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Secondary migration putting fiscal pressure on schools in Lynn, MA

Posted by Christopher Coen on May 5, 2012

The mayor of Lynn, MA is putting out alerts about the fiscal pressure experienced by schools in her city, apparently due to refugee secondary migration. Secondary migration is refugees leaving the city they were initially settled in and, under their own volition, going elsewhere due to a whole number of reasons, e.g. to be near friends and relatives, to find a place that has more or higher paying jobs, to seek a less alien climate, to move to a place with a larger community of people from their ethnic group and/or group of national of origin, etc. The main problem here I think is that federal funds are insufficient to help schools impacted by refugee arrivals – the Office of Refugee Resettlement’s grant, known as the Refugee School Impact Program, doesn’t come close to meeting needs.

An article in The Daily News explains some basic details of the problem in Lynn, although it also shows that the mayor is taking a winding and confused course through government channels, even going to the UNHCR, and gets facts wrong about several of the federal agencies:

…[Mayor Judith Flanagan Kennedy's Chief of Staff, Jamie Cerulli] said after getting bounced from office to office she finally spoke to Barbara Day with the state department’s office of Refugee Resettlement Administration for Children and Families.

She said for Fiscal Year 2011 they approved 25 refugees to come to the Lynn area,” Cerulli said. “She also said in 2012 it looks like there is approval for 28 … but that’s such a small number. If they’re not coming from there then where are they coming from?”

Cerulli said Day noted that if immigrants already have family in the area they are more likely to gravitate to the same area. Day was not available Thursday for comment and calls to the U.S. State Department of Health and Human Services were not immediately returned.

Cerulli said she plans to keep digging at the federal and state level to try and determine if Lynn has been officially deemed a haven city while also trying to determine exactly what drives immigrants to Lynn.

Kennedy has always emphasized her administration has gone the extra step to celebrate the ethnic diversity and welcome immigrants to the city and she said she would never deny a child or its family services… Read more here

Posted in Boston, capacity, children, funding, language, Office of Admissions, ORR, school for refugee children, schools, secondary migration, refugee, UN (United Nations) | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Israeli Government Ramps Up Hatred Of African Refugees Fleeing Persecution

Posted by Christopher Coen on February 24, 2012

Over the past several weeks has came news that Israel will deport southern Sudanese refugees to South Sudan, claiming that their safety is now ensured by the South’s declaration of independence last summer — even though the fledgling country is far from safe or stable for these refugees (see Haaretz article). What sense this makes escapes me since the southern Sudanese are natural allies of Israel, having experienced large-scale murderous attacks by the Islamist government of Sudan. At the same time, Israel is also ramping up hatred of other African refugees feeling persecution. (Israel has re-branded these refugees as “infiltrators” and “a threat to the fabric of Jewish society” — refusing to accept 1500 people per month, mostly African Muslims, while importing workers for cheap labor from East Asia – primarily the Philippines and Thailand.) When will we hear US refugee agencies speak out against these human rights violations? An article in Aljazeera explains the situation:

The notion of a “Jewish and democratic state”, never a feasible reality, continues to unravel as its inherent racism is revealed in a new way. Any political discussion of refugees that are of the wrong ethnicity inevitably refers to African migration to Israel as an “existential threat”. Labelling these refugees as “threats” allows the state to criminalise and imprison them…

…State officials estimate that around 2,000 asylum seekers enter the country every month. Most of the men end up in Levinsky Park in southern Tel Aviv. At any time during the day or night, one can find young black African men sitting on the park’s benches, swings and concrete walls. In late January, a man who lived in the park died from exposure during the night.

The majority of the men who live in Levinsky Park are from Eritrea and Darfur…

…While community members and organisations have responded to the refugee-related crises developing in the country’s founding city by setting up an emergency shelter and serving warm dinners to a hungry crowd, these generous gestures are the exception in a state that fosters growing hostility to outsiders…

…”This is how the public becomes racist,” Yohannes Bayu, the director of African Refugee Development Centre (ARDC), tells me, explaining the government’s campaign against African asylum seekers, who are labelled as “labour infiltrators”…

…the media and the government has ramped up this hatred,” explains Bayu.

But Bayu adds that overt racism in Israeli society has become common, “People are attacked on the streets. People are not allowed to rent houses to African refugees.”…

…The desperate men – and some women – who leave their families and homelands behind in Africa escape torture, forced military conscription and murder. As confirmed by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), Eritrea and Sudan have been two of the top producers of refugees over the past two years. These states’ betrayals of their own citizens have rendered tens of thousands stateless.

Conventions and detentions

Israeli politicians’ claims that only a “drizzle” of the African immigrants are rightfully refugees is quickly belied by the fact that almost none of the men are deported. Of the approximately 17,000 asylum seekers who reached Israel in 2011 via Egypt, only 270 have been returned to Egypt. Israel is a party to the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees…

However, allowing asylum seekers to remain in the country without rights hardly fulfills the directions of the Convention, which was composed in 1951 after the world saw and acknowledged the dangers posed to stateless human beings.

Before reaching Israel’s borders, asylum seekers from Eritrea and Sudan must survive a harrowing journey across the Sinai. They routinely experience rape and enslavement, and are reportedly the targets of organ traffickers.

Whether jumping the fence or walking across the border into Israel, asylum seekers are immediately picked up by border police and taken to a detention centre where they are held for weeks or months. …immigration authorities will begin holding these men to the extent of [a] new law – three years – once [a] new detention centre is built…

…for now the scenario for these men follows a predictable pattern: They are released in less than three months and given a three to six-month visa and then bussed up to Levinsky Park in Tel Aviv, where they are left to fend for themselves… Read more here

Posted in abuse, Eritrean, Jewish, left-wing, NGO's (Non-governmental organizations), safety, Sudanese, UN (United Nations), xenophobia/nationalism/isolationism | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments »

Utica Uses Refugees To Boost Population Level

Posted by Christopher Coen on February 13, 2012

Its clear that political officials in various declining US regions have decided that our country’s humanitarian refugee resettlement program should be used in concert with these cities’ needs. A major Utica publication backs this assertion up with few questions asked. (I like the efficiency of killing two stones with one bird, but what about giving the refugees a say in the matter?)

Apparently the UNHCR has also used its own propaganda on refugees, via its Refugee publication, to make them think that Utica is some sort of paradise – christening it “The town that loves refugees” – even though the unemployment and poverty rates are high, and gangs vie for the loyalty of young refugees. A Utica refugee resettlement agency also sings it own praises as “a one-stop shop for services” (I’ve heard this issue from journalists in other cities who say that local resettlement agencies also put that issue front and center — seems diversionary. Why does it merit public discussion?)

On the other hand some Utica locals apparently believe dubious rumors that refugees take people’s jobs, are given free houses, and don’t pay taxes for seven years (that’s a new one). An editorial in The Utica Post-Standard shows the paper’s editorial board as apparently 100 percent behind the region’s use of refugees to increase the population:

Like many Rust Belt cities, Utica was declining in the 1980s and ’90s. A city that once numbered more than 100,000 citizens dropped perilously close to 50,000.

Then a remarkable thing happened: First a trickle, then a steady stream of refugees began arriving…They kept on coming, because they found a warm reception.

We foster conditions that make for a welcoming environment,” says Peter Vogelaar, executive director of the Mohawk Valley Resource Center…

…Vogelaar explained why the city has been an ideal refugee haven. Utica’s infrastructure accommodates the new arrivals…Then there’s the resettlement center itself — “a one-stop shop for services,” Vogelaar says.

An article in the U.N. publication “Refugee” calls Utica “The town that loves refugees.” And the 14,000 refugees who came over the past 30 years returned the favor. They bought houses — many of them vacant — fixed them up and began paying property taxes. They planted community gardens and started successful businesses. The city’s ethnic restaurants are winning wide acclaim…

…Resettlement has not been problem-free. Housing prices are rising faster than some would like. Gangs vie for the loyalty of young refugees. New immigrants keep the poverty rate high, and schools struggle with students who still need to learn English.

Some still cling to stereotypes, Vogelaar added. “That darn foreigner takes my job, is given a house, doesn’t pay taxes for seven years — it’s all false rumors,” he said. “They get labeled ‘problem people.’ The reality is, they have faced untold problems, yet they are the resilient ones. They came through it all to make new lives.”… Read more here

Posted in employment/jobs for refugees, Mohawk Valley Resource Center for Refugees, population levels, using refugees as pawns to boost, safety, UN (United Nations), UNHCR, Utica | Tagged: , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Relief partners’ ongoing glitzy gala events for Angelina Jolie

Posted by Christopher Coen on October 7, 2011

A showbiz blog at The Guardian updates us on the continuing black-tie dinners and glitzy ceremonies at which the resettlement and relief establishment continues to give awards to its preeminent celebrity luminary, Angelina Jolie. There are the luxury hotel ballrooms, the limousine fleets, the five-star banquets and the donning of floorlength-and-fabulous gowns. Church World Service, the International Rescue Committee and the UNHCR are some of the organizations that have gotten in on the act and, somewhat embarrassingly, all in the name of helping the world’s poorest.

Once more, dear friends, to a familiar furrow, as we must ask: when did philanthropy stop being its own reward? The inquiry is prompted this time by news that Angelina Jolie has been garlanded with yet another humanitarian award. According to the UN Refugee Agency’s own report on the matter, the agency “paid lavish tribute” to the Hollywood star on Monday night in “a slick ceremony”.

Of course, this not the first award that the UN has bestowed upon Angelina. They confected another one in 2005, giving her their first Global Humanitarian Action Award, which was presented at a glittering black-tie dinner at the Waldorf Astoria hotel in New York, attended by 700 diplomats and dignitaries.

Back in 2002, another glitzy New York ceremony had attended Angelina’s receipt of the inaugural Church World Service Immigration and Refugee Program Humanitarian Award…

…in 2007, she scooped another gong, this time from the UNHCR’s close partner, the International Rescue Committee. This was the Freedom Award, previously used to honour Winston Churchill and Aung San Suu Kyi, and which is given in recognition of an individual’s ability “to shape history”. There seems to have been some ceremony in – well, what do you know? – a swanky New York hotel.

One could go on. But what a strange business this is – this hiring of luxury hotel ballrooms, this renting of limousine fleets, this preparing of five-star banquets for invited bigwigs, this donning of floorlength-and-fabulous gowns. No doubt many of the providers contribute their services for free or at cost, but it seems to be a most idiosyncratic way of helping some of the world’s poorest people… Read more here

Posted in CWS, IRC, NYC, UN (United Nations) | Tagged: , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Taking a closer look at HIAS as it marks 130 years

Posted by Christopher Coen on February 3, 2011

Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society is celebrating its 130th anniversary, as outlined in a posting on the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) website. The article expounds on the agency’s virtues. But what do the State Department’s PRM monitoring reports from those once in 8-13 years pre-announced inspections show us about HIAS’ track record?

According to reports, government monitors found the HIAS affiliate Jewish Family Service of Seattle had not visited nearly half of their refugee clients at home, as is supposedly required. Government monitors found one refugee that had to sleep on the living-room floor, thus violating requirements that resettlement agencies give all refugees a bed to sleep on. The refugee also had a kidney stone and felt he was not receiving adequate medical care, as the agency had not always provided an interpreter and he was not able to understand whether he needed surgery.

At the HIAS affiliate in San Francisco government monitors found that management staff indicated in a questionnaire that each refugee received $275 from refugee funds upon arrival, when in fact each refugee had actually received only $250. In addition, the affiliate’s caseworkers were conducting home visits in only about 25% of cases. The monitors found a refugee family of five living in a cramped one-bedroom apartment.

The HIAS affiliate in Chicago only allowed Jewish refugees to enroll in a beneficial program that offeres early employment bonuses (Matching Grant). The affiliate’s resettlement coordinator was also unable to give early employment statistics for the non-Jewish refugee caseload, yet reported that Jewish refugee employment as 5% at 90 days, and 40% at 6 months — extremely poor rates. A refugee family’s aunt sponsored them and reported that she had to take a loan from the agency to pay for the services the family received, which was suddenly increased by $400 when the affiliate decided that costs were going to be higher than anticipated. Another refugee said his caseworker told him that the affiliate only assisted Jewish refugees with employment services.

The HIAS affiliate in New York City charged sponsoring refugee relatives $500 per refugee to aid with resettlement services. In addition, staff only conducted home visits to between 17-18% of refugees. One refugee couple said the affiliate had not offered them any furniture (basic items required by the contract), and another refugee family with 3 young children reported that their caseworker had never visited them at home. Although the family had arrived in the U.S. nearly eight months earlier the parents were still not working. A third refugee family reported that their caseworker had never visited them at home either, and that they had not received any furniture as well.

The HIAS affiliate in Rockville, Maryland has also charged sponsoring relatives inappropriately large charges for resettlement services provided to refugees — $2000 per “employable” refugee and $500 for each “unemployable” refugee.

Posted in beds, employment services, furnishings, lack of, HIAS, housing, overcrowding, Jewish, Jewish Family and Children's Services San Francisco, Jewish Family and Community Service Chicago, Jewish Family Service of Seattle, New York Association for New Americans (NYANA), over-charging refugee relative co-sponsors, UN (United Nations) | Tagged: , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

 
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