NYC's $125.8B Budget Boosts Immigrant Services Amid Federal Crackdown
July 3, 2026
New York City's Fiscal Year 2027 budget totals US$125.8 billion and includes substantial spending on immigrant services spanning legal, health, housing, language, and education programs.
The timing is pivotal as federal immigration enforcement steps under the Trump administration are adding pressure on immigrant communities.
The New York Immigration Coalition and other immigrant advocates welcomed the funding, highlighting its alignment with long-standing advocacy amid intensified federal enforcement.
Record funding of US$4.2 million is allocated to the Community Interpreter Bank and Language Services Worker Cooperatives, underscoring a focus on language access.
Key initiatives include CUNY’s Citizenship Now, the Key to the City program, and restoring the US$4 million Immigrant Family Outreach Initiative.
US$86.4 million is set aside for immigration legal services to aid those facing deportation, with additional resources for naturalization and language access.
Murad Awawdeh, president and CEO of the NYIC, stresses the urgency of funding in light of federal policy changes affecting protections like Temporary Protected Status.
The budget aims to assist about 2.5 million residents with limited English proficiency and bolster detained removal defense as more New Yorkers confront federal detention actions.
New investments for immigrant students include US$2.4 million for immigration legal services and US$4 million for arts education, along with ongoing school infrastructure investments.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani and the City Council approved the budget on a Tuesday, with the article dated July 3, 2026.
Summary based on 1 source
Get a daily email with more US News stories
Source

Caribbean Today • Jul 3, 2026
Immigration Advocates Welcome New York City Budget Investments For Immigrants