Archive for the ‘ESL & ELL’ Category
Posted by Christopher Coen on January 10, 2012

Representatives in New Hampshire’s state legislature this month introduced a bill to give cities the ability to declare a one-year moratorium on new refugees. An article at Yahoo News explains:
MANCHESTER, N.H.–With Mitt Romney’s strength in the polls in New Hampshire, the mayor of the state’s biggest city hopes that a resolution to what he calls “the refugee resettlement question” will soon be at hand…
…In July, the city’s aldermen took the unusual step of passing a bill requesting a two-year moratorium on new refugee resettlement… After interviewing city leaders and refugees, the State Department reduced the number of new refugees that would be settled in Manchester during this fiscal year–which began in October–from 300 to 200…
…Leaders in the local Bhutanese community are happy that the moratorium failed, but they remain wary of the mayor’s insistence that the city can’t handle more refugees. This month, representatives in the state legislature introduced a bill to give cities the ability to declare a one-year moratorium on new refugees, suggesting that the debate over their place in New Hampshire is far from over…
…”The moratorium that he is talking about has really created a lot of mental disturbances and tension to the communities who are already here,” Narad Adhikari, who moved to Manchester five months ago and is still looking for work, told Yahoo News…
The article also mentions that USCRI’s International Institute lumped all the refugees in one English class, ignoring skill levels (which has long proven counterproductive):
…many Bhutanese families in Manchester do not speak English, according to Acharya. The English classes provided by the International Institute–and paid for by the federal government–lump together refugees who have never had a day’s education with those who have spent years in a classroom, hampering the progress of both groups, he says.
The students Subedi works with sometimes act out in class because they receive less homework and lighter discipline than they did at the United Nations-run schools in the refugee camp.
“It’s easier here, so sometimes they try to take advantage of it,” Subedi said. Read more here
Posted in ESL & ELL, language, legislation, legislation, moratorium / restriction, Nepali Bhutanese, New Hampshire, State Department | Tagged: bhutanese, International Institute of New England, manchester, State Department, U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants | 2 Comments »
Posted by Christopher Coen on December 15, 2011

Mechanicsburg in Central Pennsylvania is another site of “secondary migration” – refugees moving away from their primary resettlement area, looking for better opportunities or wanting to join family or friends. Catholic Charities Immigration and Refugee Services in nearby Harrisburg also resettles refugees directly to the area. The area’s factory jobs are a good fit for those with limited English. The Somali Association of Central Pennsylvania works to help refugees become independent. An article in The Patriot-News explains:
To most, learning to write down a telephone or Social Security number wasn’t a big deal.
But to 67-year-old Abdiyo Osman, who doesn’t know English, the task is a milestone.
Displaced from Somalia three years ago because of a tribal war that’s been brewing there for 20 years, Osman has been in Mechanicsburg ever since.
Some might wonder why the refugee came to the midstate, a place the polar opposite of her native land. She came here for the Somali Association of Central Pennsylvania.
Established in 2008 in Hampden Twp., word of mouth spread spread quickly that Somalis had gathered there to start new lives in the United States. Once they arrive, the association helps them adjust to life much different than back home…
…Osman spent a short time in Kenya before coming to the states, but she never got an education — until she came here.
Three times a week, Osman meets with several other refugees and takes classes in a tiny room in a small building in the West Shore office park off the Carlisle Pike. It is there Osman has learns how to write and adapt to American Culture.
One week it’s a lesson about the U.S. medical system and health care. The next week it’s budgeting money and opening a bank account. “It’s important to be able to do those basic things,” Osman said.
The Somali Association of Central Pennsylvania also works with various hiring agencies to help find refugees work in factories. Since most can’t speak English yet, it’s work that’s easiest to find.
With a job and basic life skills, refugees take steps toward the association’s idea of success — independent living.
It’s a life defined by opportunity as much as challenge… Read more here
Posted in cultural adjustment, economic self-sufficiency, employment/jobs for refugees, ESL & ELL, Harrisburg-Mechanicsburg, language, secondary migration, refugee, Somali | Tagged: Catholic Charities Immigration and Refugee Services, factory, Hampden, Harrisburg, limited English, Mechanicsburg, refugees, resettlement, secondary migration, Somali Association of Central Pennsylvania | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Christopher Coen on November 28, 2011

Researchers at San Francisco State University and the Burma Refugee Family Network (BRFN) released a report that claims almost 60 percent of Oakland’s refugees from Burma/Myanmar are living in extreme poverty, with 63% being unemployed. Those of Karenni origin from Burma fair even worse: 81 percent are unemployed, and 90 percent are living in extreme poverty. The report concludes that refugees from Burma in Oakland are at risk of becoming a permanent, poverty-stricken underclass, and that the local resettlement program has not been successful. An article at EurekAlert has the story:
Refugees who have fled Burma to live in Oakland, Calif., are at risk of becoming a permanent, poverty-stricken underclass warns a new report released today by researchers at San Francisco State University and the Burma Refugee Family Network (BRFN). The report found that almost 60 percent of Oakland’s refugees from Burma are living in extreme poverty…
…”These recent refugees from Burma are facing dire circumstances,” said Russell Jeung, associate professor of Asian American Studies at San Francisco State University…
…Jeung and his students, together with BRFN and other community-based organizations, surveyed 194 refugees from Burma to assess the community’s needs. The researchers found that in addition to high poverty rates, these refugees face barriers to accessing employment, health care and government benefits caused by their lack of English. These barriers have been exacerbated by recent cuts in the provision of English as a Second Language (ESL) classes and a lack of appropriate interpretation services…
…The report found that among Oakland’s refugee population from Burma:
- 63 percent are unemployed. Those that are employed have sporadic, low-wage jobs.
- 57 percent live below the federal threshold for extreme poverty, earning less than $1,000 per month for an average household size of five. Most of the remainder live below the federal poverty line.
- 38 percent speak no English at all. Another 28 percent speak English poorly.
- 74 percent report that lack of English is their biggest barrier to accessing health care.
- 47 percent report that English classes are the most-needed service in their community…
…Now resettled in Oakland, refugees of Karenni origin are struggling to adapt to life in the United States: 81 percent are unemployed, 90 percent are living in extreme poverty and 90 percent have no high school education…
…”Our findings suggest that resettlement programs in Oakland are not yet successful,” Maung said. “We would like to see federal and local refugee government agencies and nonprofits working together with and supporting grassroots community organizations in order to help members of our community achieve self-sufficiency.”… Read more here
Refugees from Burma/Myanmar have also experienced muggings and robberies in Oakland, as have refugees from Bhutan/Nepal.
Posted in alienation-isolation, Burma/Myanmar, dangerous neighborhoods, economic self-sufficiency, employment/jobs for refugees, ESL & ELL, Karen, Karenni, language, language interpretation/translation, lack of, Oakland | Tagged: Burma, Burma Refugee Family Network, Cesar Chavez Institute, From Crisis to Community Development: Needs Assessments of Refugees from Burma, Myanmar, Oakland, poverty, refugees, resettlement, San Francisco State University | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Christopher Coen on November 20, 2011

A roundtable panel discussion In Austin addresses the issue of older refugees. Panelists included Zarni Tun (resettlement case manager with Refugee Services of Texas); Lorel Donaghey (employment specialist with Caritas of Austin); Casey Kasper (ESL teacher with Interfaith Action of Texas) and Rebecca Tulis (extended case manager with Refugee Services of Texas). The discussion is described at Austin Refugee Roundtable:
…Some of the problems faced by older refugees –identified as refugees over the age of 50- included:
- General fear of being a burden on family members.
- It is more difficult for them to learn English which makes it more difficult to pass the US citizenship test. This makes them not eligible to receive SSI/SSDI beyond 7 years.
- Employment difficulty since many jobs that would be a good fit (caring for others, childcare, sewing) require individuals to be fluent in English or able to work fast on big machines… Read more here
Posted in alienation-isolation, Austin, Caritas of Austin, elderly refugees, employment/jobs for refugees, ESL & ELL, language, mental health, Refugee Services of Texas, Refugee Services of Texas | Tagged: Austin, Caritas of Austin, elderly, ESL, Interfaith Action of Texas, panel discussion, Refugee Services of Texas, refugees, resettlement, Roundtable | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Christopher Coen on November 2, 2011

The wait for refugees in San Diego needing to take english as a
second language (ESL) classes has increased by nearly 14-times. The head of the US Department of HHS’s Office of Refugee Resettlement (that would be Eskinder Negash) claims he “was caught off guard by the size of the problem”, and did not offer any immediate solutions. Yet, the California state government has been in deep financial troubles for two years now. An article in Fronteras has more:
SAN DIEGO — On a recent Friday morning, students of Iraqi descent practiced phrases they might need for a job interview in the language lab at Cuyamaca College…
…English as a Second Language, or ESL, courses, are in high demand at Cuyamaca, which is located in San Diego’s East County.
“We had enough students on the wait list to double the program,” said Alicia Muñoz, Cuyamaca’s ESL coordinator. In fact, over the past two years, the wait list for ESL classes has increased by nearly 14-times.
Most of the demand comes from recently arrived Iraqi refugees. More than 13,000 Iraqis have relocated to San Diego County since 2005, making it one of the largest refugee communities in the country…
…But budget cuts – affecting community colleges across the state – have forced schools to cancel classes in many subjects, including ESL. At the same time, the demand for these classes has skyrocketed. And it’s not just community colleges that are feeling the strain.
County Supervisor Dianne Jacob has gotten an earful of concerns from elementary schools, hospitals and other public institutions in her district. They all say that they don’t have the funds to address refugee needs, especially on shrinking budgets.
“There have not been adequate resources available to serve this population,” Jacob said.
The supervisor recently hosted a meeting of refugee resettlement officials and service providers to discuss the problem…
…After the meeting, the head of the federal office of refugee resettlement admitted he was caught off guard by the size of the problem. He didn’t offer any immediate solutions, but conversations between Jacob’s office and service providers are ongoing… Read more here
A year-and-a-half ago we wrote to the ORR about a refugee who was unable to use medical health care in Sacramento – that too, explained a California state official, was related to budget problems. If the ORR had investigated the case – or even talked to anyone in California – wouldn’t they have discovered the budget problems by now, and the effects on refugees? How do they manage to be completely out of touch with the problems that refugees in San Diego (the largest resettlement site in the US) are experiencing?
Another issue we put in a complaint to the ORR about is the issue of discrimination in hiring by faith-based refugee resettlement agencies (World Relief and Catholic Charities). World Relief claimed they could not hire a Muslim former refugee in Washington state because “he might not feel comfortable while they prayed at staff meetings.” Yet, federal regulations prohibit worship on the public dime. The ORR claimed it was investigating, yet has stonewalled since we placed the complaint in April 2010. We wrote once again in April 2011 to find out what progress they were making, Mr. Negash’s Deputy Director, Ken Tota, did not even bother to respond.
Posted in Chaldean, discrimination in hiring, ESL & ELL, evangelical, funding, Iraqi, language, ORR, Sacramento, San Diego, World Relief | Tagged: English as a Second Language, Eskinder Negash, ESL, Iraqi, Ken Tota, Office of Refugee Resettlement, ORR, refugees, resettlement, SanDiego | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Christopher Coen on October 22, 2010
Lexington, Nebraska has become a site of refugee secondary migration (when refugees resettled in one place move on their own volition to another city or state.) Approximately 2,200 Somali refugees have relocated to this rural site to take jobs at Tyson Fresh Meats during the past 4-5 years. An article in the Lexington Clipper-Herald covers the problems these refugees face with the lack of services that address their language and cultural barriers.
Four or five years ago, the numbers of Somali residents in Lexington began to grow as work opportunities at Tyson Fresh Meats attracted resettled refugee victims with employment.
The Somali Community Center says nearly 2,200 Somali natives have become Lexingtonites, and are in dire need of language services in order to integrate and be a productive and safe part of the Lexington community...
…Lexington is full of “secondary migrants,” says Kimberly Thomas, Interim Director of Community Services at Lutheran Family Services of Nebraska, an agency involved in providing resettlement services and assistance in conjunction with the international relocation process…
…Thomas encourages all community members in Lexington to reach out to their new neighbors.
On the topic of traffic accidents, customary differences, and especially health and physical safety needs like medical service, and paying bills, Somalis are struggling…
…the language barrier is a very real problem.
This problem is especially challenging because no current state interpreter licensure exists in many fields…
…Medical interpretation assistance is one area in which the SCC board members express the most need., especially during after-hours emergency care.
While not enough adults have gained proficiency in English yet, there is a shortage of volunteer interpreters to help Somalis do things like pay bills or recognize junk mail, and most importantly interface with professionals on a variety of levels including law enforcement and at the hospital…
…Throughout several interviews, the idea of “Emergency ESL” emerged as a potential way community members could volunteer to help each other.
“It’s really going to take a community,” Thomas says, “It’s going to take local people embracing a neighbor and saying, ‘here, I’ll help you, I’ll teach you, because [that which is] outside of Lexington can’t do it for Lexington,” Lexington is going to have to get there.
“It’s going to take volunteer effort. Limited dollars are going to be involved, but it is rewarding work.
“And when people stop seeing them[selves] as outside [the problem] and not responsible, they start [understanding] that this is “our” community.”
Thomas suggested a mentor-mentee model where churches could get volunteers to sponsor a person or a family to help once or twice a week going through the mail, or helping with “Survival English.”… Read more here
Not mentioned in the article is that Nebraska is one of five sites chosen for a U.S. Department of Health & Human Services Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) funded Rural Secondary Migration Pilot Project study begun in early spring 2009 and conducted by the Spring Institute for Intercultural Learning. The study was supposed to “examine the impact of secondary migration on communities, the community response to secondary migration, available community resources and early intervention strategies for assisting refugees, and technical assistance to build social service capacity.” Other states participating in the assessment process include: Texas, North Dakota, Colorado and Kansas.
A delegation from the Spring Institute for Intercultural Learning visited Lexington in August 2009, yet to date there is no word from the Institute or the ORR about what they learned or what technical assistance they offered to build social service capacity. Certainly, the community and the refugee population is still struggling as ORR dawdles.
Posted in ESL & ELL, Lexington, Lutheran Family Services of Nebraska, meatpacking industry, Nebraska, ORR, refugee magnet city, secondary migration, refugee, Somali | Tagged: Lexington Nebraska, Lutheran Family Services of Nebraska, Office of Refugee Resettlement, ORR, refugee resettlement, refugee resettlement agencies, refugee resettlement program, refugees, Rural Secondary Migration Pilot Project, secondary migrants, secondary migration, refugee, Somali refuges, Spring Institute for Intercultural Learning, Tyson Fresh Meats | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Christopher Coen on September 25, 2010
The State Department’s Assistant Secretary of State for Population, Refugees, and Migration Eric P. Schwartz took a trip to Salt Lake City and Portland on September 7-8 ostensibly to meet with resettled refugees, state and local officials, and resettlement agency representatives. He reports his observations of the trip in a September 22nd letter posted on the State Department website.
I wanted to report to you on my September 7-8 visit to Salt Lake City and Portland, to meet with resettled refugees, state and local officials involved in refugee resettlement, resettlement agency representatives and others who are concerned and engaged in these issues in both communities. I was delighted to be accompanied for the Portland portion of my trip by U.S. Senator Jeff Merkley. In addition, Barbara Day of PRM’s Admissions staff joined me for both portions of the visit.
Both cities are great models of our public-private partnership, supported by volunteers who are deeply committed to the humanitarian mission of resettlement and by communities that strongly support the effort. They host Bhutanese, Iraqis, Burundians, Burmese, Congolese and many other refugee groups, and continually seek to enhance the support provided to new arrivals. It was gratifying to hear that the State Department’s doubling of the reception and placement grant – provided to support refugees for the first one to three months after their arrivals – has dramatically enhanced the ability of local agencies to provide critical initial support to refugees. here
So the resettlement contractors give great praise to Mr. Schwartz for doubling funding this year for refugees’ first 30-90 days (although when they talk to the press they only complain that they need more government funding) and Mr. Schwartz feels intense gratification. I guess I’m more interested to know if the resettlement agencies are now meeting minimum service requirements since the State Dept. has doubled their funding. Mr. Schwartz doesn’t seem to have looked into that.
He then takes a look at the “Salt Lake City innovation”, the State Dept’s experimental funding of local resettlement agencies for two years of case management for refugees (here and here). No discussion however about any qualitative measurements of what refugees have gained from extended case management, e.g. are employment outcomes increased, are refugees’ incomes increased, are refugees’ English language abilities increased, is out-migration (to other states) decreased, are more refugees learning to drive, owning cars, or finding better housing arrangements?
Case management: Supported by funding from the State of Utah, Salt Lake City has adopted a two-year, case-management approach, in which voluntary agency case workers formally sustain their intensive engagement with newly arrived refugees not for several months (as is generally the case in other states), but, rather, for two years….this system greatly enhances the ability of the refugee, over time, to access services effectively, and increases his or her overall sense of well-being… the Salt Lake City innovation seems like an important contribution that could serve as a model for others.
Then he discusses the problem of overseas cultural orientation. Refugees keep arriving in the U.S. reporting to have received all sorts of misinformation about American culture and the life they should expect to have once they get here, even though the State Department pays its private partner organizations IOM and the IRC to give the refugees quality cultural orientation lessons.
Overseas cultural orientation: Despite the State Department’s efforts to enhance our overseas cultural orientation programs for refugees who will be traveling to the United States, I continued to hear reports from refugees that the pre-departure process did not give them an adequate sense of –and preparation for— the challenges they would be confronting after arrival. PRM’s Admissions team is currently engaged in a critical review of our cultural orientation programs worldwide, which I expect will help us make significant improvements this coming year.
I’ve noticed that when I read about resettlement agencies blaming refugees’ misconceptions about American culture on the overseas orientation (as opposed to the orientation that the State Dept. requires resettlement agencies to do here once the refugees arrive) the agencies never mention the IOM or the IRC. I guess they don’t want the public to know that these “partner” agencies are obviously falling down on their responsibilities. Better instead to make it sound like some mysterious oversees group is misleading the refugees, or just providing poor orientation services. Shouldn’t it be our concern if the IOM and the IRC aren’t doing a good job? After all, we’re paying for it. I think we should measure their services by how well-informed refugees are once they arrive here, and not by how hard the agencies tried or some other subjective criteria. Also, why isn’t Mr. Schwartz taking a look at the problems with cultural orientation provided by resettlement agencies to refugees upon their arrival in the U.S. here, here, and here? It seems there are some severe problems in that phase as well.
Then Mr. Schwartz takes a look at English-language training for refugees.
English-language training for new arrivals: The most critical obstacle for successful integration of refugees may be lack of English language proficiency. Thus, it is essential that newly arriving refugees have access to the English language training that will enable them to enter the workforce and contribute to their local communities. In Salt Lake City, in Portland, and in the other cities I’ve visited over the past year, I heard repeatedly that even when English language programs were available, they could not be easily accessed by refugees compelled to find employment as quickly as possible. Some local communities have developed innovative English language training efforts linked to the workplace, but we at the federal level should consider ways to facilitate such innovations.
I think Mr. Schwartz got ahead of himself a bit by doubling resettlement agencies’ funding and only then looking at their services’ quality. Why this late analysis of English-language training? We’ve long known that these classes are often poor quality. Not only do refugees have a problem accessing them due to lack of time, transportation, and day care, but these classes are often taught by teachers who cannot speak the refugees’ languages (imagine trying to learn Chinese from an instructor who can’t explain anything to you in English). We also regularly hear from refugees who already have some English ability who say that agencies place them in classes that are too easy for them. We’ve heard these same complaints repeated by refugees for nine years now and the State Department has never responded to these complaints when we’ve brought them to their attention.
In the weeks and months ahead, we will pursue action in these and other areas, and, as always, we at PRM would very much welcome your observations and perspectives.
Of course that’s easily to say, but then why hasn’t the State Department responded to our many letters documenting the poor services that refugees have received in the U.S. from the private refugee resettlement agencies? I challenge Mr. Schwartz to act on his words and show us his welcoming of our observations by digging all our letters out of his files and for once responding to them in a substantive way.
Posted in "Salt Lake City innovation", Assistant Secretary of the PRM, community/cultural orientation, cultural adjustment, cultural orientation, pre-departure, Eric P. Schwartz (former Asst Sec.), ESL & ELL, funding, IOM, IRC, Oregon, PRM, public/private partnership, R&P, Salt Lake City, State Department, Utah | Tagged: "Salt Lake City innovation", Assistant Secretary of State for Population Refugees and Migration, Barbara Day, doubling of the reception and placement grant, English-language training, Eric P. Schwartz (former Asst Sec.), Eric Schwartz, ESL, International Organization for Migration, International Rescue Committee, IOM, IRC, Overseas cultural orientation, Portland, pre-departure cultural orientation, PRM, refugee case-management, refugee resettlement, refugee resettlement agencies, refugee resettlement program, refugees, resettlement, Salt Lake City, State Department | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Christopher Coen on September 1, 2010
A college student in Vernal, UT, in a physician’s assistant program who will be doing clinical rotations studying refugee populations, recently wrote an article for the Salt Lake Tribune listing ideas for making Utah a more friendly place for resettled refugees.
She writes that refugees need many more trained interpreters and English-as-a-Second-Language classes, and that the state should remove obstacles for refugees to get driver licenses to increase their job prospects. She also advocates giving refugees the opportunity to give feedback about the refugee resettlement process and how it might be improved. Finally, she suggests educating the public about refugees.
…According to the Utah Department of Refugee Services, Utah has accepted 25,000 [refugees] since it started taking refugees after the Vietnam War.
…Utah’s present system has many gaps that need filling to improve the transition for these individuals.
Finding employment for refugees in Utah has been difficult. Many have skill sets that could be useful in the local economy but face significant language barriers, limiting placement opportunities.
Many more trained interpreters and English-as-a-Second-Language classes are needed to accommodate our refugee community.
New driver license laws make it very hard for refugees to acquire a license. The test is now offered only in English, and interpreters are not provided to help the test taker understand the questions. Without access to a driver license, many refugees are not able to get to and from work or bring home enough groceries for their families.
One problem is that many people don’t know we have refugee populations in Utah. We need to inform our communities about which populations are here and provide an opportunity to learn more about their cultures.
Empowerment is another issue that needs to be addressed. Many refugees are moved along the resettlement process, which resembles a fine-tuned machine. But they are not given the opportunity to give feedback about the process and how it might be improved. Communication between service providers and refugees also needs to be more confluent. here
Posted in ESL & ELL, transportation, Utah | Tagged: English as a Second Language, ESL, refugee resettlement, refugee resettlement agencies, refugee resettlement program, refugees, resettlement, Utah | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Christopher Coen on August 11, 2010
Refugee resettlement services at Resettlement and Immigration Services of Atlanta (RRISA), a joint site of Church World Service (CWS) and Episcopal Migration Ministries (EMM), is the focus of a recent article by a college student who did an internship at the organization, here. While having a good heart and trying her best to help the refugees the young woman also has obviously good critical thinking skills, and notices what works and what doesn’t work well in refugee resettlement.
For example, although she had never taught English before, RRISA assigned her the task of teaching English to Haitians.
One of my major tasks at RRISA was taking over the adult Haitian Medical Evacuees’ English classes. RRISA was the only resettlement agency in Atlanta assigned Haitian clients. I had never taught English before, and to make matters worse, I don’t know a word of Creole or French. One of the Haitians was fluent in Spanish, and when the barrier of communication was too great, I would translate into Spanish, and she would translate into Creole for the rest of the class.
This is one of the two most common complaints we hear from refugees – trying to learn English from people who do not speak their language. (Imagine sitting in a classroom and trying to learn Japanese from a someone who speaks no English at all.) The other most common complaint we hear is refugees who speak some English being placed in classes for beginners that are too easy for them and a waste of their time.
The intern also discusses RRISA caseworkers not even noticing when refugees’ Medicaid ran out, and not assisting refugee clients with serious health matters, even though these have a major impact on self-sufficiency.
Besides the Haitians, there are many refugees that come into the U.S. with chronic illnesses. Because RRISA’s goal is to encourage refugee self-sufficiency, case managers often do not address or have knowledge of the steps needed to ensure a client’s long-term medical care. Refugees are eligible for eight months of Medicaid upon arrival into the U.S. After that time, most are working and ineligible for public health benefits under current policy. For clients not receiving health benefits through employment, or needing procedures that Medicaid does not cover, Atlanta’s Grady Health System is a supposedly viable option for patients in need of specialist care. In my time at RRISA, I was assigned several health cases and acted as an advocate for clients.
Grady was a major source of frustration for my clients and me throughout the summer. Imagine waiting eleven hours in a Grady satellite clinic as a walk-in because your Medicaid ran out. Your case worker didn’t notice, and you have no more medication for your Hepatitis B. You wait, only to have the doctor see you for five minutes. Because you can’t speak English to him, he fails to read your file, which states that you still need treatment for your communicable disease. And to top it all off, you can’t work because of the illness.
I looked up the State Department monitoring report for RRISA and it is just unbelievable. Whereas some reports end with just 3-4 recommendations/criticisms of a resettlement agency, this report has 17.
Among the State Department’s findings: culturally appropriate ready-to-eat food was not provided to refugees upon arrival, staff retention was poor, financial records documenting expenditures for refugees were unclear and often inaccurate, in family reunion cases the agency showed a reliance on refugees’ relatives to give basic resettlement services, and RRISA acknowledged that their relations with the State Refugee Coordinator’s office was strained.
When the State Department inspectors requested to visit four refugees cases, RRISA notified them that all had out-migrated from Atlanta. (This often indicates poor services. Refugees will flee to new locations when their basic needs are not met.) The inspectors then requested to visit four other refugee families. The inspectors noted that RRISA delivered basic furnishings to three of the four refugees families, dressers and lamps, only the day before the State Department inspection (RRISA’s executive director acknowledged that it can take months for them to give refugee clients basic furnishings). All four of the refugees’ apartments also had insect infestations. A Somali refugee said that her young son had been repeatedly ill due to either insecticide inhalation or ingesting insects. The apartment RRISA placed her in was substandard – a non-working smoke alarm, a toilet seat broken in half, non-functioning appliances (dishwasher, freezer section of the refrigerator, and two stove burners), peeling paint, water leaking in from the door leading to the patio, and an inadequate seal on the from door (see Operational Guidance for minimum standards of services for refugees). She said that both RRISA and the apartment maintenance staff had been unresponsive to her complaints.
The Somali woman as well as an Iraqi refugee woman were both unemployed. Both claimed that RRISA had pressured them to find jobs immediately without regard to their circumstances (child care in the Somali case; home health care for the Iraqi woman’s ill elderly mother). The Somali refugee woman was unable to take English classes since she lacked childcare. Both women also said that they had never used public transportation nor had anyone at RRISA showed they how to use it. Another refugee family said that RRISA did not give them any baby food for their infant upon their arrival.
The State Department also found that RRISA had been improperly charging refugees for moving vans, apparently for delivering furniture to their apartments, from the State Department money intended for the refugees, and not charging it from the money the State Department pays for the agency’s overhead. One case had an outstanding balance due to the refugee at nearly 180 days after the refugee’s arrival. RRISA was also regularly stretching State Department funds for refugees beyond the 90 day maximum time limit (resettlement agencies must give refugees any remaining balance of their funds at the end of the 90 day State Department contract period).
There are many more deficiencies noted. Read the report, here.
Posted in Atlanta, childcare, Christian, CWS, EMM, employment services, employment/jobs for refugees, Episcopal, ESL & ELL, faith-based, food, furnishings, lack of, Georgia, Haitian, health, household items, missing or broken, housing, housing, substandard, Iraqi, Kenyen, Meskhetian Turks (Ahiska
Turk), Operational Guidance, RRISA, RRISA, secondary migration, refugee, Somali, State Department | Tagged: Atlanta, Church World Service, English as a Second Language, Episcopal Migration Ministries, ESL, Haitian Refugees, humanitarian paroles, Iraqi refugees, Medicaid, Operational Guidance To Resettlement Agencies, Refugee Medical Assistance, refugee resettlement, refugee resettlement program, refugee self-sufficiency, refugees, resettlement, Resettlement and Immigration Services of Atlanta, RMA, RRISA, Somali refugees, State Department | 2 Comments »
Posted by Christopher Coen on July 22, 2010
USCCB affiliate Catholic Charities Indianapolis is yet another resettlement agency that has been out of compliance with their State Department refugee services contract. In other words the public pays for them to give certain minimum services and material items to the refugees, via a government contract, and then they don’t abide by that contract. The consequences? None. The State Department’s Admissions Office merely noted some of their failures and asked them to do better. After all, they are not considered merely contractors, but exalted “partners” — with rights. Rights that apparently include violating basic terms of public contracts if they want to. Catholic Charities Indianapolis is one of the agencies that recently requested yet more government money for their refugee services, here.
The most recent State Department monitoring report for this agency (April 2008) indicates that Catholic Charities Indianapolis failed to properly document services, failed to refer refugees to English classes, failed to give refugees community and cultural orientation, failed to give refugees required pocket-money, and failed to show proof that they gave refugees their share of State Department R&P (Resettlement & Placement) money, here. Refugee case files also contained names of unrelated people (privacy violation), and Catholic Charities Indianapolis did not have any structured training program for its employees, as required.
Catholic Charities Indianapolis for the most part resettles Burmese refugees who have ties to friends and family (often distant relatives) in Indiana. The resettlement program refers to these friends and family as “anchors”, and resettlement agencies often talk the anchors into giving the arriving refugees the minimum-required services and material items that the State Department requires via the refugee contracts. As of February 2008, however, USCCB (US Catholic Conference of Bishops)directed Catholic Charities Indianapolis to treat all their refugee clients as “free case” refugees (refugees with no established ties to someone in the US). In fiscal year 2007 Catholic Charities Indianapolis resettled 393 refugees.
State Department monitors visited four refugees families – a Somali family of eight, and three Burmese families, one with seven members, one with four, and one single man. It immediately became clear that Catholic Charities Indianapolis had not given the refugees even the minimum-required services, which are fairly minimal to start with.
None of the adults were enrolled in ESL (English as a Second Language). Two families said they did not get any community/cultural orientation. The Somali family said they had electric bills of between $500 and $700 per month and did not understand the reason for this (apparently Catholic Charities Indianapolis was not monitoring the family’s situation). One of the Burmese families said they did not have enough clothing for the husband for work, or for the children for school. Also, they were unable to close their sliding door completely and cold air was coming into the apartment (in April). The couple was also very concerned about having enough income to pay rent and utility bills.
The adults in the second Burmese refugee family that monitors visited said they were also concerned about paying the rent, and neither of them was working. The husband said that Catholic Charities Indianapolis did not do anything to help him find a job, and although he did not speak English, he said that no one from Catholic Charities Indianapolis told him where to take ESL classes. He said he didn’t even know how to take the bus.
The third Burmese refugee home visit was to the single man. Although he had arrived five month earlier he said that Catholic Charities Indianapolis did not give him any of his R&P money ($425 at that time) until the day before the State Department monitors visited! He said Catholic Charities Indianapolis didn’t even give him any pocket-money (the refugee contract supposedly requires this). He also said that they didn’t give him any orientation. He had no idea about 911 emergency procedures, and had no idea how to bring his wife and children to the US.
Of the 11 other case files that monitors inspected, four lacked refugee client signatures indicating receipt of R&P money (in other words there was no proof to show the refugees ever received the money at all). Seven files contained names and personal information of unrelated persons. Pocket money was not given to any of the refugees. In addition, case files often lacked signatures and dates, all contact with refugees was not recorded, and there was no distinction between money spent for the State Department R&P services and money spent for HHS’ Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) refugee services. Therefore, there was no way to account for the R&P money.
Catholic Charities Indianapolis is one of the resettlement agencies that geared up for larger numbers of arriving refugees this year, here.
Posted in State Department, ORR, USCCB, R&P, Burma/Myanmar, Somali, Indiana, reform, faith-based, funding, employment services, Catholic, transportation, community/cultural orientation, public/private partnership, pocket-money, immigration services, clothes, ESL & ELL, employment/jobs for refugees, late health screenings, Indianapolis | Tagged: Burma/Myanmar, Catholic Charities Indianapolis, ESL, Indiana, Indianapolis, pocket-money, R&P, refugees, resettlement, Resettlement & Placement, Somali, State Department, us catholic conference of bishops, USCCB | Leave a Comment »