The asylum seekers arrived on three buses into Port Authority around 6:45 a.m., Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs spokesperson Shaina Coronel told CNN.
The group was a mix of families and individuals, she said. City officials estimate there were around 10 children, including a 10-month-old baby.
New York Mayor Eric Adams and other city officials have previously accused Abbott’s administration of allegedly forcing asylum seekers onto buses bound for New York City and of not coordinating with city officials on the transfer of people.
Abbott’s office has responded in multiple statements that the people arriving in New York have come willingly and have signed a waiver consenting to their destination.
Including the hundreds bused in from Texas, about 6,000 asylum seekers have arrived in New York from border states since May, according to the mayor’s immigrant affairs office.
On Sunday, volunteers greeted the migrants and provided food, water and clothing, Coronel said. The city is providing legal assistance as well, and there were two bilingual lawyers available to answer legal questions from asylum seekers, she said.
Coronel said a triage center was set up at the Port Authority to assess the migrants on arrival, and the city worked with the Fire Department to provide medical assistance. The city is also providing vans to transport migrants to shelters and hotels.
Aid workers from the Jewish community response group Masbia Relief were among the volunteers Sunday, offering essentials, like shoes and toiletries, to the arriving asylum seekers. When the buses pulled up with the migrants on board, there were cheers and applause and signs of welcome written in English, Hebrew and Spanish, according to the organization.
“The idea is to help people turn the page and start their new beginning here in New York in a better way,” Masbia Executive Director Alexander Rapaport said in a statement.
“The journey ahead of them is still going to be challenging but we want to plant the seeds of change in their luck and give them their basic humanity back,” Rapaport said.
Last week, New York officials announced a multi-agency effort to ensure young asylum seekers have access to school placements before the school year starts next month.
“Our public schools are prepared to welcome families seeking asylum with open arms,” Department of Education Chancellor David Banks said Friday. “Our schools are ready and excited to welcome our newest New Yorkers to class on September 8th.”
CNN’s Kiely Westhoff and Theresa Waldrop contributed to this report.