Friends of Refugees

A U.S. Refugee Resettlement Program Watchdog Group

Archive for the ‘Haitian’ Category

USCIS reminds eligible Haitians to file for TPS

Posted by Christopher Coen on August 16, 2011

The final day for TPS-Haiti beneficiaries to re-register is Aug. 22,
2011. TPS was originally designated for Haiti in January 2010 in
response to a catastrophic earthquake that devastated that country. The current 18-month extension of TPS for Haiti will remain in effect through Jan. 22, 2013. The following three groups are covered under the Haiti TPS extension and re-designation:

1) Individuals filing for the first time
2) Individuals with pending TPS application
3) Individuals re-registering for TPS (Individuals who were initially granted TPS for Haiti through July 22, 2011 and who plan to remain in the United States must re-register no later than Aug. 22, 2011)

Please see USCIS Update for more information.

Posted in Haitian, TPS (Temporary Protected Status), USCIS | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

US extends Temporary Protected Status to Haitians by 18-months, adds those who arrived after quake

Posted by Christopher Coen on May 22, 2011

The Boston Globe reports that the US federal government is giving an 18-month extension to Haitians who came to the US before the deadly earthquake and whom the government granted Temporary Protected Status (TPS). Further, a new policy will allow Haitians who fled that country after the earthquake to work and live in the United States through the beginning of 2013. Previously, only those who lived in the country before the earthquake had access to the TPS being extended under the new policy. Now, Haitians who arrived in the U.S. up to a year after the quake can use the status until Jan. 22, 2013.

Haitians who fled the earthquake-ravaged nation last year will be eligible to apply for special status that allows them to live and work legally in the United States for a fixed amount of time, US immigration officials announced today.

The move extending so-called temporary protected status to the Haitians marks a major shift for federal officials, who had resisted granting it to thousands of Haitians in part to discourage a life-threatening mass migration by sea.The announcement comes days after Haiti inaugurated a new president.

Under their new status, the Haitians who came after the quake will enjoy the protected status until Jan. 22, 2013. The government also gave the 18-month extension to Haitians who came to the US before the quake. It had been set to expire in July.

“Providing a temporary refuge for Haitian nationals who are currently in the United States and whose personal safety would be endangered by returning to Haiti is part of this administration’s continuing efforts to support Haiti’s recovery,” Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano said in a statement.

The estimated 10,000 people who had fled after the quake on visitor visas, which they overstayed because they had no jobs or homes to return to, ended up crowded into relatives’ homes or homeless and living in motels, as the Globe reported in January… Read more here

Posted in Dept of Homeland Security, Haitian, TPS (Temporary Protected Status), USCIS | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

What its like as a Haitian refugee in the U.S. one year after earthquake

Posted by Christopher Coen on January 12, 2011

The Boston Globe has an article about how Haitian refugees are fairing in the U.S. after one year.

ROCKTON — The young schoolteacher fled Haiti after the powerful earthquake, the day she spent four terrifying hours pinned under a car and a pile of rubble. In Massachusetts, she found medical care to heal her grotesquely swollen leg, counseling to quiet her nightmares, and hopeful messages from the US government that it would help her start over.

But today, the one year anniversary of the quake, she is homeless, with no documentation to work or drive, and living in a Brockton shelter with her husband and two daughters, aged 3 and 2 months. She is among a flood of Haitians silently adrift across the United States. Many fled the horrific disaster, using visitor visas to enter the United States and stay with friends or relatives, hoping to stay, at least temporarily, to work and rebuild.

In April, a top federal immigration official said Haitians who fled the earthquake could apply for deferred action, a rarely used immigration benefit that could allow them to stay and work for a fixed amount of time. But hundreds of applications are still unresolved nationwide, and advocates say that many Haitians are still unaware that the option exists.

Because they are not permitted to work, many are becoming burdens on their families or finding themselves homeless, according to Catholic Charities and other advocates. In Massachusetts, some are reluctant wards of the state, which pays for food stamps, apartment shelters, or hotel rooms for destitute families.

I just want to have legal status. I need to start over,’’ said the woman, who asked not to be identified because she has applied for deferred action and fears deportation. She spoke in a single room in the Westgate Hotel in Brockton, where her family lived for nearly two months before being moved yesterday to an emergency family shelter.

A spokesman for the immigration official, Alejandro Mayorkas, director of US Citizenship and Immigration Services, declined requests for an interview for this story. Matthew Chandler, spokesman for the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees the immigration agency, said federal officials are reviewing their policies regarding Haitians who fled the earthquake.

Many Haitians had hoped for another designation that would allow them to work, called temporary protected status. But the Obama administration did not extend that option to Haitians fleeing the quake’s devastation, partly to discourage a life-threatening mass migration by sea. Some advocates have pressed the government to give Haitians who fled the earthquake temporary protected status, as they did for Hondurans and Salvadorans who came to the United States after disasters in their countries.

It is unclear how many Haitians who fled the quake remain in limbo, but Catholic Charities officials said they know of at least 330 people in Boston and Brockton. The organization’s Miami offices estimated their numbers in the thousands nationwide… Read more here

Posted in Haitian | Tagged: , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Resettlement & Immigration Services of Atlanta (RRISA) caught cheating on their contracts, neglecting refugees

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: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

US extends Haitian TPS deadline to January 18, 2011

Posted by Christopher Coen on July 16, 2010

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) is giving Haitians who were in the U.S. as of January 21, 2010 a six month extension to file for TPS (Temporary Protected Status), here. TPS will allow Haitians the legal status to stay here and work legally for at least 18 months. Previously the deadline was July 20, 2010, but is now extended until January 18, 2011. Haitians who cannot afford the registration fees may apply for a fee waiver. The U.S. will not immediately deport Haitians who apply for TPS and receive a rejection determination, as the US is not deporting Haitians at this time. The U.S. will allow Haitians granted TPS to stay in the U.S. until July 22, 2011. The U.S. government will also decide whether or not to extend TPS for Haitians. The U.S. has extended TPS for Hondurans and Nicaraguans for the past 11 years, and for El Salvadorans for nine years.

Posted in Haitian, TPS (Temporary Protected Status), USCIS | Tagged: , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Haitian humanitarian paroles recovering in Atlanta, Miami, Durham, Houston, Portland, Ore. & Louisville

Posted by Christopher Coen on July 7, 2010

Haitian humanitarian paroles are slowly recovering from earthquake injuries in Atlanta, Miami, Durham, N.C. Houston, Portland, Ore., Louisville and other cities. An article in the Courier-Journal newspaper profiles two Haitians in Louisville, here.

Paralyzed from the waist down during the Jan. 12 earthquake that devastated Port-au-Prince, [Haitian Miguel Zamor] was resettled in Louisville three weeks ago following surgeries in Miami on his spine, which was crushed by a falling wall.

“We get a lot of help here, my biggest problem is the chair I’m in,” Zamor said through a Haitian Creole translator. Zamor still holds out hope to walk again and return to his family in Haiti.

The 26-year-old Zamor is among a handful of medically fragile Haitians and their family members who since February have been resettled in Louisville. Under the care of Kentucky Refugee Ministries, they are slowly recovering with temporary aid such as housing, food stamps and medical care.

…It hasn’t been easy for the Haitians to adjust to a strange city with few friends. Some are still traumatized from losing the use of limbs or family members. And most are acutely aware that their families are still sleeping under rickety shelters in the poor, quake-damaged nation.

“Some in our family are still not found,” said Zamor, who was cooking food in a Port-au-Prince apartment when the quake brought down his building. He lay buried for hours until his family came to dig him out. He said doctors gave him a 50 percent chance of walking again.

With an estimated 220,000 to 300,000 killed and roughly 1.5 million homeless from the quake, some of the most severely injured were evacuated by the U.S. military to Miami hospitals for treatment. Many remained there for weeks or months.

The most common injuries included amputations, burns, brain damage and spinal cord injuries.

Unable to undergo painstaking and expensive recoveries in quake-damaged Haiti, more than 111 were resettled by Church World Service to cities such as Atlanta, Miami, Durham, N.C. Houston, Portland, Ore. and Louisville. Only two of the 111 have been able to return to Haiti. Other agencies, including the Catholic Conference of Bishops, have resettled other Haitians.

Each was granted “humanitarian parole” from the U.S. Government — typically given to immigrants from countries where sudden conflict or disaster prevents them from returning to their homelands safely — which allows them to stay for at least one year and potentially reapply to stay longer.

…several Liberian refugees recently brought more than six bags of clothing for the Haitians after reading about their plights. And they presented Zamor with a $115 check to help with living expenses.

“We know how it is to face suffering from war and disasters,” said Jefferson Howe, one of the Liberians who came to the U.S. years ago.

Apparently the federal government is resettlement agencies refugee resettlement funds to care for these Haitians while they stay in the US. I suspect the USCIS (formerly known as the INS) will allow them to stay until their injuries heal and Haiti has recovered from February’s earthquake. The USCIS granted Haitians who applied for and received Temporary Protected Status (TPS) 18 months to stay, until July 11, 2011. That will likely be renewed until Haiti recovers. There are just two more weeks left to apply for TPS. Haitian nationals, who have continuously resided in the United States since Jan. 12, 2010 and who meet other TPS eligibility requirements, must file their applications for TPS no later than July 20, 2010.

*UPDATE — the deadline to apply for TPS has now been extended until January 18, 2011.

Final note: the State Department gave Kentucky Refugee Ministries, a CWS and EMM affiliate, generally high marks on their last inspection visit in 2007, here.

Posted in CWS, EMM, Haitian, Kentucky, Kentucky Refugee Ministries, Kentucky Refugee Ministries, Louisville, State Department, TPS (Temporary Protected Status) | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Haitians eligible for temporary protected status (TPS) urged to apply before July 20 deadline

Posted by Christopher Coen on April 18, 2010

*UPDATE — July 16, 2010

Alejandro Mayorkas, director of Washington-based US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) is urging refugee advocates to persuade Haitians who are eligible for temporary protected status to apply for it before the July 20 deadline (here).

Applications have been fewer than expected. As of this week, 45,680 Haitians nationwide had applied for temporary protected status, and 4,898 people, almost 11 percent, have been approved. From 70,000 to 100,000 people could be eligible for the status nationwide, he said.

…Money might also be an issue for many applicants eligible for protected status. Those ages 14 to 65 who wish to work must pay a total of $470. Low-income residents can apply for fee waivers.                                         

…“The approval rate of fee waiver requests — when people submit a basis for that request — is very, very, very high.’’

One of the Haitian families that we helped apply for TPS requested a fee waiver and the USCIS granted it. It did require, however, listing all income and expenses and providing copies of documents to prove it, e.g. tax returns, copies of all monthly bills and expenses, birth certificates including an English translation, etc. For some unknown reason the USCIS approved half the family (father and three children) for the fee waiver, and sent back the applications for the mother and one of the daughters, so we had to resubmit the forms with new copies of all the documents. It took hours. The mother and daughter were then also approved.

Posted in Haitian, TPS (Temporary Protected Status), USCIS | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

Refugee Protection Act of 2010, introduced by Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.).

Posted by Christopher Coen on March 16, 2010

Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) has introduced the The Refugee Protection Act of 2010 (see here).  The bill is co-sponsored by Senators Carl Levin (D-MI), Richard Durbin (D-IL), and Daniel Akaka (D-HI).

The measure would change existing asylum policies to ensure more people who need and deserve US protection can benefit from it. It would also make several discrete, yet long overdue improvements in the support provided to refugees newly arrived in the United States. Importantly, the bill would direct the United States government to apply one standard for all asylum seekers intercepted at sea. This would make uniform the treatment of Cubans, Chinese and Haitians attempting to enter America by boat.

Well, I guess this discreteness is somewhat undemocratic, but hopefully Congress intends for it to help legitimate asylees.

The measure would also make other changes in the way asylum seekers are treated. Since 1996, asylum-seekers have had to file an asylum claim within one year of arrival in the United States. This has led to bona fide asylum seekers being denied protection simply because of the deadline, no matter how compelling their asylum cases may be. These asylum seekers are then returned to their countries of origin where they face a real threat of persecution. The Refugee Protection Act would eliminate this one-year deadline.

Well, that makes sense –to allow these asylees to apply for their green cards (permanent resident status) earlier than one year after they have been here. But then why does the bill include a provision for refugee resettlement agencies to get more money each year based on, “inflation and the cost of living”. Isn’t the recent doubling of the State Department’s R&P (Resettlement and Placement) grant enough?

In addition, the bill would ensure that the State Department’s Reception & Placement Grant – the one-time, per-capita grant given to refugees upon arrival in the United States – is adjusted annually to keep up with inflation and the cost of living.

How do we know that the resettlement agencies will use increases directly for the refugees, rather than on salaries, etc? Audits by the State Department’s Office of Inspector General seem to be extremely rare, and resettlement agencies can use “in-kind” donations to refugees of all of the junk-for-Jesus stuff they receive as a type of R&P “direct service” to the refugees. They can then use the R&P grant for other things like salaries, blackberries, wireless internet, etc. (witness Susan Gibson-Wise and LFS in the Carolinas in Greensboro).

It seems that the resettlement agencies have become addicted to easy federal agency funding, and have decided to include sneaky funding increases in every refugee/asylee bill with the help of their allies in Congress. To the extant that we tolerate this, they will just continue these ploys. They must only be given government funding increases IF they agree to verifiable increased services to refugees and asylees, increased government oversight, and openess and transparency to the public.

Easy money is only good for refugee resettlement agencies, not for the refugees.

Posted in asylees, Congress, Haitian, R&P | Tagged: , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

 
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