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Massachusetts Spending $64 a Day to Feed Each Migrant

State records show Massachusetts spends about $64 per immigrant per day on meals for people in state care, an expense that will add up to the $1 billion the Bay State is expected to spend by 2025. contributing to the spending of dollars.

According to WBZ-TV, the latest numbers show the state pays $16 for breakfast, $17 for lunch and a whopping $31 for each dinner.

The country claims that Required Fox Business Network reported that the 1983 Sanctuary City Act, passed to address the state’s much smaller population of homeless people, provides free food.

However, the right to refuge law is not applied exactly as written. The law also states that people given shelter must be provided with a refrigerator and the ability to prepare meals, but immigrants are given food already made and are not allowed to cook it themselves. No abilities are given.

The condition is the current According to the agency, it houses and cares for approximately 20,000 migrants. Daily Mail.

A man looks between more than 300 military cots on the gym floor as state and local officials tour the Melnea A. Cass Recreation Complex housing immigrants in Boston, Massachusetts, on January 31, 2024. Workers walking. (John Tolmacchi/Boston Globe via Getty Images)

When Democratic Gov. Maura Healey visited Boston to discuss the closure of the Roxbury community center, she said the state had “no choice” but to close the community center and rent out hotels to house undocumented immigrants. ‘ he claimed.

Residents are not so resigned to their “choice.” Parents of children stripped from the Roxbury Community Center are outraged by the move by state and city officials to take the community center away from their children.

Still, the government appears to be making quick, ill-considered decisions.

Fox Business Network added that the state awarded a $10 million, six-month no-bid contract to school lunch provider Spinelli Ravioli. The state Department of Housing and Livability justified the contract by citing Healey’s “state of emergency.”

The food service company claimed there was no guarantee that the contract would continue and that it was only aware of the six-month “emergency” it was given.

Republicans in the state Legislature say the Democratic administration is “obstructing” transparency.

Republican state Sen. Peter Durant said the cost cannot be easily obtained from the administration.

“The concern is that the money has to come from somewhere and there are really only two options: either raise taxes or cut services. All of this kind of stuff flows directly downhill to the taxpayers,” Durant said.

Follow Warner Todd Huston on Facebook: facebook.com/Warner.Todd.Hustonor truth social @WarnerToddHuston

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