or search for housing every month in order to stay at the housing sites. The policy doesn't apply to United Way of Massachusetts Bay-run sites.

"We have said for months now that our system is at capacity, and we do not have the space, providers or funding to continue expanding," Emergency Assistance Director General Scott Rice said in a statement. "This new certification policy is a responsible step to address the capacity constraints at our safety-net sites. Families will need to demonstrate that they’ve taken action to get on a path toward independence and out of shelter."

The state currently spends about $75 million each month — or about $10,000 per family — on the 7,500 migrant and local families that are living in emergency shelters across the state.

Housing the roughly 100 migrant families due to move into the new Chelsea Soldiers' Home site in April will not affect services for veterans, Secretary of Veterans Services Dr. Jon Santiago noted in a statement. The building has fallen out of use after a brand-new facility, the Massachusetts Veterans Home of Chelsea, was opened last year.

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