
Early months of combined migrant, homeless shelters in Chicago see success, structural challenges
They had numerous concerns about the shelter at 4900 S. DuSable Lake Shore Drive: whether migrants would be vaccinated and fingerprinted; how their children would be educated; the food they would eat. And many wanted to know what Chicago was doing for the large and growing homeless population that predated the migrants' arrival.
Almost three years later, buses sent by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott have stopped arriving from the more closely surveilled southern border. The city has closed down most of the facilities it scrambled to stand up to meet waves of asylum-seekers, mostly from Venezuela. Thousands have transitioned to permanent housing. Police stations, once overflowing with newly arrived people, are empty.
What remains is a new, merged shelter network officials have dubbed the One System Initiative, which houses anyone, from anywhere, who doesn't have a place to go. The city and state were running 28 migrant-exclusive facilities at the peak of arrivals in January of last year, according to city census data. They have collaborated with nonprofits to run 50 total sites across the system, city officials said.
Homeless advocates have long championed the idea of a combined system, saying it would spread out resources to a wider range of people. The first few months under the new system brought changes those advocates hailed as triumphs, including the opening of a new no-barrier emergency shelter on the Lower West Side that works as a gateway to the social service network for anyone.
Challenges remain. The number of people who need a short-term place to sleep still exceeds the 7,400 beds available in the merged systems. Some facilities are still dealing with bilingual staff shortages. Even if Chicago's emergency shelters were perfectly equipped to meet demand, advocates say that issues with homelessness will persist unless the city addresses its inadequate supply of affordable housing. And in Kenwood, some residents are pushing back and may take legal action to try to prevent a shelter that once opened for migrants from becoming a permanent fixture in their area.
Inside the shelters, residents and workers say there is empathy among the people staying there.
'Some come because their house burned down, others because they just arrived in the U.S. and have nowhere else to go, some are fleeing violence from places like Mexico, Venezuela, or Haiti,' said Marcos Sanchez, a Venezuelan migrant who now works at a state-funded shelter near Midway Airport. 'People support each other emotionally.'
Kenwood neighborhood divide
The first waves of arriving migrants set off a swirl of activity across the city in August 2022. As arrivals picked up, thousands of volunteers organized to help people get on their feet and the city and state hurried to find shelter for the asylum-seekers, who at one point were arriving by the hundreds.
Kenwood wasn't the only neighborhood to see heated arguments about shelters: Woodlawn on the South Side, Galewood on the Northwest Side and Pilsen, a hub for Chicago's Mexican-American community, also became centers of intense debate about whether and how migrants should stay there.
Joy Cobbs remembered that while many residents were unhappy about plans to put migrants in hotel buildings in the 4900 block of DuSable Lake Shore Drive — surrounded by high-rise condominiums and townhouses — she and others thought the neighborhood needed to do its part with what city leaders described as a rapid response to a national emergency.
'There was an understanding in the community that this was an emergency situation and it was going to be for a limited time,' she said. 'We did pitch in with blanket drives and toy drives.'
Cobbs, 53, and some of her neighbors came to find the activities around the shelter 'extremely disruptive.' They cited large gatherings in nearby parks, litter, outdoor cooking, crime, smoking and drug use among their concerns.
'People can try to make us feel a certain way, say we're intolerant,' Cobbs said. 'We gave literally close to two years of tolerance.'
Cobbs is one of a group of residents who have organized Hyde Park Neighbors Preserving Community, which is trying to prevent the shelter from continuing to operate past July, when the city will take it over from the state. The group, led by a seven-person organizing committee, has gotten about 1,200 signatures on a petition asking legislators to oppose the shelter.
State Rep. Curtis Tarver, who represents part of the south lakefront in the Illinois House, wrote a letter to the state and the city in late March, decrying the decision to keep the shelter open, its planned capacity of 750 people and the way the decision was communicated to residents.
State Sen. Robert Peters agrees: '750 seems pretty large.' But the Chicago Democrat said he is compelled to support the shelter.
'Hyde Park is about embracing people,' he said. 'It has always been about embracing people.'
Ginni Cook shares that conviction. Cook, 83, lives a few blocks from the site and said she'd heard her neighbors' objections but felt that 'we can't keep saying, 'not here, not here.''
'We've got to do what we can,' she said. 'What if that were me?'
She thought the facility should house fewer people for the sake of safety and privacy for those living there, and supported the idea of security measures for their protection.
Peters wrote to the city and state late last month asking that the shelter's capacity be capped at 450 people, with a promise not to expand into adjacent buildings. He requested that security cameras be installed at the mouth of the parking lot, increased sanitation service and stepped-up communication between officials and the neighborhood about how the facility is operating.
By mid-April, 414 people were staying at the shelter, according to the city. Peters, who visited the facility April 15, said most of the people staying there are children. Officials have since acknowledged the letter and been 'responsive' to his inquiries about operations and data, Peters said.
Reached for comment, city officials acknowledged that Ald. Desmon Yancy, 5th, reported a 'lack of clarity' about long-term plans for the site and pointed to an update meeting held for residents in February.
Though the city said the meeting was meant to 'reaffirm their commitment to supporting both shelter residents and the broader community,' members of Hyde Park Neighbors Preserving Community said the meeting felt like a lecture and were caught completely off guard by its outcome.
A flyer has begun to circulate in at least one of the neighborhood's apartment buildings asking residents to help raise money for a legal challenge to the shelter.
'We must fight to maintain our property value, quality of life, and integrity of our neighborhood,' the flyer reads. 'If we don't, we will surely forget it.'
The flyer appears to seek about $7,500. An online fundraiser had raised just over $5,000 as of last week.
A learning curve
City officials hired several controversial out-of-state contractors — Favorite Healthcare Staffing and GardaWorld Federal Services — to respond to hundreds of migrants arriving in Chicago daily. But Andre Gordillo, whose nonprofit New Life Centers runs two of the shelters as part of its social service network on the South and West sides, said groups like Favorite have 'packed their bags.'
These days, Gordillo, who leads New Life's 'New Vecinos' program, said the two state-funded shelters they help operate in Kenwood and in West Lawn are far less busy than when hundreds of people were arriving every day on buses. At the peak of the crisis, 189 migrants a day needed shelter in addition to the existing needs of Chicagoans, according to the city.Now, everyone who stays in a shelter is enrolled in the city's housing waitlist, known as the Coordinated Entry System, but officials no longer differentiate between individuals who have migrated and those who were born in the U.S. As of March, city officials said there were 128 combined — migrant and nonmigrant — requests for shelter a day.
About 75% of the people at the shelters New Life runs are migrants, Gordillo said; the rest are a wide range of nationalities from Haitians to Russians.
New Life is adjusting its support resources inside the shelter. 'There's been a bit of a learning curve to serving their different needs and wants,' Gordillo said. 'For example … instead of English classes, we've added Spanish classes.'
The city's Department of Family and Support Services said in a statement to the Tribune that the initiative to combine the two systems is 'an ongoing process' and that 'while it is going well, there are occasional issues to work through,' such as challenges in hiring and retaining qualified staff and limited funding.
Shelter workers are required to take classes on trauma-informed case management and immigration basics, according to the city. DFSS spokeswoman Linsey Maughan said 966 staff at 47 agencies have completed one or more trainings as of April 18.
The shelters haven't been the target of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement or the Department of Homeland Security, Gordillo said, but both migrants and no-migrants have been invited to Know Your Rights trainings in case.
'We've passed around videos and communication,' he said. 'If there's a raid, there are steps to follow. There are people to call.'
Gordillo said that when a family needs a shelter placement, they can usually get it within the day.
For single people without a place to go, Sam Paler-Ponce, associate director of city policy for the Chicago Coalition for the Homeless, said 'there is still huge demand' that outstrips the availability of beds. City officials said family homelessness was more prevalent in the migrant population, and as buses from the border decline, single adult rates are rising.
Late last month, Maughan said that a shelter near Midway Airport, housing over 500 families, would reorient to serve single adults 'over the coming months' to help address that demand.
'We're all experiencing similar uncertainty' Nikita Thomas said she wasn't expecting to hear Spanish at mealtimes or in the elevator to her room when she and her 6-year-old son arrived at the converted West Lawn hotel near Midway several weeks ago.Thomas, 36, said she and her son Nakari stayed at several temporary shelters for people experiencing homelessness in Indiana before they moved into the converted hotel. There, they became neighbors with the last of the tens of thousands of migrants who were bused to Chicago.
Thomas and her son live on a different floor from the asylum-seekers, but they eat meals together, she said. They use Google Translate to communicate.'I ask them about things that I need, regular things at the shelter,' Thomas said. 'But they don't speak English, so we translate on our phones. They're really nice.'
Nearby, Maria Muñoz, a 39-year-old woman from Venezuela's northern mountainous region, expressed gratitude for the social workers at the shelter who have provided mental health support and helped her son enroll in school.
'We're all experiencing similar uncertainty. Tomorrow, anything could happen,' she said.
Sanchez, the migrant who now works at the facility near Midway, said 'the shelter still functions the same' no matter who is living there.
Sanchez worked in human resources for a firm and taught music at a school in his home city of Maracaibo, Venezuela. He said he left his home country with his wife and 8-year-old son because its schools and hospitals were crumbling, and he stayed at a shelter himself before joining New Life as an employee.
Everyone staying at the shelter where he works comes with a 'different type of trauma,' he said, but they've bonded.
'It's impressive to see how everyone interacts using signs and sounds to communicate,' he said. 'I feel there's a lot of resilience. That ability to bounce back no matter the trauma.'
Beyond shelter
Cobbs, the East Hyde Park resident who opposes the area shelter's long-term operation, wanted to know why the city and state were spending millions on emergency shelters when 'the solution for homelessness is affordable housing.'
'This is a lot of money supporting something that could be going toward permanently housing people, where they have resources and kitchens to cook,' she said.
While Mayor Brandon Johnson is floating ideas to boost the city's supply of affordable housing, advocates warn that the city is on track to lose at least 845 units of subsidized housing this year. And at the federal level, cuts to the Department of Housing and Urban Development could put the city, which has seen a steady increase in its homeless population, even further back on its heels in replenishing its affordable housing stock.
Paler-Ponce, of the Chicago Coalition for the Homeless, said all those dynamics made for a 'huge uphill battle' to reduce homelessness for migrants and nonmigrants in and around Chicago.
The question, he said, is 'what's next beyond shelter. … It's a serious need, especially in extreme weather, to get people under a roof, but it's certainly not a permanent solution.'
Maughan said no cuts had been announced that would affect DFSS and other agencies it runs, but that the city was 'actively monitoring' federal decisions that could impact funding.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


UPI
3 hours ago
- UPI
U.S. sanctions head of Tren de Aragua, five key figures
Hector Rusthenford Guerrero Flores, 42, was sanctioned by the United States on Thursday on accusations of being the leader of the Tren de Aragua gang. Photo courtesy of U.S. State Department/ Release July 18 (UPI) -- The United States has sanctioned the head of the Tren de Aragua gang and five key leaders and affiliates as the Trump administration targets criminal organizations as part of its immigration crackdown. Hector Rusthenford Guerrero Flores, 42, is accused of being the leader of Tren de Aragua, and of expanding it from a Venezuelan prison gang involved in extortion and bribery to what the Treasury said was "an organization with growing influence throughout the Western Hemisphere." Under the previous Biden administration, the State Department issued a reward of up to $5 million for information that leads to his arrest or conviction. Guerrero Flores, also known as Nino Guerrero, was sanctioned Thursday by the Treasury, along with Yohan Jose Romero, 47, Josue Angel Santana Pena, 30, Wilmer Jose Perez Castillo, 39, Wendy Marbelys Rios Gomez, 45, and Felix Anner Castillo Rondon, 41. "Today's action highlights the critical role of leaders like Nino Guerrero and his lieutenants in Tren de Aragua's efforts to increase its destabilizing influence throughout the region," Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in a statement. "The Trump administration will not allow Tren de Aragua to continue to terrorize our communities and harm innocent Americans." The sanctions freeze all property under the designated individual's name and bar U.S. persons from doing business with them. Tren de Aragua has been a target of the Trump administration, which has sought to conduct mass deportations and close the border to undocumented migrants. On Feb. 20, the U.S. State Department designated Tren de Aragua as a foreign terrorist organization. The following month, President Donald Trump tried to use the gang, under unfounded claims it was "perpetrating, attempting and threatening an invasion" of the United States, to invoke the 1798 Alien Enemies Act to deport hundreds of Venezuelans to El Salvador -- a move that has since been blocked by the courts. The FBI on Thursday also added Giovanni Vicente Mosquera Serrano to its Ten Most Wanted Fugitives List, with the State Department offering a reward of up to $3 million for information leading to his arrest of conviction. Mosquera Serrano is accused of being a leader of Tren de Aragua and is the first member of the gang to be added to the FBI's infamous list.

12 hours ago
El Salvador's top human rights group flees President Bukele's ongoing crackdown on dissent
MEXICO CITY -- El Salvador's top human rights organization, Cristosal, announced Thursday it is leaving the country because of mounting harassment and legal threats by the government of President Nayib Bukele. The organization has been one of the most visible critics of Bukele, documenting abuses in the strongman's war on the country's gangs and the detention of hundreds of Venezuelan deportees in an agreement with U.S. President Donald Trump. Bukele's government has long targeted opponents, but Cristosal Executive Director Noah Bullock said things reached a tipping point in recent months as Bukele has grown empowered by his alliance with Trump. 'The clear targeting of our organization has made us choose between exile or prison," Bullock said in an interview with the Associated Press. 'The Bukele administration has unleashed a wave of repression over the past few months ... There's been an exodus of civil society leaders, professionals and even businessmen.' El Salvador 's government did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Cristosal has been working in El Salvador since 2000, when it was founded by Evangelical bishops in order to address human rights and democratic concerns following the country's brutal civil war. On Thursday, the human rights organization announced that it packed up its offices and moved 20 employees from the Central American nation to neighboring Guatemala and Honduras. Cristosal quietly got staff and their families out before publicly announcing they were leaving out of fear that they could be targeted by the Bukele government. The decision came after its top anti-corruption lawyer Ruth López was jailed in June on enrichment charges, which the organization denies. Cristosal's legal team has supported hundreds of cases alleging the government arbitrarily detained innocent people in its crackdown on gangs, and has unlawfully detained Venezuelans deported from the U.S. López headed many of those investigations. In a court appearance in June, she appeared shackled and escorted by police. 'They're not going to silence me, I want a public trial,' she shouted. 'I'm a political prisoner.' For years, the organization said staff have been followed around by police officers, had their phones tapped by spyware like Pegasus, and been subject to legal attacks and defamation campaigns. But López's court appearance was the moment that Bullock said he knew they would have to leave the country. At the same time, the government has arrested more critics, while others have quietly fled the country. In late May, El Salvador's Congress passed a 'foreign agents' law, championed by the populist president. It resembles legislation implemented by governments in Nicaragua, Venezuela, Russia, Belarus and China to silence and criminalize dissent by exerting pressure on organizations that rely on overseas funding. Bullock said the the law would make it easier for the government to criminalize staff and cripple the organization economically. Cristosal's flight from the country marks another blow to checks and balances in a country where Bukele has virtually consolidated control of the government. Bullock said no longer being able to work in the country will make it significantly harder for the organization to continue their ongoing legal work, particularly supporting those detained with little access to due process.


Newsweek
12 hours ago
- Newsweek
Who is Tren de Aragua Leader 'Niño Guerrero' Donald Trump is Sanctioning?
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The United States Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) imposed sanctions on Thursday against Hector Rusthenford Guerrero Flores, also known as "Niño Guerrero," along with five other key leaders and affiliates of the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua. U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent pledged to continue to dedicate his department to "dismantling Tren de Aragua and disrupting the group's campaign of violence." When asked for further comment or clarification, a Treasury spokesman directed Newsweek to a department FAQ on the topic. The Treasury department rarely explains the parameters of such matters due to concerns that it could tip off the target of sanctions and give them time to move assets or funds and avoid punishment. A Department of the Treasury sign is displayed outside the Denver Mint, a branch of the United States Mint on March 20, 2025, in Denver, Colorado. INSET: Hector Rusthenford Guerrero Flores (a.k.a. 'Niño Guerrero') is... A Department of the Treasury sign is displayed outside the Denver Mint, a branch of the United States Mint on March 20, 2025, in Denver, Colorado. INSET: Hector Rusthenford Guerrero Flores (a.k.a. 'Niño Guerrero') is the notorious head of Tren de Aragua. More// Treasury Department Handout Why It Matters The sanctions against Guerrero Flores and Tren de Aragua's (TdA) leadership show the U.S. government's continued dedication to limiting the gang's activity, which includes extortion, sexual exploitation, smuggling, and armed violence. The U.S. government designated the group as a foreign terrorist organization (FTO) in February 2025, and President Donald Trump highlighted the group as a significant factor in his decision to increase the scale and severity of his immigration crackdown. Designating TdA as a terrorist organization and freezing its leaders' assets are intended to disrupt its financial networks and operational reach. What to Know The OFAC identified Flores as the head of the organization, which has evolved from a prison-based gang to a transnational criminal group operating across the Western Hemisphere. The State Department designations of TdA as an FTO and a Specially Designated Global Terrorist group expanded the legal authorities used to disrupt the group's operations in the United States and abroad. President Trump has accused Tren de Aragua of coordinating its U.S. operations with the Venezuelan government under President Nicolás Maduro, a claim that one senior U.S. official has pushed back on, saying Maduro's direct involvement with the gang remains unproven, according to Reuters. Flores, also known as Niño Guerrero, has been involved with the gang for over two decades. The State Department in 2024 offered a reward of up to $5 million for information leading to Flores's arrest or conviction. Under his leadership, TdA grew to become the international threat that the U.S. calls an "influential organization that threatens public safety throughout the Western Hemisphere." This includes mining operations that help fund the group's activities and the importation of military-grade weapons used to establish control of territory and combat Colombian guerrillas, according to the Treasury Department. Guerrero is specifically alleged to have seized control of gold mines, drug trafficking routes, and border crossings, building links with local criminal entities in countries such as Colombia, Ecuador, Chile, and, according to U.S. officials, the United States, the BBC reported. The sanctions announced on Thursday allow the U.S. to seize all property and interests in property of the designated persons that are in the United States or controlled by U.S. entities. Americans are prohibited from engaging in almost any transaction involving the subject of sanctions or their assets unless specifically permitted by OFAC. Violations may result in substantial civil or criminal penalties, the Treasury said in its press release. What People Are Saying Scott Bessent, Secretary of the Treasury, in a statement: "Today's action highlights the critical role of leaders like Niño Guerrero and his lieutenants in Tren de Aragua's efforts to increase its destabilizing influence throughout the region." President Donald Trump in a Truth Social post from February: "It is so good to have the Venezuela Hostages back home and, very important to note, that Venezuela has agreed to receive, back into their Country, all Venezuela illegal aliens who were encamped in the U.S., including gang members of Tren de Aragua. Venezuela has further agreed to supply the transportation back. We are in the process of removing record numbers of illegal aliens from all Countries, and all Countries have agreed to accept these illegal aliens back. Furthermore, record numbers of criminals are being removed from our Country, and the Border numbers are the strongest they have been since the First Term of the Trump Administration!" What Happens Next The State Department continues to offer multi-million-dollar rewards for information leading to the capture of the gang's leaders as international law enforcement cooperation intensifies. This article includes reporting by The Associated Press.