As New York City is now suing more than half of the counties in New York State to get them to accept migrants that the city itself cannot handle, other Rockland towns are praising the actions Rockland County and the town of Orangetown took early on to keep area hotels from becoming homeless shelters. Clarkstown supervisor George Hoehmann told “The Morning Show” Monday a Nanuet hotel was also approached by the city, but that hotel declined to participate…
Hoehmann said in response to the city’s attempt to move their migrants to Rockland, the town board strengthened their own laws to limit the number of consecutive days anyone can stay at local hotels to 29. Ramapo supervisor Michael Specht said as far as knows, none of the hotels in Ramapo was approached by the city…
Meanwhile, Rockland County Executive Ed Day is once again criticizing New York City Mayor Eric Adams’ management skills, after the Daily News recently reported the city can house some 15,000 people. The report said the city has nearly four-thousand Housing Authority units available and more than 26-hundred units for homeless New Yorkers vacant in the city’s housing network that are going unused.