Poverty, stress-related ailments, unemployment and struggle with the English language concern to Oakland’s Bhutanese refugees
Posted by Christopher Coen on October 14, 2012
Bhutanese refugees are struggling with poverty, stress-related ailments, unemployment and the English language in Oakland, California. The refugees lack many needed services in the East Bay area that could help them meet self-sufficiency, partly due to the poor economy and related state budget cuts. An article in the Oakland Tribune explains:
Five years after a few pioneering families began trickling into East Oakland and Alameda, a burgeoning Bhutanese exile community is happy to have left refugee camps but still struggling to adjust to Bay Area life, according to the first report to survey their well-being.
“The community is still trying to survive,” said Jiwan Subba, president of the Alameda-based Bhutanese Community in California, a year-old organization helping link the refugees with jobs, health services and fellowship…
…Subba’s group used the occasion to reveal some of the economic and social problems felt by the community of several hundred refugees, nearly all of whom have arrived in the past five years.
In a survey of 91 Bhutanese immigrants in Oakland and Alameda, about 68 percent had incomes below the federal poverty line, more than half reported stress-related ailments, 42 percent are unemployed and many say they struggle with the English language, which makes it harder for them to find good jobs… Read more here
This entry was posted on October 14, 2012 at 2:39 pm and is filed under economic self-sufficiency, employment/jobs for refugees, ESL & ELL, language, mental health, Nepali Bhutanese, Oakland. Tagged: bhutanese, budget cuts, east bay, nepalese, Oakland, poverty, refugees, resettlement, stress-related ailments, unemployment. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
