dwindle. young people are the future, yet there are many factors which are disheartening such as the lack of jobs, the dizzying pace of contemporary life, hikes in the cost of living, the difficulty of finding housing and even more disturbing the fear of forming families and bringing children into the world. francis also talking about the clergy sex abuse crisis, he was calling just spoke and said the scandal of the abuse crisis has marred the church and has driven many of the people away from the church and of course world youth day is about turning that enthusiasm on again about the church, the catholic church, to the next generation coming along, sandra. sandra: really interesting stuff. lauren green, thank you. great to see you. thank you. all right, here we go. can you believe it, the top of a
years, they ve paid it forward, if you will, they ve helped in natural disasters around the world, i think 50 countries, five continents, so but they are needing help. a lot of it in the coming weeks is going to be finding housing for those who cannot get back in their apartment buildings. it s a lot more vertical living here than people realize and so, a lot of those apartment buildings are going to be unstable. i think the last word was about 2,800 structures were either down or partially damaged and it s going to be hard to occupy those, so certainly blankets and tents and some field hospitals and some other things are going to be needed, as well. obviously, there s a significant difference between the united states ability to help turkey, which is a fairly western nato member, and syria,
so being relocated to this part of brooklyn, a cruise ship terminal that is not very easy to get to if you don t have transportation, that just presents yet another obstacle. so it really is a complicated situation not only for these adult male migrants that are being asked to relocate from manhattan here to brooklyn, but also for the city that s trying to keep its head above water when it comes to finding housing for well over 70,000 homeless people. this includes those chronically homeless and also the tens of thousands of recently arrived asylum seekers. i want you to hear directly from mayor eric adams as he actually visited this particular site here, trying to put any concerns among those asylum seekers at ease. i just liked to come here when i started hearing all the rumors about it is too cold. my brother got on shorts. it s warm inside. about the food not being there. you know, healthy food is
sort of searching and getting an assessment of how bad this actually was all over the city of naples. i also asked him about where the efforts are today in terms of the focus. two things he mentioned that i think are important, one, he talked about still assessing the damage on the infrastructure when it comes to power. only about a third of customers still don t have power. they ve been able to restore quite a bit. but he has no idea how long it will be before they get to 100%. and they re also working on finding housing for those that have been displaced. they re working around the clock there. i know you are as well. thank you so much. and there s much more to come tonight on this sunday. up next, a live report from the white house as president biden prepares to see hurricane damage firsthand in both puerto rico and in florida. plus, inside the ukrainian city of lyman. the city begins to pick up the pieces. and then later, back to hurricane ian, there s so much
little choice. we ll get a request from a family to take them to the grocery store or something like that. so that is not typical of what our program does. this is happening every time. yes. because there might be a bit of frustration there. it s sadness and frustration for the families. someone is supposed to be helping them. yes. it s not happening. not to the extent we understood. reporter: in california the federal government has tasked 23 resettlement agencies to assist new refugee arrivals. that responsibility falls solely on the international rescue committee. an ngo contracted to help arrivals navigate the complex u.s. systems from finding housing to accessing health services to enrolling in english language instruction. we interviewed refugees who say they are frustrated and feeling left behind. like this 25-year-old, who when