New York City Mayor Eric Adams on Sunday called on the federal government to play a bigger role in addressing the migrant crisis at the U.S.-Mexico border that is overwhelming city officials. 

The Democratic mayor was in El Paso this weekend to survey the border and meet with his counterparts to discuss how the crisis is impacting the community. 

NYC Eric Adams

NYC Mayor Eric Adams and El Paso Mayor Lesser visit an area where asylum seekers are known to cross the border. (Fabien Levy)

The trip comes after the mayor said on Friday that the Big Apple is at its "breaking point" as record numbers of migrants continue to arrive. Adams submitted an emergency mutual aid request to New York state for immediate help this weekend to shelter the asylum seekers. 

That announcement came after the city reportedly received more than 3,100 asylum seekers in the past week – with more than 800 arriving last Thursday alone.

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Speaking at a Sunday afternoon press conference alongside El Paso Mayor Oscar Leeser, Adams said New York City wasn't pointing at any border city in particular for exacerbating the problem. 

"We’re pointing the finger … at our national government," Adams said. "This is a national problem. We must have real immigration reform, and we must immediately have a short-term fix of making sure that the cost of this does not fall on our local cities." 

NYC Eric Adams

NYC Mayor Eric Adams visits a CBP processing facility. (Fabien Levy)

Adams chastised Govs. Jared Polis of Colorado and Greg Abbott of Texas for their "uncoordinated efforts" in bussing migrants to New York City. 

"The governor of Colorado, who’s a Democrat, and … the governor of Texas, who’s a Republican – I think they had a bipartisan disrespect for the cities, and it was wrong and it should not happen, and it should not continue," Adams said. 

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Adams said many of the migrants read websites ahead of their travel and are given a false impression that New York City’s streets are "paved with gold" and that they will automatically be given employment" upon arrival.

"We have to give people accurate information," he said, adding that the burden should fall on the federal government to educate migrants about the realities they are going to face. 

"Our cities are being undermined. And we don’t deserve this. Migrants don’t deserve this. And people who live in the cities don’t deserve this," Adams said. "We expect more from our national leaders to address this issue in a real way." 

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Adams will head to Washington, D.C., later this week to speak at the U.S. Conference of Mayors.