One-way plane tickets: NYC offers migrants free travel anywhere to move

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NEW YORK — Here’s one approach to discourage migrants from settling in New York City: Give them a free, one-way plane ticket out of town.

Mayor Eric Adams is ramping up efforts to fly migrants to the destination of their choice, figuring it’s cheaper than sheltering them for months on end. And he’s simultaneously warning that those opting to stay in New York may be in for a winter of sleeping outside with shelters full.

“When you are out of room, that means you’re out of room,” Adams told reporters Tuesday. “Every year, my relatives show up for Thanksgiving, and they want to all sleep at my house. There’s no more room. That’s where we are right now.”

In recent days, the mayor of the nation’s largest city has been steering people who were vacated from city shelters to a Manhattan office devoted solely to booking plane tickets, creating more uncertainty for the new arrivals.

Dispersing them across the nation and world harkens back to when the Democratic mayor ripped Republican governors in Texas and Florida for sending migrants from the southern border to liberal enclaves. But City Hall officials defend their effort as different because the migrants aren’t being coerced to leave.

Still, critics say Adams’ actions sends a message lacking in compassion.

“What we’ve witnessed from this administration — even if they’re not directly saying ‘you’ve got to get out of here’ — is that they’ve consistently created hysteria and chaos and confusion and have not used a tone of inclusivity and welcome,” City Council member Shahana Hanif said in an interview.

More practically, Hanif said, tracking a migrant’s applications for work authorization or asylum can be impossible once he or she leaves the city’s care.

The new, more aggressive “reticketing” plan comes as the city deals with the 130,000 migrants arriving since last year and as it tightens how long they can stay in shelters, forcing the newest arrivals out after 30 days.

Migrants have opted to fly to destinations as far as away as Colombia and Morocco.

The city has been at odds with the White House over the lack of a national remedy to the migrant surge, pitting Adams against President Joe Biden. One-way plane tickets, even international ones, are cheaper than the cumulative daily, per-migrant cost that has risen to $394 this month from $363 in the city.

“With no sign of a decompression strategy in the near future, we have established a reticketing center for migrants,” City Hall spokesperson Kayla Mamelak said in a statement. “Here, the city will redouble efforts to purchase tickets for migrants to help them take the next steps in their journeys.”

Adams is threatening that migrants who end up on the streets — “when,” not “if,” it comes to that — would be clustered only with bathroom facilities. He has also weighed distributing tents to them.

“Nothing is off the table,” Mamelak reiterated.

The message from Adams comes as a record 4,000 newcomers arrive to the city each week.

Limits on shelter stays, combined with casework services that include “reticketing” to other places, are necessary to drive down the population in the city’s care and make room for new arrivals, City Hall officials say.

City Hall officials say the squeeze has been working. Less than 20 percent of migrants who received 30- and 60-day vacate notices have reapplied to return to the city’s care, a rate that officials tout as a success.

But it’s still unclear where a majority of the people kicked out of shelters go.

This week, migrants out on the streets followed directions the city gave them to the new reticketing center: a repurposed church office in the East Village. The group included dozens of migrant adults who were forced to leave a midtown Manhattan shelter site Monday because of fire safety concerns.

On Wednesday, a trickle of men, carrying their belongings in small suitcases, pillowcases and even trash bags, emerged from the reticketing site confused.

Several were asylum-seekers from Mauritania, a West African nation with heightened racial tensions, and they said in interviews in French that they rejected the flight offer because they wished to stay in the city to seek work.

At least one man was rushing to the airport to make a flight to Michigan.

“We tried our luck here, but there is no room,” Savi Qhlil, 30, said.

There is no immediate guarantee of an open bed for those who opt to return to the city’s care.

Some migrants hop from shelter to shelter seeking vacancies, and some bide their time by sleeping on the subway.

The city has used reticketing since the crisis began about 18 months ago, but it now has a dedicated site separate from the Roosevelt Hotel intake center in midtown Manhattan. Officials did not have immediate information on how much they’ve spent more recently on tickets or where the bulk of the travelers requested to go.

Murad Awawdeh, executive director of the New York Immigration Coalition, said it “doesn’t make any sense for reticketing to be the main prime focus.”

He added that while some migrants in the early stages of the crisis were forced to come to New York City, including via buses chartered by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, more recent arrivals want to be in the city.

“It’s unconscionable that this is the tone and tact this administration is taking when immigrants have been the lifeline and lifeblood of this city for centuries,” Awawdeh said.

Adams told reporters this week that he’s talking with other countries about how they’ve managed migrants sleeping outdoors, a prospect that the Legal Aid Society and the Coalition for the Homeless stress runs contrary to the city’s right-to-shelter obligation to provide a bed for any one who needs it.

“We have to make sure that people have some type of restroom facilities, some type of shower network,” Adams told reporters Tuesday.

A possibility floated Wednesday of distributing tents for outdoor living was confirmed by his spokesperson.

Adams repeatedly notes that he has kept children off the streets thus far. What Day 61 will look like for migrant children — a newer policy announced last month that evicts even families — remains to be seen.

“We’re still formulating that, and we’ll get back to you on it,” said Molly Schaeffer, interim director of the Office of Asylum Seeker Operations, at a City Council hearing Monday.

The city has a network of hotels, churches and state facilities used to house migrants across the five boroughs, and Adams has pegged the city’s cost to ultimately hit $12 billion over three years.

City Council member Diana Ayala said the most cost-effective approach is longer-term solutions including publicly subsidized housing vouchers that get conventional shelter residents into permanent housing.

“I do really understand the complexity of what they’re being asked to do under the circumstances,” Ayala said in an interview about the city’s response. “But I don’t think that their policies are helpful. I think they have the potential to leave thousands of individuals out on the street.”

Jason Beeferman and Janaki Chadha contributed to this report.

Ryan Reaves hit still bothering Wild’s Freddy Gaudreau

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PHILADELPHIA — Freddy Gaudreau, who played all 82 regular-season games for the Wild last season, will miss at least the three starting Thursday night against the Flyers at Wells Fargo Arena.

Sidelined by an upper body injury, Gaudreau did not travel here with the team and won’t join his teammates for games Friday at Washington and Sunday in New Jersey.

“He’s been dealing with it,” head coach Dean Evason said Thursday.

Gaudreau took a wicked blind check from former teammate Ryan Reaves at Toronto on Oct. 14 and had to compose himself on the ice for several moments — while Reaves and Marcus Foligno traded blows — before he was able to skate off.

Gaudreau was examined after the hit but returned and played 9 minutes, 51 seconds in the Wild’s 7-4 loss. Afterward, he said he had the wind knocked out of him.

He joins a growing list of regulars sidelined by injuries. Defensemen Alex Goligoski (lower body) and Jared Spurgeon (upper body) are on long term injured reserve, and Matt Boldy is skating in Minnesota after suffering an upper body injury late against the Maple Leafs.

Boldy was set to travel with the team Wednesday but held back because the team won’t practice on this trip after taking an optional morning skate on Thursday.

New playmate

With Gaudreau sidelined, the Wild called forward Jujhar Khaira up from Iowa and inserted him on the fourth line with Connor Dewar and Brandon Duhaime for Thursday’s 6:30 puck drop.

Khaira will be the fourth different linemate for the two young forwards the Wild call “the Deweys.” Vinni Lettieri, who played with Dewar and Duhaime in Tuesday’s 7-4 victory over Edmonton, was moved into Gaudreau’s spot on the third line with Marco Rossi and Marcus Foligno.

Pat Maroon started the season with Dewar and Duhaime, and Sammy Walker played one game with them.

A veteran of 336 NHL games, Khaira has played his first minor league games this season since playing 27 games for AHL Bakersfield (Edmonton) in 2016-17. He played two games at center and two at wing at Iowa, leading all skaters with a plus-3 rating. “Obviously, you want to get back as fast as you can, and I can only control what I control, and I thought I did that down there,” Khaira said.

“He’s very versatile. He’s very comfortable. Clearly he’s a pro,” Evason said. “He’s played in the NHL a long time. We’re looking for him to slot right in with his experience, with his size (6-foot-4, 212 pounds), with his speed. Should be a nice fit for us.”

Briefly

Evason said the team is hoping Boldy and Spurgeon can begin practicing with the team when it returns from a 4 p.m. game at New Jersey on Sunday. Spurgeon can’t be activated until a Nov. 4 home game against the New York Rangers, and of the two, Evason said, “Boldy is closer.” … After earning the victory against the Oilers on Tuesday, Filip Gustavsson was given the start against the Flyers. Marc-Andre Fleury is scheduled to start Friday against the Capitals.

A pioneering gene therapy aims to free patients of blood disease. Is a cure at hand?

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Faith in God called Clint and Alissa Finlayson to adopt two sick girls from an orphanage in China. Faith in medicine called them to Oakland.

Born with a deadly blood disease, the Finlayson’s daughters — Ada, 9, and Lily, 12 — are the first patients on the West Coast to receive a new gene therapy offered by UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital Oakland.

Already, Ada is already feeling better 10 weeks after receiving her stem cell transplant. Lily started treatment last week. Both have 90% chance of a permanent cure.

“It’s science, and it’s a miracle,” said their mother Alissa, sitting in the small yard of their guest home in downtown Oakland, far from their small mountain town of Kalispell, Montana.

Alissa Finlayson, left, along with her daughters Lily, 12,, Ruby, 10, and Ada, 9, create art with Foil Fun in the patio at Ronald McDonald House create art with Foil Fun in the patio at Ronald McDonald House where Ada and Lily are being monitored after gene therapy for beta thalassemia by UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital in Oakland, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 18, 2023.. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)

The children were born with beta thalassemia, a common hereditary red blood cell diseases in China. Unable to create normal blood cells, they’ve needed six-hour-long blood transfusions every 21 days, an intense treatment that carries risk and requires constant monitoring.

Because Chinese orphanages can’t provide treatment, both girls were destined to live short lives.

Then the family found that UCSF’s Oakland hospital is one of three sites in the U.S. to offer the initial test of the therapy, Zynteglo. Now that Zynteglo is FDA approved, the hospital is among 15 in the nation authorized to provide care. Stanford’s Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital, Loma Linda University Children Hospital and Seattle Children’s Hospital will also offer the treatment.

The therapy is a one-time treatment that works by using an engineered virus to deliver a healthy gene into patient cells. It’s not the same as CRISPR, which uses gene editing to fix existing genes. That process is still under review and has not received FDA approval.

Ada Finlayson, 9, looks on from the patio at Ronald McDonald House where she is being monitored after gene therapy for beta thalassemia by UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital in Oakland, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 18, 2023. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)

“The point of the treatment is to stop those transfusions,” said Dr. Mark Walters, a hematologist and director of the hospital’s Pediatric Blood and Marrow Transplant Program. Walters will follow the girls and other patients for 15 years to see if there are long-term complications, or if they remain free of disease and can be considered truly cured. Other patients are in the hospital’s pipeline.

Beta thalassemia is caused by a single mutation on the gene for hemoglobin, the protein in red blood cells that carries oxygen to tissues. Children develop life-threatening anemia. They can’t gain weight or grow properly.  They suffer organ damage.

By fixing the underlying genetic problem, the new treatment buoys hopes for an estimated 1,300 to 1,500 patients — and opens up the possibility of treating other simple inherited disorders.

Scientists say this approach will be a crucial part of 21st century medicine. An estimated 400 million people worldwide are affected by one of the 7,000 diseases caused by mutations in a single gene. ‌

Ada Finlayson, 9, left, and her sister Lily, 12, interact each other in the patio at Ronald McDonald House where Ada is being monitored after gene therapy for beta thalassemia by UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital in Oakland, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 18, 2023. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)

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“It’s incredibly exciting time, as we harness what we’ve learn about genes and then how to fix them,” said Walters.

“This is just one disease we’re treating with the gene therapy,” he said. “There are lots and lots of others to work on. All the lessons we’ve learned about genetics are coming to fruition.”

These customized treatments remain challenging to build and are profoundly expensive. Zynteglo, made by Massachusetts-based biotech company bluebird bio, costs $2.8 million for a single-use vial, making it one of the most expensive drugs in the world.

But money is saved by a lifetime without ongoing care, which can cost many millions of dollars.

Devout Christians, the Finlaysons married in their early 20s and soon bore two biological children in the picturesque 1800s-era town near Glacier National Park, with mountains, alpine trails and lakes filled with trout. Clint, 41, is an engineer; Alissa, 38, is a music teacher who homeschools their children.

Seeking to grow their family, they shared a dream of adoption. They agreed to welcome a child with any medical condition.

“It’s just something that you figure out,” said Alissa. “We have very strong faith that God is going to put the child in our path that he wants us to adopt.”

Ada Finlayson, 9, looks on from the patio at Ronald McDonald House where she is being monitored after gene therapy for beta thalassemia by UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital in Oakland, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 18, 2023. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)

Charmed by Lily’s cherubic photo, they brought her home.  About a year later, they received a call asking if they would consider adopting a second girl, Ada, with the same medical condition. Their answer was a definitive “Yes.”

They’re now inseparable. Lily is quiet, thoughtful and strong. Ada is an impish ball of energy.

To keep them healthy, “it’s like a weight you put on,” said Clint. “But after awhile, you forget it’s there.”

When the couple learned of the promise of gene therapy, they rushed to put their names on the hospital’s wait list. Friends’ daughters, also adopted from China, had completed the clinical trial and were thriving.

The call came as Alissa was sitting on the family couch, teaching her brood. “I recognized the 510 area code,” she said. “I didn’t hesitate. I said: ‘Yes. When can we come?’ “

“We believe that God has paved a way for us to be here,” she said, pausing for the roar of a passing BART train. “We miss home, but we love how knowledgeable the people here are, and how they treat us as a family.”

Ada went first. From start to finish, the process took four months.

First, her stem cells were collected from her blood. Using a virus, healthy copies of the hemaglobin gene were inserted into these collected cells, then grown for three months.

Chemotherapy killed off the bad stem cells in her bone marrow to make room for the new healthy cells. Her hair fell out. The cells were infused into her body, and found their home in her marrow. They are now beginning to pump out normal hemoglobin.

The beauty of this approach is that patients don’t reject their own bone marrow. And there’s no risk of a dangerous complication caused when foreign cells attack the body’s own tissues.

“You just do the next thing, and the next thing leads you to something else,” said Clint. “Then eventually, holy cow, you’re on the other side of it.”

For the first time in her life, Ada needs no transfusions. While her hemoglobin levels won’t fully stabilize for a year, her spunk is emerging as the disease departs.

Lily’s treatment, delayed by a cell manufacturing error, has now started. It was a major disappointment, because the girls could not be treated together. And instead of staying in Oakland for four months, the family must be here for eight.

The Finlaysons also struggled to gain insurance coverage, and feared medical debt. After two months of daily phone calls with Aetna, coverage is now guaranteed.

“You feel these painful moments and you just want to give up sometimes,” said Alissa. “But we’re blessed to be here. We have an army of family, friends and our church praying for our entire family.”

Impatient with her family’s tale, Ada bounced over, announcing “This is boring to listen to!”

“I don’t really think the magnitude of this has hit them,” Alissa said, offering a hug. “They think getting cured is totally normal.”

Alissa Finlayson, left, offers water to her daughter, Ada, 9, in the patio at Ronald McDonald House where Ada is being monitored after gene therapy for beta thalassemia by UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital in Oakland, Calif., on Wednesday, Oct. 18, 2023. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)

New US House speaker tried to help overturn the 2020 election, raising concerns about the next one

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By NICHOLAS RICCARDI (Associated Press)

The new leader of one of the chambers of Congress that will certify the winner of next year’s presidential election helped spearhead the attempt to overturn the last one, raising alarms that Republicans could try to subvert the will of the voters if they remain in power despite safeguards enacted after the 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol.

Mike Johnson, the Louisiana congressman who was elected speaker of the House of Representatives on Wednesday after a three-week standoff among Republicans, took the lead in filing a brief in a lawsuit that sought to overturn Joe Biden’s 2020 presidential election win. That claim, widely panned by legal scholars of all ideologies, was quickly thrown out by the U.S. Supreme Court.

After the 2020 election, Johnson also echoed some of the wilder conspiracy theories pushed by then-President Donald Trump to explain away his loss. Then Johnson voted against certifying Biden’s win even after the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.

Johnson’s role three years ago is relevant now not only because the speaker is second in the line of presidential succession, after the vice president. The House Johnson now leads also will have to certify the winner of the 2024 presidential election.

“You don’t want people who falsely claim the last election was stolen to be in a position of deciding who won the next one,” said Rick Hasen, a law professor at the University of California, Los Angeles. On Wednesday, he flagged another worry about Johnson, who is a constitutional lawyer.

“Johnson is more dangerous because he wrapped up his attempt to subvert the election outcomes in lawyerly and technical language,” Hasen said.

Last year, Congress revamped the procedures for how a presidential win is certified, making it far harder to object in the way that Johnson and 146 other House Republicans did on Jan. 6, 2021. But there is a conservative school of thought that no legislation can control how Congress oversees the certification of a president’s win — all that counts is the Constitution’s broad granting of power to ratify the electoral college’s votes.

The House in January 2025 will be filled with the winners of the previous November’s election, so there’s no guarantee a Speaker Johnson would remain in power. To be sure, it would be difficult for the speaker to change any of the results. The vice president — who would be Democrat Kamala Harris at the time — presides over the joint House and Senate session in a ceremonial role and calls votes if there are enough objections to do so.

Still, the goal of Trump supporters in 2020 was to advance any legal argument against Biden’s win to a Supreme Court where conservative justices have a 6-3 edge, three of whom were nominated by Trump. A speaker who supported Trump’s last effort to stay in power would be well-positioned to do so again if the former president is the GOP nominee next year and loses the election.

On Tuesday night, after Johnson was nominated to his new post by the House GOP caucus, he smiled and shook his head as the rest of the caucus laughed and booed at a reporter’s question about his role in trying to halt certification of the 2020 results. “Next question,” Johnson said. “Next question.”

Democrats kept the issue center stage as the speaker vote on the floor proceeded Wednesday.

“This has been about one thing,” Rep. Pete Aguilar said. “This has been about who can appease Donald Trump. House Republicans have put their names behind someone who has been called the most important architect of the electoral college objections.”

“Damn right,” someone called from the Republican side of the House.

Later, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., noted that Biden had won the 2020 election. Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor-Greene yelled, “No, he didn’t.”

Johnson’s ascension came after Trump on Tuesday torpedoed the candidacy of Rep. Tom Emmer, who signed onto Johnson’s brief in the lawsuit to overturn Trump’s loss but ended up voting to certify Biden’s win after the attack on the Capitol. The former president called Emmer a “RINO” — or Republican In Name Only — on his social media platform, Truth Social, and said Emmer “wasn’t MAGA,” a reference to his Make America Great Again slogan.

Johnson is a former attorney for the religious rights group Alliance Defending Freedom who was first elected to the House in 2016, the year Trump won the presidency. An active member of the House Judiciary Committee, he gained notice as one of the leading Republican questioners of witnesses during Trump’s first impeachment in 2019.

He remained one of Trump’s chief defenders through the 2020 election. On Nov. 7, 2020, four days after Election Day, he posted on Twitter that he had told Trump, “Stay strong and keep fighting, sir!” In an interview on a Shreveport, Louisiana, radio station 10 days later, he repeated a debunked claim about an international conspiracy to hack voting machines so Trump would lose.

“In every election in American history, there’s some small element of fraud, irregularity,” Johnson said in the interview. “But when you have it on a broad scale, when you have a software system that is used all around the country that is suspect because it came from Hugo Chavez in Venezuela, when you have testimonials of people like this, it demands to be litigated.”

Johnson then organized more than 100 House Republicans to sign onto an amicus brief filed in support of a lawsuit from Texas’ Republican Attorney General, Ken Paxton, asking the U.S. Supreme Court to invalidate Biden’s wins in four states that gave him his winning margin in the Electoral College — Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. Many legal analysts were aghast at the litigation, which was quickly rejected by the high court.

On his social media streaming show, former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, who is facing charges in Georgia for trying to overturn the election results there, praised Johnson on Wednesday for refusing to accept Trump’s 2020 election loss.

“He seems to be right on everything, including the things I’m interested in, which is he didn’t accept the election rollover,” said Giuliani, who also praised Johnson for supporting the lawsuit by the Texas attorney general.

In an interview with The New Yorker in December 2020, Johnson dialed down his election rhetoric.

“I don’t see a grand conspiracy,” he said of the allegations of voter fraud. “What I see is a lot of chaos and confusion across the land, and the result is that this election will have this giant question mark hanging over it.”

On Jan. 6, just before Trump’s supporters overran the Capitol, Johnson tweeted: “We MUST fight for election integrity, the Constitution, and the preservation of our republic! It will be my honor to help lead that fight in the Congress today.”

Hours later, after the attack, Johnson condemned the violence on Twitter. But he still voted with about two-thirds of House Republicans to overturn Biden’s wins in Arizona and Pennsylvania. He remains close to House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan, a fellow Republican who strategized with Trump over how to overturn his defeat before Jan. 6.

Trump’s supporters in trying to overturn the election have not fared well in elections since the violent assault on the Capitol, with a slate of conspiracy theorists attempting to assume positions overseeing elections in key swing states all losing their races last year. Instead, they have excelled at winning internal party contests and taking control of some state parties. Now they also have claimed one of the nation’s most powerful political positions.

Joanna Lydgate, chief executive officer of States United Democracy Center, a nonpartisan group organizing against election deniers, said Johnson’s ascension was alarming: “How can you run the people’s House if you don’t believe in the will of the people?”

Noting the speaker’s role in “the peaceful transfer of power” between presidential administrations, Lydgate warned, “When those in power don’t take our democracy and the will of the people seriously, it can have dire consequences.”

Correction: This story has been corrected to show the House will have to certify the winner of the 2024 presidential election, not the 2025 presidential election. And it deletes an incorrect reference to the U.S. Constitution putting the speaker second in the line of presidential succession.

Associated Press writers Mary Clare Jalonick in Washington and Michael R. Sisak in New York contributed to this report.