Archive for June, 2011
Posted by Christopher Coen on June 30, 2011

Time and again when I’ve found refugees living in deplorable conditions and receiving sub-par resettlement services I’ve noticed government agency partners working in unison with private resettlement contractors to stonewall, and to whitewash refugees’ complaints. An article by a journalist at the Australian Broadcasting Corporation illustrates this same phenomena at work on the other side of the Pacific Ocean. Government oversight staff and their contractors’ primary concern seems to be protecting their reputations and careers, and secondarily, concern for refugees’ welfare. Instead of spending their time asking themselves why they’ve failed refugees they instead focus their energy on defense, PR, and silencing refugees’ voices. Here is an exerpt from the article:
Four months after he touched down in Australia, Clement Saidi says he’s finally arrived…
The flight from Tanzania, where Clement and his family [Congolese refugees from a pygmy tribe] had spent 12 years in a refugee camp, should have meant an end to squalor.
Instead, the Humanitarian Resettlement Program provided them with what was effectively slum housing.
Theirs was among five homes found by an Ernst and Young report commissioned by the Immigration Minister Chris Bowen to be in a ‘state of disrepair’.
One of these homes was deemed uninhabitable. There was ‘no hot water, holes in the roof, window panes missing in a bedroom for children and wholly inadequate heating’…
I found Clement, his wife and three of their children. My meeting with them was arranged by Sister Diana Santleben, a feisty refugee advocate. She’s had a series of battles with Navitas, the company which holds the contract for refugee resettlement services in the Hunter region. She and the local MP Sharon Grierson have for years been raising concerns about the service provided, and now she says openly that she’s on a mission to get the company out of the refugee housing business.
I was there to follow up on the recommendations in the Ernst and Young report. I wanted to meet for myself some of the people affected.
Simple, right? Apparently not.
Clement Saidi’s story almost didn’t make it to air.
After I interviewed him I called Navitas, whose subcontractor Resolve FM was until very recently responsible for accommodation services for refugees in the region.
The Ernst and Young report on the services they provided did not, in Chris Bowen’s words, ‘make for pretty reading’.
In addition to the inadequate housing, rents were often well above market rates and there were suggestions that refugees had been overcharged for repairs and utilities. The Department of Immigration was criticised too, for its management of the issues.
The Minister put the contractors and Departmental staff on notice, ordered a forensic audit of Resolve FM and a nationwide review of refugee resettlement services.
When I called Navitas the reaction was defensive. The company accused me of not having had consent from the refugee family to interview them. This was before they even knew which family we were talking about. They found out soon enough, by calling around all possible suspects. Navitas suggested Sister Diana had forced Clement Saidi into speaking to me. I replied that I had indeed obtained informed consent.
I clearly identified myself, did not misrepresent the ABC and informed Clement when the recording began and ended.
The company said it was very concerned about the fact that no interpreter was present at the interview. Clement’s English is limited, but I was confident I would be able to use small sections of the interview to illustrate his story…
I found myself getting a lecture from Navitas on what it meant to interview someone who has limited English.
The refugee may not have expressed himself correctly, the company said. It was important to treat these people with respect. Did I understand how his knowledge of English compared with mine? Refugees were vulnerable, the company said.
After I talked to Navitas, they talked to Sandi Logan. Mr Logan is the Immigration Department’s spokesman…
My experience with Clement Saidi was increasingly beginning to suggest that the Immigration Department and its contractor see similar threat levels even when the media speaks to a refugee who is not in detention.
“Shd we be concerned?” Sandi Logan tweeted. “Journalist w nun i/views African refugee today. No informed consent provided. Refugee says journo ‘was from department’.”
This seemed to indicate that the Department was prepared to go public with an accusation solely on the word of Navitas, without asking the journo concerned – me.
Mark Colvin tweeted back to ask Logan if he’d checked this version of the events with the reporter. “We’re emailing,” Sandi Logan tweeted and promptly sent me an email.
In it, he gave a briefing on multicultural settings and expressed his concern about my treatment of Clement Saidi, because he said he was “responsible for our service providers’ clients’ well-being in their media interactions.”
It was hard not to be sceptical. Where was the concern when these same people were languishing in appalling over-priced and over-crowded accommodation?…
Whatever you think of the rights and wrongs of that discussion, let’s be clear.
Clement Saidi has been accepted as a refugee…
His days of not being free to speak should have ended the moment he set foot in this country…
Refugees like Clement Saidi are people, with faces and voices – and opinions – of their own.
Isn’t it time the Government – and the companies it pays handsomely to look after them – stopped trying quite so hard to stop us seeing and hearing them?
Barbara Miller is a reporter with ABC Radio Current Affairs and regular contributor to AM, The World Today and PM. Read more here
Hear the radio report and read a related article on the ABC Network.
Posted in Australian refugee resettlement prgm, Congolese, furnishings, lack of, household items, missing or broken, housing, housing, substandard, neglect, openess and transparency in government, public/private partnership, Sudanese | Tagged: Australia, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, Barbara Miller, Chris Bowen, Clement Saidi, Congolese refugees, Department of Immigration, Diana Santleben, English proficiency, Ernst and Young, government contractor, human rights, journalist, media, Navitas, Newcastle, public/private partnership, refugee, refugee advocate, refugee resettlement, refugee resettlement agencies, refugee resettlement program, resettlement, Resolve FM, Sandi Logan, SHARON GRIERSON, slum housing, slum lord, slumlord | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Christopher Coen on June 28, 2011

While Minnesota legislators refuse to meet the governor half way on funding state government, and continue to busy themselves with press conferences — repeating positions made at dozens of earlier press conferences – refugees in Minnesota fear for the worst. A state government shutdown could occur this Friday. A Twin Cities Daily Planet article has more:
Day Wah sees the alarm on their faces and hears it in the voices of many of the refugees she works with. They fear this thing called a government shutdown all out of proportion.
“They worry they will have to go and live on the street,” or something worse, Wah tells me, a slight Karen woman with the important job of translating the strange customs and realities of the world we know as Minnesota to the Karen, refugees from Burma, for a program called MORE Multicultural School for Empowerment in St. Paul.
All they know is the news of a possible “government shutdown” that comes to their mailboxes on official government white paper in foreign, black-lettered words.
“They worry. Some people [do] not sleep all night; they cry.” They stockpile food, wonder how they’ll pay their rent or for medical care, says Wah, 27, who came to the United States about four years ago from a refugee camp in Thailand...
In the afternoon, 16 people, including Hmong and Karen translators and an English teacher, gathered…
“We’re meeting because we’re hearing a lot of questions and a lot of worry about the government closing down for awhile. We want to talk about it,” began Sister Stephanie Spandl, a social worker with the program and a member of the School Sisters of Notre Dame. A nonprofit had to explain what the government had not…
MORE can help, she said, providing free bread and other food on Fridays, clothes on Saturdays and advocacy help other days. She suggested people help each other, too, by forming babysitting coops, for instance, so they can continue going to work or school, that they use emergency food shelves if food stamp payments are unavailable…
Some small businesses such as those providing foreign-language translators or personal-care attendants might have to close temporarily, she explained. Enlist friends to help if possible, she advised.
“You’re not going to lose your housing right away” if you can’t pay rent, she said. Turn first to family or friends to see if they can lend you money, and if that doesn’t work, try talking to your landlord promising to pay as soon as you receive your housing assistance.
For medications, see if the pharmacy will issue next month’s prescription now. (MORE might be able to help with that, too, [MORE's executive director Cathy] Patterson said.)
If you’re sick, go to your doctor, Sandl advised. Most likely the doctor will care for you, trusting he or she will eventually receive state reimbursement, she said. “If the doctor says ‘no,’ go the E.R.”… Read more here
**UPDATE** — June 29, 2011 – MPR reports that judge orders “core” services to continue (food stamps and refugee cash assistance will remain available if MN state government shuts down).
**UPDATE** July 7, 2011 – Refugee advocates ask for resumption – during state government shutdown – of translation/interpretation services for new arrivals who do not speak English.
Posted in government, Karen, Minnesota | Tagged: government shutdown, Minnesota, MORE, Multicultural School for Empowerment, refugee, refugee resettlement, refugee resettlement agencies, refugee resettlement program, resettlement, School Sisters of Notre Dame | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Christopher Coen on June 25, 2011

The Penfield Post in upstate New York has an article today profiling Rochester’s Catholic Family Center and a local hospital that works with refugees.
Irondequoit, N.Y. — “Opposite” is the word Dim Sian Huai has for her life in Rochester for about the past two years.
Originally from Burma, in Southeast Asia, Dim obtained refugee status and lived in Malaysia before moving to Rochester with her brother and sister.
“The place (Rochester) was chosen for me,”…
…According to 2008 data, the latest for which data is available, 87 percent of refugees coming in to New York state were resettled upstate. Of that 87 percent, 16 percent of those refugees are settled in Rochester.
“I think the environment here (in Rochester) is easier, and housing and jobs are semi-decent,” [Jim] Sutton [a physician’s assistant and director of community medicine and the refugee health program for Rochester General] said. “Plus, Catholic Family Center is one of the better resettlement agencies in the country.”
He works with refugees primarily from a medical standpoint, and organized a conference on the topic earlier this year. The response to that two-day conference surprised even him. It drew 400 participants from 29 states.
“There are three traumas refugees go through,” Sutton said, pointing first to whatever happened in a refugee’s
native country, then becoming, in effect, “a person without a country” in a camp, then resettling in the U.S.
“We see a lot of symptoms of unhealed trauma,” Sutton said, “yet it’s also extremely rewarding to help someone who’s so vulnerable and wants to do the right thing … Even a little bit of help always gets a smile and a thank you.”
…Sutton works closely with people like Jim Morris, associate director of refugee services at Catholic Family Center.
The center has a three-month resettlement program, Morris said, during which they provide or arrange “core services” — like housing and education — as defined by the federal government.
The national network with whom the center works sends biographies of potential refugees who might settle in Rochester, Morris explained, and the center accepts about 99 percent of them.
…Most are resettled in the city of Rochester because they need to be close to public transportation and city services, Morris said, but added that he knows families that have relocated to Henrietta, Pittsford, Perinton, Brighton and beyond after their initial arrival.
…“There’s value in understanding other cultures and people,” Morris said, adding that refugees are also rejuvenating some whole blocks and neighborhoods in Rochester. “It’s a story of urban development… Read more here
A local volunteer reported in October that a neighborhood in Rochester where CFC was resettling refugees has the highest crime rate in all of New York state. Politicians in states losing population have long succeeded in pressuring the federal government into placing refugees in these areas (often extremely dangerous areas) and I never hear public or private partners in the resettlement program criticize this.
Also, I see that CFC says it takes 99 percent of refugees that the USCCB offers them, which differs from statements that other private resettlement agencies have made about their national affiliates forcing them to take refugee clients.
Posted in Catholic, Catholic Family Center (Rochester), cultural adjustment, dangerous neighborhoods, faith-based, health, language, mental health, population levels, using refugees as pawns to boost, Rochester, USCCB | Tagged: Brighton, Henrietta, human rights, Perinton, Pittsford, refugee, refugee resettlement, refugee resettlement agencies, refugee resettlement program, resettlement | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Christopher Coen on June 21, 2011

**UPDATE** — July 7, 2011
Media outlets are reporting that three young Nepali-Bhutanese men went missing ten days ago in North Spokane, Washington. The three were last seen playing soccer at a local park, going home to eat, and then heading out again. NWCN has the story:
SPOKANE, Wash. – Police need help finding three young men who went missing ten days ago.
They are Bhutanese refugees who came to Washington two years ago.
Family and friends say the men were at Mission Park in North Spokane playing soccer just before they went missing. They came home, had dinner, and then went out again. That’s the last time anyone saw them.
Family members filed a missing person’s report. Now loved ones and staff at World Relief are trying to get the word out about the mysterious disappearance… Read more here
Another article at KXLY-4 reports that two young men, Bhattarai and Dhital, are from Tukwila (in western Washington) and that Dhakal, a 17-year-old, is from Spokane.
…17-year-old Krishna Dhakal, a Lewis and Clark High School student, 28-year-old Dilli Ram Bhattarai and 21-year-old Krishna Dhital disappeared two weeks ago. They were last seen shortly after playing soccer at a park near Whittier Pool on June 11.
…When Dhakal didn’t show up for finals at Lewis and Clark two weeks ago, police and his mom knew something wasn’t right. Dhakal was last seen with his cousin Dilli Ram Bhattarai and his friend Krishna Dhital. Bhattarai and Dhital are both from Tukwila in western Washington. No one has seen them or been able to reach them by cellphone.
[family friend Anna] Demmert says the Bhutanese are a very trusting culture and she’s afraid that may have landed Dhakal, Bhattarai and Dhital in trouble… Read more here
On a video clip Dhakal’s mother says via an interperter that they tried calling the three but that their cellphones are “not working”.
If you have any information please call Crime Check 509-456-2233.
Posted in Nepali Bhutanese, safety, Spokane, World Relief | Tagged: bhutanese, Dilli Ram Bhattarai, Ditti Bhatatarai, Khrishan Dhakal, Khrishna Dhakal, Krishna Dhakal, Lewis and Clark High School, Mark Kadel, Mission Park, Nepali, Nepali-Bhutanese, refugee, refugee resettlement agencies, refugee resettlement program, resettlement, soccer, spokane, Tukwila, washington state, Whittier Pool, World Relief | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Christopher Coen on June 20, 2011

June 20th is World Refugee Day – a time for us to bring the plight of refugees into our society’s awareness. I think that at the center of the refugee experience is the issue of power, more specifically, the abuse of power.
To me power is the act of exerting one’s will over another. Everyday we find ourselves challenged on how to do this as individual people — which is the struggle we can have with personal morality – and ethics, a branch of philosophy that addresses questions about personal morality. One of the most obvious places that this comes into play is when an adult interacts with a child. Most of us instinctively know that it is our responsibility to protect children’s welfare, and this responsibility forces us to use power to ensure a child is safe. But the power differential between an adult and a child is in stark contrast. An adult may find themselves tempted to take certain liberties with a child that he or she would more rarely take with an adult — maybe a comment or criticism that is a bit too intrusive.
People don’t like to admit it but we are all very sensitive to power. As a social species nature has programmed us to seek order by determining each other’s power in relation to our own — do they have more power or less? Everything we do as a species, for good or for bad, requires actions that we regulate with power. Some of the starkest demonstrations of abuse of power is in the plight of refugees — the dictators, ethnic cleansing, and genocide these human beings flee from; their desperate attempts to survive; their resilience; the severe damage that others have people inflicted upon them.
But I think we shouldn’t let that blind us to all the other small and large abuses of power all around us everyday, and our own abuses of power in small and larger ways. To really honor the plight of refugees we must look at power, and especially how we use power against others, and how we take no action when others abuse their power. We must be the change we want to see in the world or the world will not change.
Posted in World Refugee Day | Tagged: human rights, power, refugee, refugee resettlement, refugee resettlement agencies, refugee resettlement program, resettlement, World Refugee Day | 1 Comment »
Posted by Christopher Coen on June 18, 2011

The ORR recently put out a message about the 2012 Matching Grant Program to refugee resettlement agencies. For the Matching Grant Program the ORR awards $2 in public funds for every $1 raised by the private resettlement contractor, up to a maximum of $2,200 in federal funds per capita (that is, per persons in the program, although not proportioned equally to all refugee clients).
Dear colleagues,
The Office of Refugee Resettlement is very pleased to announce the publication of the 2012 Matching Grant Program funding opportunity announcement.
The Voluntary Agencies Matching Grant Program is an alternative to public cash assistance designed to enable refugees, asylees, and other ORR eligible populations to become self-sufficient through employment within 120 to 180 days from date of arrival into the United States (U.S.) and/or date of eligibility for ORR services… Services provided under this cooperative agreement
include, but are not limited to, comprehensive case management, employment services, maintenance assistance, cash allowance, and administration.
…Participating agencies agree to match the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) grant with cash and in-kind contributions of goods and services from the community. Currently, ORR awards $2 for every $1 raised by the agency up to a maximum of $2,200 in federal funds per client. At least 20 percent of the non-federal share (the grantee’s match) must be met with cash or cash equivalent; the balance may be cash, in-kind services, or donated goods. Note that while Federal and match funds are calculated and awarded on a per capita or enrolled client basis, the actual spending of such funds is not per capita based. This is to allow Matching Grant Program service providers flexibility in providing individually tailored services (higher or lower than the per capita rate) necessary for the client to achieve self-sufficiency… [emphasis added]
Program related questions should be directed to Tom Giossi in the Office of Refugee Resettlement.
Thank
you,
ORR
(An online version is found on the ORR website.)
So, it looks like resettlement agencies are able to direct money to
individual refugee clients depending upon the individuals’ needs. The policy does therefore, however place a large amount of power over individual refugees in the hands of these small religious and/or non-profit private groups. This freedom can also be misused to reward some refugee clients and punish others, especially those that speak-up. It would be naive to think this cannot and does not happen. Refugee clients are often fearful of retaliation from authority figures – and they commonly misperceive these small, private government contractors as “authorities” – due to the negative and traumatic circumstances from which they have fled For that same reason, however, many refugee clients have learned the necessity of being courageous and speaking up for themselves when they see abuses.
My concern is the power this Matching Grant Program policy gives those agencies that have, or newly develop, a propensity to punish refugee clients who speak out. (I’ve seen it happen – this is not hypothetical.) To counter that negative and unintended consequence what we need here, at the very least, is unbiased and independent oversight – and that’s not what we have with the current cozy partnership between government oversight agencies and the private agencies they oversee. Not only is “partnership” the official policy, but most of the government monitors are former resettlement agency employees who went in search of government jobs – jobs that may be more demanding/ stimulating, but that also have much better benefits.
Therefore, who protects refugees from the real and possible abuses? Essentially no one, so far, except the outspoken and courageous community members and leaders we periodically see. I don’t think that’s enough though, and it certainly can never substitute for effective oversight.
Posted in employment services, employment/jobs for refugees, Matching Grant program, ORR, public/private partnership, retaliation, revolving door | Tagged: human rights, Match Grant, Matching grant, Office of Refugee Resettlement, ORR, refugee, refugee resettlement, refugee resettlement agencies, refugee resettlement program, resettlement, voluntary agencies | 5 Comments »
Posted by Christopher Coen on June 16, 2011

The ORR is giving the Heartland Alliance agency in Chicago a $250,000 grant to create a training and technical assistance center that will support US resettlement agencies that resettle LGBT refugees. A Windy City Times article has more information:
The Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR), a division of ACF, has awarded a $250,000 contract to the Heartland Alliance of Chicago to create this training and technical assistance center, according to a press release from the alliance…
…The focus of this initiative will be to provide:
—Resource and capacity development in key resettlement locations;
—Sensitivity training to network staff, including overview of key issue regarding newly arriving LGBT refugees;
—Technical assistance in service delivery; and
—Development of best practices and orientation materials for refugee service providers across the country.
“As many of these refugees left their homelands specifically because of persecution related to their LGBT status, it is particularly incumbent on us to provide a safe and welcoming environment,” [ACF Acting Assistant Secretary David A.] Hansell added.
“The current resettlement network has limited understanding of the LGBT community,” said ORR Director Eskinder Negash. “In addition, no information exists in the context of available resource materials specifically for LGBT refugees. The need for these services is critical to ensure their successful resettlement in the U.S… Read more here
It’s obvious that the State Department’s and ORR’s national network of private resettlement agencies are often anything but sensitive to LGBTI refugees, as seen in Houston last year. Regular incidents include fundamental violation of human rights, with government partners who then act to protect the agencies from any real accountability. The problem I have with this grant is that the Heartland Alliance agency in Chicago has somewhat of a checkered history itself when it comes to basic violations of refugee clients’ most basic needs and rights – as I saw for myself beginning in 2001.
Posted in Chicago, funding, Heartland Alliance, LGBT refugees, ORR | Tagged: bisexual, Chicago, gay, heartland alliance, human rights, LBBTI, lesbian, lgbt, Office of Refugee Resettlement, ORR, refugee, refugee resettlement, refugee resettlement agencies, refugee resettlement program, resettlement, training and technical assistance, transgendered | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Christopher Coen on June 15, 2011

12-passenger Chevrolet Express van
A charity has given Catholic Charities Fort Worth a grant for a new fleet of passenger vans according to an article in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. One of Catholic Charities’ first purchases is a 12-passenger Chevrolet Express van and the agency has already begun using it to transport refugee children.
FORT WORTH — With precious cargo inside, new vans donated to Catholic Charities Fort Worth won’t be traveling at high speeds.
But the spiffy rides are funded by folks who enjoy fast cars: the Texas chapter of Speedway Children’s Charities. A $146,431 grant from the group will pay for a fleet of four passenger vans for the nonprofit organization…
…The 2011 white vans, a 12-passenger Chevrolet Express and an eight-passenger Toyota Sienna, will springboard a new transportation program at Catholic Charities Fort Worth, which provides services for low-income families, seniors, refugees and immigrants in the 28-county diocese.
About 9,000 children are expected to ride in the vans this year to appointments, educational activities and fun outings. Their parents will get rides to parenting classes, support groups and other activities, said Heather Reynolds, chief executive officer and president of Catholic Charities Fort Worth…
…On Tuesday, children piled into the vans for a field trip to the Fort Worth Museum of Science and History and Omni Theater. The 16 youngsters, all refugees who have been resettled in Fort Worth, have limited English skills, but their gratitude was unmistakable… Read more here
It concerns me the see this article due to the passenger van rollovers in Arizona and Georgia in the past two years in which so many refugees died or were seriously injured. Officials reported that a tire blowout was the cause of the rollover in Georgia.
A lawyer, Certified Insurance Counselor and member of the USA Baseball Medical/Safety Advisory Committee named John M. Sadler claims that research indicates that 12-passenger vans don’t fare much better than 15-passenger vans in rollovers. In a 2008 article he advised sports organizations as soon as possible to get rid of all 12-passenger and 15-passenger vans, and replace them with 7-passenger mini vans or school buses, which have a much lower rollover propensity at higher occupant loads. He also recommends – among other things – that those groups that do use these larger vans always use a trained, experienced driver who understands and is familiar with the handling characteristics of a fully loaded van. They should also insist that all occupants wear safety belts for the entire duration of the trip, move passengers and cargo forward of the rear axle, and check tires before any trip to make sure that they are properly inflated and not excessively worn.
Finally, agencies should check the pressure of each tire when “cold” and set to the recommended inflation pressure as specified on the vehicle placard in the owner’s manual (the typical recommended pressure for the rear tires can also be higher than for the front tires). Agencies should always equip vans with a tire gauge.
I think that refugee agencies also should never fully load these large vans with adult passengers, and if they insist on using these vans they should only buy or use vans that have electronic stability control (ESC).
Posted in Burma/Myanmar, Catholic, Catholic Charities Fort Worth, children, Dallas/Fort Worth, safety, transportation | Tagged: 12 passenger van, accident, Burma/Myanmar, catholic charities, children, crash, Fort Worth, Heather Reynolds, human rights, refugee, refugee resettlement, refugee resettlement agencies, resettlement, roll-over, transportation, van rollover | 2 Comments »
Posted by Christopher Coen on June 14, 2011

I submitted a question for George Rupp, president and CEO of the IRC, for his interview today by the PRM’s Assistant Secretary Eric Schwartz.
“Why does the IRC partner with local churches in their attempts to convert Bhutanese refugees to Christianity, for example, IRC’s partnership with The Word at Southern Hills church in Abilene, Texas?”
Unfortunately this comment seems to have magically disappeared from the list of submitted questions (funny how that works). Yet, I base the question on a news article from Abilene that I linked to in January. Personally I think that these refugees’ Hindu and Buddhist beliefs are serving them just fine and I don’t understand why our government and its contractors, therefore we as a society, are partnering to give these new Americans a new religion, which they haven’t requested.
So then I submitted another question, which this time they actually posted:
“A 2007 State Department PRM monitoring report for the IRC office in Baltimore indicates that the IRC and another resettlement contractor frequently placed refugees into an East Baltimore apartment complex that had evidence of questionable maintenance and security standards (housing that is safe, sanitary, and in good repair is supposedly a State Department refugee contract requirement). Monitors also noted that the IRC had failed to give a three-member Meskhetian Turk refugee family a crib and other supplies for their infant son. I note, again, that these items are listed as “minimum” required items in the State Department contracts. Why does the IRC fail to meet so-called “minimum requirements” of their obligations to refugees in the public/private partnership?”
The State Department did not select this question for use in the interview — of course — yet this question was also based on a document – one of the State Department’s own monitoring reports – so it’s not like I just make this stuff up. Again the State Department doesn’t want to discuss the issue.
I think there’s an obvious problem here when our government feels free to filter out substantive questions that it may not feel comfortable with, or which may not convey the message it wishes to control, but isn’t the supposed intent of our constitutional democracy to allow public input? I think we need to be concerned when a part of our US Department of State feels free to disregard that fundamental principle.
Posted in State Department, PRM, Nepali Bhutanese, Meskhetian Turks (Ahiska
Turk), Christian, Eric P. Schwartz (former Asst Sec.), Assistant Secretary of the PRM, churches, neglect, housing, substandard, household items, missing or broken, public/private partnership, furnishings, lack of, openess and transparency in government, children, Abilene, Buddhist, Hindu, Baltimore | Tagged: Abilene, Assistant Secretary of Population Refugees and Migration, Baltimore, Buddhist, censorship, Christian, constitution democracy, Conversations with America, conversion, Eric Schwartz, George Rupp, Hindu, International Rescue Committee, IRC, Meskhetian Turk, monitoring report, Population Refugees and Migration, PRM, public/private partnership, refugee, refugee resettlement, refugee resettlement agencies, refugee resettlement program, resettlement, State Department, The Word at Southern Hills | 4 Comments »
Posted by Christopher Coen on June 13, 2011

The Roanoke Times has an article about the subject of refugee parents trying to deal with the system when their children are suffering from a disorder – in this case Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). ADHD is a problem with inattentiveness, over-activity, impulsivity, or a combination, affects about 3 – 5% of school aged children, and specialists diagnose it much more often in boys than in girls. Depression, lack of sleep, learning disabilities, tic disorders, and behavior problems may be confused with, or appear with, ADHD. Most children with ADHD also have at least one other developmental or behavioral problem, and may also have another psychiatric problem, such as depression or bipolar disorder.
In the case illuminated in Roanoke the system (county social services, county attorneys) compounds the problem via their inability or unwillingness to competently manage the cultural and language barriers that new Americans have, and the power that refugee children with behavioral health issues can have. (This is yet another reason that adults should not use minors as interpreters – not only can a minor manipulate the communication but, more importantly, acting as a go-between with adults often places undue stress on a minor). In this case no amount of warning and explanation to county social workers did the slightest good — officials simply blamed the messenger — a community volunteer — because her style/approach didn’t satisfy them.
Melva Belcher is a formidable school administrator, determined and unafraid to forge her own path. When low-performing schools get into trouble, she’s often the go-to taskmaster to whom Roanoke City Public Schools turn to shake things up.
As principal of Westside Elementary School, it’s what she did in 2006 when she first encountered the likes of 10-year-old Ibrahim Kromah, a troubled refugee from war-torn Liberia who came to the United States angry and determined to wreak havoc wherever he went, fighting at school, showing disrespect to his mother at home — and even stealing the money she’d put aside for rent.
Belcher put him on a rigid discipline plan, and she visited regularly with his mom, 44-year-old Makagbe Toure, with whom she became friends.
But Belcher has been stymied by what happened to the family once Ibrahim left her school. She’s found herself face to face with a system that even she can’t stare down.
Now 64 and a semiretired administrator on assignment, Belcher watched powerlessly as Ibrahim bounced from his home in the Indian Village public housing project to four different foster-care homes in the region before finally landing, in January, at Keystone Newport News Behavioral Health Center, a residential mental-health treatment center for teens…
…This is a story about the morass that immigrant families find themselves in when key facts aren’t just lost in translation; they’re also buried in bureaucracy…
…Most service providers are well-meaning, added Liberian-born Danielle Taana Smith, a Rochester Institute of Technology sociologist who studies refugee assimilation. “But they lack cultural understanding.”
What Taana Smith used to hear murmured occasionally, she now perceives as a steady drumbeat: “People are saying they were better off in the refugee camps because they may not have had much, but they had hope.
“Now, they’re realizing it’s easier to escape from a refugee camp than it is from an urban ghetto,” she said…
…the situation exploded in August 2009 when Toure thought she was signing paperwork to have Ibrahim placed at Sanctuary, the crisis intervention facility for youth.
Because interpreter services weren’t provided at that time, it wasn’t until later that she learned she had actually signed away her custodial rights, Toure said. She also didn’t realize that she’d been charged with abuse and neglect at the same time — until she was terminated from her school housekeeping job following a background check, she said.
“They said I hit him,” Toure said. “I didn’t hit him, but we always argue, and he always threatens to call his caseworker.”
The situation so angered Belcher, who had become like a mother to Toure — opening her mail and taking her to doctor appointments — that she hired lawyer Onzlee Ware to represent Toure. (The case is currently being reviewed by a regional social services administrator.)
Thus began the shuffling of the boy amid four different sets of foster parents, all of whom complained about the same disruptive behaviors that his mother had, according to documents provided by Belcher and Toure.
While cases involving legal action always require interpreters, Department of Social Services Director Jane Conlin said it’s not always clear during home visits when an interpreter is needed. As for immigrant parents communicating with social workers, she added: “I think it’s more difficult when parents may not speak English and where there may be some fear in general of the government… Read more here
But what about the basic responsibility that refugee resettlement
contractors and county social workers have to provide interpretation/translation? That probably would have made all the difference in the world in this case. (If it’s not “clear” to officials that an interpreter may be dispensed with, then isn’t it clear that they need an interpreter?) At the end of the day these public servants don’t care because its simply a nuisance to them, and they don’t suffer all the damages that result from this lack of accountability – only the immigrant parents and children do.
Note: 1) Social services working with the courts took away the six children of a Burundian refugee woman in Idaho, also apparently due to lack of interpretation, and bureacratic mistakes and misunderstandings.; 2) Combining poor social work and poor prosecution work with love of power has also driven people from their home countries – causing them to become refugees.
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