Updated

New York City is attempting to follow through with a plan to send migrants to upstate New York after resistance from local leaders and a temporary restraining order. 

The plan was announced Friday to provide temporary housing at two hotels in Orange Lake and Orangeburg for as many as 300 single, adult men seeking asylum for up to four months. 

However, the proposal met resistance, which led to a delay after an initial transfer had been touted for Wednesday – even as the city said plans had not changed.

A spokesperson for Mayor Eric Adams previously said that New York City officials had intended to move forward with at least part of the plan and send "a small number of asylum seekers" to Orange County. However, by the end of the day, the Associated Press reported that no migrants had arrived at the Crossroads Hotel. 

NEW YORK CITY CONSIDERING 'ALL OPTIONS' TO HOUSE ASYLUM-SEEKRS, EVEN SHUTTING DOWN STREETS

Mayor Eric Adams

Mayor Eric Adams during a briefing at the Javits Federal Building on April 17, 2023. (Luiz C. Ribeiro/New York Daily News/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

Those migrants did arrive on Thursday, however, much to the surprise of local officials who say they were assured no more buses would arrive.

"Last night, both the State and City assured the Town of Newburgh and Orange County that no buses with asylum seekers would be here until further notice. The process has been a disorganized disaster and the blame lies with the Mayor of New York, who originally opened the door for as many undocumented immigrants as possible to his self-proclaimed sanctuary city, and the Governor. She has sat back and done nothing as this crisis has negatively impacted New York State," Orange County Executive Steven Neuhaus said in a statement.

"The New York State Police, the Orange County Sheriff’s Office, the Supervisor of the Town of Newburgh and his police department were not notified that these buses would be arriving today. Sadly, we have learned that you cannot trust the word of New York City’s Mayor and the leadership of New York," he added.

Other local officials accused the mayor of doing the same thing southern governors had: bussing out asylum-seekers without properly alerting the municipalities where the people were headed.

COURT ORDER BLOCKS NYC PLAN TO MOVE MIGRANTS UPSTATE AFTER CITY AND COUNTY OFFICIALS FIGHT BACK

A bus carrying asylum seekers

A bus carrying asylum seekers arrives at Port Authority on May 3, 2023, in New York City. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

"It was a sneak attack in the dark of night," Orangetown Supervisor Teresa Kenny said at a Wednesday news conference.

Kenny said her Rockland County town secured a temporary restraining order stopping the Armoni Inn and Suites from taking in asylum-seekers as its lawsuit progresses. That’s in addition to emergency declarations in both Rockland and Orange counties that are designed to block hotels or motels from housing migrants.

The Rockland County Supreme Court backed up the restraining order with its own temporary order blocking Adams from sending Migrants to the Armoni Inn on Thursday.

"The decision made here is not a political decision," Justice Thomas Zugibe said in his order.

New York City mayor

Mayor Eric Adams at New York Police Department headquarters in Manhattan on April 18, 2023. (Luiz C. Ribeiro/New York Daily News/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

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New York City has struggled with a surge of more than 60,000 asylum-seekers since last spring. The administration has been using hotels to house migrants and 37,500 asylum seekers are currently in the city's care.

All of this came ahead of an expected influx of asylum seekers at the southern border, as pandemic-era Title 42 restrictions end on Thursday.

"I'm working very closely with the mayor to identify more sites where we can welcome these individuals," Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul said Wednesday, according to Gothamist. 

Fox News' Michael Lee and The Associated Press contributed to this report.