Metro

Hundreds protest potential new migrant site at former NYC senior citizen home

More than 200 raucous demonstrators rallied outside a former Staten Island nursing home Sunday, chanting, “Close the border!” to protest its possible conversion to an emergency shelter for migrants.

“Don’t call them immigrants. Call them ‘illegals,’ ” Ray Thaisz, 66, said outside the currently shuttered former Island Shores Senior Residences in Midland Beach. “I don’t mind people coming here, but they’re coming here illegally, and then we have to support them.”

Another local, retired nurse Claire O’Toole, said she just didn’t want the asylum seekers housed in her neighborhood.

“I have four grandchildren,” said O’Toole, 64. “I don’t want this by my house. Why would I want that worry? They want to put 800 men here, but we have no idea who they are, period. Are they rapists? Are they murderers? Are they vaccinated? Do they speak English?”

Guardian Angels founder and former failed mayoral candidate Curtis Sliwa organized the protest and was among about a dozen demonstrators later arrested by cops for blocking traffic.

It was Sliwa’s second migrant-related bust in less than a week.

More than 200 demonstrators gathered outside the former Island Shore Senior Residences facility Sunday on Staten Island to protest plans to house migrants there. Kevin C. Downs for NY Post
Guardian Angels founder Curtis Sliwa was among about a dozen demonstrators arrested Sunday for blocking traffic outside the Island Shore Senior Residences nursing home on Staten Island. Kevin C. Downs for NY Post

In a flyer announcing the demonstration, Sliwa wrote, “Arrests at the location are expected.”

“When I finish, we are gonna block this street,” the Guardian Angels chief told the crowd. “You line up behind me … and the others who know what civil disobedience is. Let’s await the instructions of the cops.

“We occupy this facility and dare them to arrest [us],” he told the crowd. “We don’t want illegal aliens.”

Sliwa was also among the demonstrators arrested last week protesting a new 1,000-bed migrant tent shelter on the grounds of the former Creedmoor Psychiatric Center in Queens.

Staten Island local artist Scott LoBaido painted a mural that states NYC Mayor Eric Adams hates NYC. Kevin C. Downs for NY Post
The possibility of converting the former Island Shore Senior Residences nursing home in Middle Beach on Staten Island into a migrant shelter first surfaced last year. Kevin C. Downs for NY Post

The possibility of converting the former Midland Beach nursing home first surfaced last year, when the 288-bed facility was on the verge of being sold, according to a report this month by the Staten Island Advance.

The sale meant that 53 senior citizens would have to be relocated from the assisted living facility — and local pols raised fears that the site was being eyed for conversion to a migrant shelter.

“This site was an important cornerstone in our senior care system and we have been advocating to the owner of the site to sell to an entity with a similar end-use as a senior retirement facility,” Staten Island Borough President Vito Fossella and other elected officials wrote to Mayor Eric Adams, the outlet said.

“With several potential buyers interested in providing some type of long-term care to Staten Islanders, this migrant shelter sets back Staten Islanders’ senior health care options,” the letter said.

Demonstrators on Staten Island came out Sunday to protest the conversion of a former 288-bed nursing home in Middle Beach into a shelter for migrants. Kevin C. Downs for NY Post

Adams has been forced to scramble for space as some 100,000 asylum seekers from the US border have flooded the five boroughs since last spring — with nearly 60,000 currently under city care.

On Sunday, city officials bused in the first 150 of now-3,000 expected migrants to be housed at a massive tent city erected on soccer fields on Randall’s Island.

The state-funded site is expected to cost taxpayers $20 million a month, officials said this month.

“As we have repeatedly said, with more than 100,000 asylum seekers asking for care since the spring of 2022, New York City has been left largely alone to respond with a national humanitarian crisis,” a spokesperson for Adams said in a statement.

“We have already stood up more than 200 emergency sites and run out of space every day. We have looked at more than 3,000 sites, and, given the magnitude of this emergency, every option remains on the table. We continue to call on our federal and state partners to provide us with the help we desperately need.”