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NYC officials clear another storefront illegally housing dozens of migrants in unsafe conditions

New York City officials have cleared out a Bronx storefront illegally converted to house dozens of tenants that was run by the same person who operated one hosting as many as 70 migrants in a Queens furniture store

Via AP news wire
Thursday 29 February 2024 11:37 EST

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New York City officials have cleared out a Bronx storefront illegally converted to house dozens of tenants that was run by the same person who operated one hosting as many as 70 migrants in a Queens furniture store.

The city Department of Buildings said Thursday that it responded Wednesday to reports of an illegal conversion at a two-story commercial building in the borough's Fordham neighborhood.

Inspectors found 45 beds packed closely together on the first floor and basement of the building, along with extension cords, e-bikes, space heaters, hotplates and other fire hazards in the makeshift living quarters, the agency said.

City officials ordered the building vacated due to the ā€œhazardous, life-threatening conditionsā€ which included severe overcrowding and a lack of natural light and ventilation. The building's landlord was also issued two violations for failure to maintain the building and for occupying the building contrary to city records.

The cityā€™s Office of Emergency Management, which operates NYCā€™s migrant shelter system, is also assisting displaced tenants, the buildings department said.

The storefront is run by Ebou Sarr, who operated a similar housing operation in Queens that was shut down Tuesday.

City officials ordered Sarrā€™s Wholesale Furniture vacated after finding the buildingā€™s first-floor commercial space and cellar had been converted into sleeping quarters, with 14 bunk beds and 13 beds tightly packed on both floors and able to fit about 41 people.

The native of Senegal had told reporters Tuesday that he was housing mostly migrant men from his West African nation and charging them $300 a month because they couldnā€™t afford a place to live after timing out of the cityā€™s emergency shelter system for migrants.

No one answered phone numbers associated with Sarr on Thursday.

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