Hialeah flooded with homeless Cuban migrants

From our Buró de Jayalía with some assistance from our Bureau of Weaponized Migration

Where do all the thousands of Cuban migrants pouring into the U.S. end up? Many end up in Hialeah, homeless and unable to afford even the cheapest apartments available. Here is yet another side effect of the weaponized migration tsunami unleashed by Castro, Inc. About 75% of the half million Cubans who have arrived in the U.S. in the past two years are ending up in South Florida. And, of course, many of them head straight for Jayalía, the most Cuban borough in the Miami area.

Loosely translated from CiberCuba

In the city of Hialeah, which is facing a migration crisis and where an “affordable” efficiency apartment can cost more than $1,300, Cuban migrants choose to sleep in their cars and live on the streets, according to a report by the Univision television station.

“I prefer to sleep in a van than pay rent, because an efficiency costs $1,300. There are those who pay 1,800 dollars,” said a Cuban speaking on condition of anonymity to the aforementioned television medium.

In the report, some migrants are observed sleeping in their trucks parked in the parking lot of a store, on the street and also in improvised houses, under a bridge and next to a highway.

The common denominator of all is that money does not work for them, the television station pointed out while showing the data that 95% of the population living in the city of Hialeah is Hispanic, and 84% are Cuban.

“We prefer to be imprisoned here and not be free in Cuba,” said Antonio, who still does not have a work permit and every morning goes to a Home Depot retail company store in the hope that someone will hire him.

“It has become very difficult to live here, there are more people than jobs,” the man explained.

Esteban Bovo, mayor of the city, said that they face an uncontrolled and unanticipated migration crisis “What we are experiencing right now is a perfect storm due to the collapse of the border.”

The problem of Cubans living on the streets became more serious when on Wednesday, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed a bill prohibiting sleeping on public property.

Opponents of the measure say the Republican wants to remove the housing issue from public view. However, DeSantis promised greater access to services for homeless people, such as treatment for psychoactive substance abuse and mental health problems.

It is estimated that of the 420,000 migrants who arrived from Cuba to the United States in the last two years, 75% ended up in South Florida.

A large part of them, about 80,000, settled in Hialeah, according to unofficial figures, reported the television station América Tevé.

Last February, the United States government registered a remarkably high number of immigrants on its southwest border, which could be considered a record when compared to the same period in previous years.


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