Migrants have begun arriving at a former jail in Harlem, as the city continues to struggle to find housing for the new arrivals.
NEW YORK – A former jail in Harlem is now some to some of New York City's swelling population of migrants and asylum seekers.
The city has concerted the former Lincoln Correction Facility on West 110th Street into a dorm that can house as many as 500 people.
Migrants will be sharing rooms inside the facility, which will reportedly be for men only, not families or children.
Governor Kathy Hochul gave permission for the facility to be used to house migrants after it was closed in 2019.
This isn't the first time the building has been used when the city needed to house people. The Young Women's Hebrew Association stayed there, as well as troops during World War II.
FOX 5 New York spoke to one of the migrants currently housed at the facility, who said that most of the men inside come from Colombia and Venezuela. He added that while they need clothes, they really want to work.
However, getting migrants settled is proving to be tough, not only for them but for the city as well. By law, asylum seekers are required to wait at least half a year after filing an asylum petition before being able to obtain authorization to work. But very few have even begun the process of seeing asylum.
"It's a fairly complex legal form with some very serious consequences if you fill it out wrong," said Molly Wasow Park, Commissioner of the New York City Department of Social Services. "So I think there is a lot of anxiety."
The city has been pushing to get the process sped up for migrants to get working papers.
So far, 70,000 migrants have arrived in New York City, with more arriving every day.
Israel has welcomed the release of more hostages who have been held in Gaza since the beginning of the war.
Ofer Kalderon and Yarden Bibas were the first two released into the custody of the Red Cross in Khan Younis this morning and later handed over to Israeli forces.
American-Israeli Keith Samuel Siegel was released separately, a short time after the first two.
In exchange, 182 Palestinian prisoners, some of whom have been serving life sentences in Israel, will reportedly be freed.
In the ongoing first phase of the ceasefire, Hamas is returning 33 hostages over six weeks. In return, Israel is freeing 737 Palestinian prisoners.
Mr Bibas is the father of the two youngest hostages, baby Kfir, only nine months old when he was kidnapped and Ariel, who was four at the time of the attacks.
Hamas said in November 2023 that the boys and their mother Shiri, who was taken at the same time, were killed in an Israeli airstrike.
The family of Ofer Kalderon said they are “overwhelmed with joy” after an “unbearable” 484 days waiting for him to be freed.
“Today, we finally embrace Ofer, seeing and truly comprehending that he is here with us.
“We have witnessed how, through extraordinary mental strength, he survived this hell.
“Ofer endured months in a nightmare, and we are proud of his ability to survive and hold onto the hope of embracing his children again.”
In a joint statement, the IDF and Israel’s security agency said: “According to information communicated by the Red Cross, two hostages were transferred to them and are on their way to IDF and ISA forces in the Gaza Strip.”
The IDF added: “The commanders and soldiers of the IDF salute and embrace the returning hostages as they make their way home to Israel.
“The IDF is prepared to receive an additional hostage in the near future.”
The office of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said: “The government, together with all security agencies, will accompany them and their families.
“The Israeli government is committed to the return of all the kidnapped and missing.”
Today is also expected to see the first Palestinians allowed through the newly reopened Rafah crossing.
The crossing on the Gaza-Egypt border will be opened for 50 injured militants and 50 wounded civilians initially.
Sterling K Brown says being part of Black Panther was a “cultural moment” that allowed him to be “part of history” – and he’d jump at the chance to become part of the Marvel world again.
The 48-year-old actor, who’s currently starring in the mind-bending drama Paradise, told Sky News: “I remember reading that script – they don’t give it to you – you have to read it and then turn it back or your hands burn off or something like that…
“I remember thinking, this is a cultural moment. This is so big, not only for black America but for black people across the globe to see themselves front and centre in the largest, most zeitgeisty pop cultural machine in the world right now, the MCU [Marvel Cinematic Universe].
The superhero movie won three Oscars – Marvel’s first ever Academy Awards – including a win for costume design and best production design, the first in both categories for women of colour.
Brown goes on: “I just want to be a part of history. It was history. It was awesome.”
The Missouri-born star’s career trajectory has been impressive, from “living beneath the poverty line” to being nominated for an Oscar, he’s always been single-minded in his pursuit of acting.
He explains: “I didn’t have a hard knock life. We grew up in a house. My mom was a schoolteacher. My dad was a grocery clerk. All our needs were met.
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“But I would tape my basketball shoes up if the sole came apart because that fixed them. And my mom got mad at me one time, she’s like, ‘You know, we can buy you shoes?’ I was like, ‘Yeah, but I fixed them. What’s the big deal?'”
He says making his living through his craft was always his focus, adding, “I know that’s a luxury that’s not afforded to a lot of people. The fact that it’s gone my way, I’m incredibly thankful for.”
A three-time Emmy winner, The People V O J Simpson: American Crime Story saw him gain public attention, followed by a season in The Marvellous Mrs Maisel, an episode of Brooklyn Nine-Nine and the multi-award-winning This Is Us.
‘I’ve got good taste’
When his role in American Fiction earned him an Oscar nomination, he insists he didn’t see it coming, saying: “I just knew it was a great story, a great script, and I wanted to be a part of it.”
He goes on: “They’re all sort of game-changers. People will give me credit. I’ll take credit for having good taste, but you never know when lightning is going to strike, right?”
A fatalist, he says: “I leave it in the hands of the universe and just say, ‘If you want me to step here, I’ll step there and whatever happens, happens’.”
Now he’s leading the cast of Disney+ drama Paradise, playing Agent Xavier Collins, a man charged with protecting a second-term president – played by James Marsden – in a serene community of high-net-worth individuals.
Brown admits the role came with obligations: “There is a different level of responsibility when you’re one on the call sheet. I think people do look to you to help set the tone of what the environment is going to be like, and I don’t mind that.”
The brainchild of Dan Fogelman, best known for his work on This Is Us and Only Murders In The Building, Paradise is a murder mystery with something much bigger underneath.
‘Billionaires on camera’
Impossible to elaborate on further without giving away spoilers, it’s enough to say the first episode throws up a twist few will see coming.
Despite various parallels with the current political climate, Fogelman says he came up with the idea over a decade ago, but concedes the timing is “certainly unusual”.
Fogelman tells Sky News: “We’re openly seeing billionaires on camera having a big hand in government. And while money and wealth have always been a factor in things behind the scenes, it’s very out front and centre right now in a way that the show openly discusses [and] things about the environment and climate change.”
Brown too says the themes are prescient: “The world is unpredictable and a little bit nutty and a lot of people are on edge as to what is next. I don’t know if it’s across the world. I definitely know that it’s in the United States for certain.
“I think the show in a very strange way, is sort of asking the same questions like, ‘All right, we’re in new territory right now. I have no idea what happens next. I’m a little scared about that.'”
He goes on: “People are going to draw all sorts of conclusions and inferences and comparisons. I will leave them to draw whatever they wish because if I was an audience member, I would too.”
The first three episodes of Paradise are available on Disney+ now, with new episodes dropping each Tuesday.
Nickel Boys has become one of the surprise additions to the 97th Academy Awards.
Based on the 2019 Colson Whitehead novel of the same name, it has been nominated in the best picture and best adapted screenplay categories at the Oscars this March.
Shot entirely in the first-person perspective, it follows the friendship between two black teenagers living in the harrowing environment of a racially segregated reform school in 1960s Florida.
In trying to give a voice to the voiceless, director RaMell Ross tells Sky News he made a conscious decision to shift the narrative away from the violence and instead shine the spotlight on the people at the centre of the story.
He describes it as “a multiple fold”.
“One of the folds is just the history of cinema and its relationship to the voyeurism of black folks being harassed, tortured, and beaten. And knowing that enough, the image is already in our heads,” he says.
“The second fold would be that there’s so many ways to explore trauma, and I would say most of them are by far unexplored. And so, what other ways are there?”
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What makes Nickel Boys even more distressing is the fact that it was inspired by a real place, the Dozier School in Florida, where mass graves containing the bodies of young black boys were discovered.
Ethan Herisse plays Elwood in the film, a promising teenager who unknowingly gets into a stolen car and is arrested just as he’s on the cusp of creating the life he desires.
The When They See Us actor says being involved in the project was a unique experience.
Herisse says: “While we were making it, it felt like we were doing something special and there was so much love from all the people that were working on that set. So, I was just hoping that it was able to come across when it was all said and done.
“I can’t remember the last time that I had been so absorbed and immersed in a world of a movie. It was in such a unique way with this one.
“I wasn’t necessarily in my own body, and I think that that’s a really rewarding experience to have as a viewer.”
Nickel Boys takes some bold risks in cinematography and Herisse believes audiences are looking for films that challenge the viewer.
Herisse says: “I think there is a real deep desire from audience members to watch, like original and exciting and unique new films that bring them to a different place or force them into a different perspective.
“I think it’s a beautiful thing.”
The film is something of an underdog for best picture, simply because the others, like Conclave, A Complete Unknown, Emilia Perez and Dune: Part Two, received much wider releases and are currently available to watch either in cinema or on streaming platforms.