Dozens of families prepare for bed in the international arrivals section of Logan Airport on Thursday, June 20.Mass. facilities at full capacity leave few options for new arrivals
Since the beginning of the year, a large, open space on the ground floor of Boston Logan International Airport Terminal E has served as a shelter for migrant families with nowhere else to sleep.
On a recent Thursday night, blankets and pillows were sprawled across the floor as the families prepared for bed. Some travelers passing through paused to observe the families as boarding calls blared through the airport speakers.
Even as summer travel is in full swing, the space in the airport’s international arrivals section remains a sleeping spot for the migrant families — the majority of them Haitian — who have yet to find a spot in one of Massachusetts’ at-capacity shelters.
Fileine Ambroise, 45, arrived at Logan Airport on Saturday, June 15, and as of last Thursday, had spent every night there, along with her four children, aged 17, 15, 12 and 8.
“It is difficult for us, but the fact that we find assistance from many other Haitian families … they give us hope … so we know one day things will definitely be better. Things will change. Things will not remain the same,” she said in Haitian Creole, speaking through a translator. “Because that’s the hope that we have when we come here.”
Ambroise traveled to the U.S. from Chile, where she and her children had lived for last 10 years.
Her decision to move to Massachusetts, as is the case for many
migrants, was driven by a desire to secure better opportunities for her
family and better education for her children.
Ambroise
and her children are among hundreds of other migrant families living in
limbo as they wait for spots to open up in Massachusetts Emergency
Assistance shelters. In an email to the Banner, a spokesperson for Gov.
Maura Healey’s office said the state will soon open the doors to a new
safety-net site in Norfolk to shelter migrant families.
There
are currently safety-net sites in Lexington, Cambridge and Chelsea. The
Bay State Correctional Center in Norfolk, a former minimum-security
facility “in good condition,” the spokesperson said, will shelter
approximately 140 families on the waitlist, including some of those
living at Logan Airport.
At
the start of June, more than 7,500 families were living in
Massachusetts Emergency Assistance shelters across more than 90
communities in the state. On June 12, the Healey-Driscoll administration
announced that it would place a nine-month cap on Emergency Assistance
shelter stays to alleviate the overburdened housing system.
“This
policy is a responsible measure to address the capacity and fiscal
constraints of our state’s emergency assistance system,” Healey said in
the press release.
Alongside
the state, local nonprofits and religious organizations have worked to
respond to the state’s influx of migrants. In Jamaica Plain, the Bethel
African Methodist Episcopal Church, with the help of volunteers, has
provided housing, social services and educational resources to Haitian
families. Communities in Quincy and Milton have also assisted.
“The
needs are colossal,” said Dieufort Fleurissaint, known familiarly as
Pastor Keke, an immigrant advocate with True Alliance Center.
Fleurissaint
partners with other migrant advocacy nonprofits such as the Immigrant
Family Services Institute and the Association of Haitian Women to
accommodate the needs of families arriving in Massachusetts.
“This
trend will not stop,” he said, “I know the situation in Haiti. People
are fleeing for their lives, they’ve been displaced.” He added that
while sleeping on an airport floor may be challenging for the families,
the reality back home in Haiti is worse. Many of them are fleeing gang
violence and unrest. Here in Boston, he said, “they have peace, they
have security.”
Every
morning around 7 a.m., the families living at Logan Airport pack up
their temporary beds and transport their luggage to churches or other
institutions, where they spend the day. Every weekday, the Church of the
Holy Spirit in Mattapan welcomes some of those families. There,
sometimes hundreds of migrants receive meals and sit around and chat as
they while the day away.
Last
Thursday, the church’s pastors, volunteers and workers with IFSI served
a rice dish for lunch, followed by ice cream for dessert to combat the
sweltering heat. Chatter rang through the church’s hall, accompanied by
the sounds of children scurrying about.
Around
3 p.m., the families began wrangling their luggage to prepare to head
back to the airport. They would have to carry their large suitcases and
bags from Mattapan to East Boston. Ambroise gathered her children and
their belongings, stuffing miscellaneous items into the pockets of
various bags.
The family of five would spend another night in the airport.