New York City has quietly halted the free bus service for migrants arriving at the Port Authority Terminal in Manhattan, forcing them to instead trek nearly a mile to the welcome center crosstown, The Post has confirmed.
Asylum advocates on the ground told The Post that the city moved to halt migrant transport services to the Roosevelt Hotel migrant welcome center over the Fourth of July holiday.
Instead of a bus ride, members of the National Guard are tasked with handing out fliers that show the newcomers how to walk across Midtown Manhattan — even if the migrants arrive in the middle of the night.
Officials confirmed they put the brakes on the hospitality program to cut costs, even as the city spends $7.9 million a day to care for the 52,600 asylum seekers currently in its care. The free bus reversal was first reported by Gothamist Sunday.
“With hundreds of asylum seekers continuing to arrive daily (not just through the PABT), we need the limited number of MTA buses that have been provided by the state to transport asylum seekers from the Arrival Center to their placements,” a City Hall spokesperson said.
Asylum advocates told The Post that the city moved to halt migrant transport services to the Roosevelt Hotel migrant welcome center.
Members of the National Guard are tasked with handing out fliers that show the newcomers how to walk across Midtown Manhattan. G.N.Miller/NYPost“National Guard will be stationed at the Port Authority providing flyers with directions to the arrival center — an approximately 15-minute walk.
“As we’ve said, we continue to need assistance from the state and federal government to tackle this crisis, and welcome volunteers to continue to do their best to help support asylum seekers’ needs.”
The change has left some migrants to fend for themselves — and befuddled.
Juan Mata, 23, who has been staying at a city shelter since arriving from Venezuela three months ago, said he and his girlfriend were looking for help at the Roosevelt Hotel — but it took a while to get there.
“We didn’t know what to expect but we were kind of lost because there was no one here to help with immigration,” his girlfriend, 20-year-old Arianna Soto, told The Post.
“There were no obvious signs,” Soto said. “After searching for a while we found the map stuck to an information booth with directions to the Roosevelt Hotel.”
More than 84,100 asylum seekers had been welcomed to the boroughs since last spring, according to the city.
Those who arrived at the bus terminal in May and June were taken across town to the landmark Art Deco hotel, where they were treated to lunch in the gilded grand ballroom where Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians once popularized the New Year’s Eve standard “Auld Lang Syne.”
Since the buses stopped, a nonprofit stepped in to give the new arrivals a warm welcome by spending about $1,000 for rideshares from Port Authority to the Roosevelt.
Power Malu, of Artists Athletes Activists Inc., discovered the buses were no longer running on the Fourth of July, with Port Authority police telling him the city was “short-staffed,” he recalled.
“Because it was July 4th, it was peak, we had to call eight of them. So it was like 35 times eight — about $280 because it was one bus.”
Malu’s group continued the effort on July 7 and 8 when no buses arrived to ferry new arrivals from Texas across town.
Officials confirmed they put the brakes on the hospitality program to cut costs. G.N.Miller/NYPost
The city spends $7.9 million a day to care for the 52,600 asylum seekers. Stephen Yang“There is no way we are going to allow families who are tired and hungry to walk,” the advocate said.
“I said I’m going to put them in Ubers and Lyfts.”
“Buses are provided when requested by the city for emergency situations and when that occurs, discussions follow about sustained feasibility and reimbursement for associated costs,” MTA communications director Tim Minton told The Post.
Additional reporting by Jorge Fitz-Gibbon







