Friends of Refugees

A U.S. Refugee Resettlement Program Watchdog Group

Archive for the ‘Oregon’ Category

Resettlement and Isolation

Posted by Christopher Coen on March 27, 2012

A single mother of a refugee family from the Central African Republic finds herself alone and isolated (a condition correlated with refugee suicides) five months after resettlement to Portland via Lutheran Community Services Northwest. Interviewed about six weeks after her arrival, she only knew how to get to the grocery store and to an organization which offers employment training and referrals, though her resettlement agency was required to give her community orientation. The family’s apartment is sparsely furnished, with not enough heat to stay warm and little light (this, though the State Department’s Operational Guidance contract document supposedly requires resettlement contractors to provide refugees with one lamp per room unless installed lighting is present). An article in the Portland Tribune describes the refugee family’s initial resettlement to Portland:

Monique Detoloum…[a] new Portland resident has found peace for herself and her four children, after surviving a reign of terror in the Central African Republic and six years in limbo in neighboring Cameroon…

…Monique and her children arrived here in late October, settling in East Portland. They are among the 944 refugees from more than a dozen nations who resettled in Oregon last year, mostly in Portland. Nearly 60,000 refugees from around the world have landed here since 1975. That’s an average of 135 newcomers a month, a steady stream of foreigners who are gradually expanding the Portland area’s ethnic mix and forever changing its complexion…

…Somewhat arbitrarily, since Monique had no family or connections here, she was assigned to Portland, aided by Lutheran Community Services Northwest.

Agency staff picked up Monique’s family at the airport, found her housing in an apartment on Southeast Division Street near 126th Avenue, helped enroll her children into David Douglas schools, arranged medical screenings and financial support.

Within her first week in town, Monique was referred to East Portland’s Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization [IRCO], which offers employment training and referrals, among other services…

…Interviewed about six weeks after her arrival, Monique knew how to get to IRCO and the Winco grocery store on Northeast 122nd Avenue, but hadn’t ventured further on her own. She was too flustered to think about going downtown, feeling pretty helpless without any English skills…

…Now, after five months, here she is still having trouble adjusting to cold weather. She just experienced her first snow, and says she doesn’t like it.

The family’s two-bedroom, one-bath apartment is sparsely furnished, with little light and not enough heat to stay warm…

…Monique has found a Baptist Church she wants to attend. But she says she is feeling isolated here, with no friends to talk to, only her children…

…Refugees rarely go back to their home country, Tauch says, but they do move around once they’re here, especially to find work. In January, a recruiter came to town and offered seasonal jobs to 52 Portland-area refugees at a Kodiak, Alaska, cannery, Tauch says. Last year, a Nebraska employer offered 100 permanent jobs to local refugees… Read more here

Posted in alienation-isolation, Central African Republic, furnishings, lack of, housing, language, Lutheran Community Services Northwest, mental health, Operational Guidance, Portland | Tagged: , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Cuban refugee dies at Oregon state psychiatric facility after 15 years of alleged “inhumane treatment”

Posted by Christopher Coen on February 11, 2011

The Statesman Journal has an article about a Cuban refugee who died in 2009 from neglect at a Oregon state psychiatric hospital. He arrived from Cuba at age 12 and was institutionalized after his doctor gave him the wrong dose of medication and released him prematurely, after which he had a psychotic episode and injured his mother. An investigation of the psychiatric clinic where he spent 15 years concluded that the facility “failed to properly treat his chronic medical conditions, failed to prepare a meaningful treatment plan for him, failed to update his medical chart and failed to return calls from his family in the last weeks of his life.” Ironically, Oregon State Hospital was the site of the 1975 filming of One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.

A wrongful death lawsuit alleges that an Oregon State Hospital patient who died at the Salem psychiatric facility in 2009 was subjected to 15 years of “inhumane treatment” there.

The federal lawsuit, filed on behalf of the estate of Moises Perez, compares Perez’s flawed care at the state hospital to the tale of mental hospital cruelty told in “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest,” the novel written by the late Oregon author Ken Kesey, which spawned a 1975 movie filmed at OSH.

“While the novel is fiction, the frightening reality is that the OSH is worse than Ken Kesey ever imagined,” the lawsuit says. “The hospital ignores and oppresses its patients on a daily basis. This oppression was embodied in the life and death of Moises Perez.”…

…According to the lawsuit, Perez “suffered on a daily basis” because of deficient care provided him at Oregon’s main mental hospital.

“Over the course of his 15 years in the OSH, Mr. Perez developed a number of serious health conditions,” the suit says. “At the time of his death, he was suffering several ailments, including but not limited to congestive heart failure, hypertension, diabetes and obesity. The development of these ailments was directly related to the constitutionally inadequate care and treatment Mr. Perez received …”…

…The lawsuit asserts that Perez received flawed mental health care in Oregon prior to his commitment to the state hospital.

Perez was 12 when he and his family escaped Communist Cuba in a boat filled with refugees, hoping for a life of freedom in the United States, the suit says.

As a teenager living in Woodburn, he was diagnosed with schizophrenia and the family turned to Marion County for help.

“With medication, they were told, Moises could live a relatively normal life,” the suit says. “They were so grateful for the help that their adopted country and state were giving to Moises.”

But Perez had a psychotic episode after a psychiatrist working for the county gave him the wrong dose of medicine and released him prematurely from a stint of inpatient hospital care, according to the suit.

“Due to his psychotic episode, Moises attacked his mother at their home, almost killing her, and severing a number of her fingers,” it says.

Found guilty except for insanity of attempted murder, Perez was placed in the state hospital.

“For the next 15 years, Moises was subjected to inhumane treatment at the OSH on a continuous basis,” the suit says. “He suffered on a daily basis. Ultimately, Moises died at the age of 42 because of his treatment at OSH.”…

…OIT investigators reported that Perez’s caregivers on Ward 50F failed to properly treat his chronic medical conditions, failed to prepare a meaningful treatment plan for him, failed to update his medical chart and failed to return calls from his family in the last weeks of his life… Read more here

Posted in Cuban, mental health, Oregon | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Bhutanese refugees in Oregon – cheated out of wages, some suicidal, yet still with hope and gratitude

Posted by Christopher Coen on December 24, 2010

The author of this Op-ed, Som N. Subedi, about Bhutanese refugees in Oregon sent us the link to the article. Read the OregonLive article for the full story. Below is an excerpt. 

I am a refugee from Bhutan. In the early days after my arrival to Portland, I would call friends and family in the refugee camps in Nepal, telling them the United States is close to heaven and they should try to come as soon as possible.

Now, nearly two years later, I see those newly arrived struggling; they question me about my “heaven.” Some say they would return, if it were possible, to their dark refugee camps rather than face their desperate situations in Oregon. I have come to feel that “the
American dream” is dangerous, because people come here with great expectations. I have stopped calling the camps in Nepal…

…The Bhutanese, the newest refugee community in Oregon, began arriving in early 2008. More than 33,000 now live in the United States — including more than 400 in the Portland metro area — as part of a State Department resettlement program. Another 30,000 are expected to arrive in the U.S. over the next three years — destined to face an economic crisis that adds to the challenges of their integration…

…When the United States opened its door to refugees from Bhutan, we jumped at the opportunity. But a three-day orientation overseas did not prepare us for life in America. We were told how to use a toilet or fasten a seatbelt, but nothing about how to deal with a lack of employment opportunities. Bhutanese refugees suffer intense culture shock when they arrive in the U.S. Separation from family and from everything familiar is overwhelming, as is the trauma of war and refugee camp life…

For some, the pressure is too great. Suicide among refugees is a real and growing concern in the United States. Already, eight Bhutanese refugees have hung themselves in four states since 2009. Suicide by a refugee has an added poignancy: Refugees believe they are coming to start a new life, not to end it.

Although no suicide has occurred in Oregon, I have met several Bhutanese refugees here who have contemplated suicide due to their dire financial circumstances. Thankfully I was able to connect them to resources and counseling and tried to give them hope for the future.

Even refugees who do find work must deal with discrimination and injustice. Many are hired for low pay, asked to work extra hours, and some are not paid for the work. They are vulnerable, because they are not fluent in English and do not know their rights. Earlier this year, several Bhutanese men working at a downtown Portland restaurant were cheated of their paychecks. It took two months for community leaders to persuade the restaurant owners to pay them.

Bhutanese refugees are very thankful to the U.S. government and to Oregonians for welcoming them to this community and providing hope and an opportunity for a new life. But we need more support to thrive here. Families are simply not prepared for the complexity of American life. We need longer individual and group orientations, more vocational training, and more civic engagement. Portland resettlement agencies need volunteers and mentors to help refugees with school registration, transportation, and orientation in Oregon and in American culture… Read more here

Posted in Nepali Bhutanese, Oregon, suicide | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Did the FBI successfully thwart its own terrorist plot?

Posted by Christopher Coen on November 28, 2010

The media is flooding the nation with reports about the so-called 19-year-old Somali terrorist in Portland who was planning on blowing up a Christmas tree lighting event. He came to the U.S. at age 3 as a refugee. I’ve been thinking about this story and it bothers me how much time and effort and money the FBI agents used to entice this teenager into the plot. The agents helped him to create the plot which he had no knowledge, ability or means to do on his own. People who knew Mohamed Osman Mohamud report that he was a sweet child who always had a smile on his face. According to an article in The Oregonian as a teenager he was known for being smart, quiet, never violent, and enjoyed playing basketball.    

…”He was a good kid who made good grades,” Stephanie Napier said of Mohamud. The Napiers described him as an intelligent, polite, quiet teen who graduated early from Westview High School and moved to Corvallis for college.

Their impression of Mohamud lines up with that of a wide range of friends and acquaintances who have known the accused would-be bomber from grade school in Portland, high school in Beaverton and college in Corvallis.

While legal documents paint him as someone bent on mass destruction, friends says he is a quiet, smart young man; an avid basketball player; and proud of his Muslim faith.

They say his father was heavily involved in the Somali community but that his family was friendly and had a modern lifestyle.

But none ever saw anything to indicate he might have a radical side.

The Napiers came to know Mohamud and his parents, Mariam and Osman Barre, during the two years the families were neighbors.

They said the couple seemed to have a happy home with three well-behaved children. Mariam and her teenage daughter, Mona, were especially close with Stephanie Napier. In fact, Mona babysat Marcus, the Napier’s now 9-year-old son.

Portland Bombing Suspect Mohamed Osman Mohamud’s Neighbors The Napier family lived across the street from the family of Mohamed Osman Mohamud…

…The Napiers said Mohamud’s family moved away sometime in the summer of 2009, around the time that Mariam Barre and Osman Barre split up, she said.

“He was a quiet kid, but with his folks splitting up, who knows,” Adam Napier said…He speculated that Mohamud may have been recruited into terrorist violence: he said that in training for the Army, he learned terrorist organizations often target loners or those with no family – young kids with nothing to lose…Read more here

So far we don’t know anything about his side of what happened. The media are relying entirely on a FBI affidavit for their breathless and exciting stories, although omitting information that points to a reason why this otherwise well-behaved 19-year-old boy would want to hurt civilians, including children. Glenn Greenwald writing for Salon.com analyzes this further.

The FBI is obviously quite pleased with itself over its arrest of a 19-year-old Somali-American, Mohamed Osman Mohamud, who — with months of encouragement, support and money from the FBI’s own undercover agents — allegedly attempted to detonate a bomb at a crowded Christmas event in Portland, Oregon.  Media accounts are almost uniformly trumpeting this event exactly as the FBI describes it.  Loyalists of both parties are doing the same, with Democratic Party commentators proclaiming that this proves how great and effective Democrats are at stopping The Evil Terrorists, while right-wing polemicists point to this arrest as yet more proof that those menacing Muslims sure are violent and dangerous.

What’s missing from all of these celebrations is an iota of questioning or skepticism… Read more here

What could have gone wrong with this boy? Anger and emotional turmoil of his parent’s divorce? Mental illness? Young people, loners, people alienated from their families, and people mentally ill with depression, psychosis or other are all quite vulnerable, and criminals and terrorists are able to influence them with their ideas. Should we be enticing alienated, misguided, or mentally ill young people into criminal plots or should we be offering them help and treatment? It seems that an incredible amount of manpower and money went into this operation to destroy this young person’s life, when instead we could have used just a fraction of that money to guide him, treat him, help him. What scares me is the number of people we have in our society who fulfill their unseemly urge for power by trying to destroy other people’s lives, including the life of this teenager who had his whole life before him. I don’t think that is what this country should stand for. Call me naïve but I always believed in the U.S. Constitution and the principles for which we stand, even though I have often seen much contradiction in our society.

Posted in FBI, Islamic, mental health, Oregon, Portland, Somali, teenagers | Tagged: , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Eric P. Schwartz Visits Salt Lake City and Portland

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: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

IRC in Boise sends refugees to Threemile Canyon Farms in Oregon

Posted by Christopher Coen on August 30, 2010

An article in the Los Angeles Times details how the International Rescue Committee office in Boise has helped approximately 50 refugees from Bhutan, Myanmar Somalia, and Sudan to get jobs five hours away at Threemile Canyon Farms a dairy near Boardman, Oregon (Oregon’s largest factory farm, a sprawling 93,000-acre operation). An onion plant near Boardman has also started hiring refugees. The jobs are relatively well-paying and offer benefits, however the remote location and long hours means refugees go without basics such as English classes and refugee support services. Refugees are also packing into apartments since so few housing options exist in the Boardman area.

In Boise, Lana Whiteford, a 27-year-old employment specialist with the International Rescue Committee, was struggling to find work for refugees. Over her year in the position, she had watched as the office went from placing six or seven refugees in service and factory jobs each week to placing none for weeks at a time.

“I had this major gnawing guilt,” she said. “We had people receive eviction letters.”

Whiteford, who grew up in Anaheim, had never heard of Boardman, Ore. Then an e-mail from Threemile Canyon Farms landed in her inbox. “I Googled it,” she said.

She learned that the farm was a five-hour drive from Boise. Agencies like the International Rescue Committee, contracted by the government to help resettle refugees, look for jobs that are closer to their offices, so they can assist with housing, education and other needs. But these were extraordinary times.

…The refugees were told that the farm is unionized, salaries start at $9.45 an hour, and health insurance is provided. In Boise, they could expect to earn about $7.50 an hour with no benefits, and most jobs are part-time, Whiteford said.

…Since last year, the farm has hired about 50 refugees, all new to commercial farming and from countries as varied as Iraq, Myanmar and Sudan.

Rose Corral, the farm’s human resources director, says most have proved to be dedicated workers. The main challenge is communication. About 80% of the 300-strong workforce is Spanish-speaking. Few of the refugees speak much English, either.

The farm offers free English lessons, but most refugees find they are too tired to study after working 9 1/2-hour and longer days. After a few months, some say they speak better Spanish.

…The only problem has been finding housing for the refugees. Most Boardman workers commute from larger cities. But that can be difficult in winter, when extreme weather closes many roads.

So the refugees pack into shared apartments at [an apartment] complex…

Regardless of whether they stay, this quiet agrarian community offers them something many refugees can’t find elsewhere: the chance to become self-sufficient. here

Of course the refugee resettlement program supposedly requires that refugees be resettled to permanent housing that is safe, sanitary and in good repair. Refugees should not have to be “packed” into housing. In addition, the difficulty of attending English classes may pose problems for the refugees’ long-term self-sufficiency. The article also mentions a deadly car crash, which was blamed on a refugee who had tried to overtake another vehicle on a hill.

Many workers have tried to help the newcomers, offering to share food and rides. They collected nearly $3,000 for the widow and children of a Somali man, who was killed shortly after he was hired last year when the car he was riding in crashed into two other vehicles.

Is this the same accident in which refugees in Boardman were traveling back to Boise to visit family members?

Refugees…face long drives to see their families back in Boise. One car-load of refugees this year had a head-on collision, killing one. here

The fact that these refugees are so isolated from any support services gives me pause for concern. Refugee resettlement agencies all over the country are helping refugees to move to distant and remote locations for meatpacking jobs. Even more refugees are simply picking up and moving on their own to these jobs. Burmese refugees in Houston had a bad experience after relocating to a chicken-processing plant in Alabama (here). Refugees in Greensboro have also been relocated to a poultry plant processing plant in Moorefield, W.Va., a six-hour drive away (here). A problem with this is that these locations often do not have needed support services for refugees (English language classes, schools set up to teach refugee children, immigration services for green cards, torture survivors services, etc.), and local entities, e.g. emergency police and medical services, are rarely ready to deal with people who can’t yet speak English.

Posted in Boardman, Boise, Burma/Myanmar, employment/jobs for refugees, housing, housing, overcrowding, Idaho, Iraqi, IRC, meatpacking industry, Nepali Bhutanese, Oregon, secondary migration, refugee, Somali, Sudanese | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

USCCB’s Catholic Charities Inc. in Oregon opens lavish new headquarters

Posted by Christopher Coen on August 26, 2010

Catholic Charities, Inc. in Oregon this week dedicated a brand-new 60,000 square foot headquarters in Portland. The building, designed by Lundin Cole Architects, includes a homeless shelter with computers, laundry and shower facilities, an administrative floor with 14 conference rooms, and an oratory with beautiful sculptures of the Holy Family and the risen Christ. A significant part of the complex is an empty second floor that will allow for future growth.

…Catholic Charities will dedicate its new building, the Clark Family Center.

…In less than 18 months, 145 individuals, corporations and foundations, along with funding from investors from a special federal tax credit program brought the project funding to completion…Major gifts came not only from individuals such as Robert Franz and the Clark family including, Maybelle Clark Macdonald, Mary Clark and Mike and Tracey Clark, but also from many of the major foundations in the area including the Joseph Weston Public Foundation, the Collins Foundation, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Meyer Memorial Trust, M.J. Murdock Charitable Trust, Regence BlueCross BlueShield and Providence Health and Services. The response was an affirmation of the positive impact of Catholic Charities in our community. Community Funding Group also helped Catholic Charities get a large tax credit for the new building.

In June 2010, the staff and clients of Catholic Charities began to occupy their new home and the activity in the building is teeming.

On the basement level, chronically homeless women, who are assisted by the Housing Transitions program, now have space for meeting with caseworkers, access to computers, and laundry and shower facilities to assist them in preparing for job interviews.

A storage facility exists on the basement level to hold the many donations Catholic Charities needs. Along with helping homeless women furnish an apartment, Catholic Charities Refugee Resettlement services furnishes apartments with household items and furniture when the agency moves a refugee family from war-torn parts of the world to the Portland area.

…For the first time, Catholic Charities will have storage space on site for easy access.

Most program staff will work in open spaces on the third floor and fourth floors. The vital work of the agency is done, however, in the 14 conference rooms located in this space.

…In addition to some program staff, the top floor of the center houses Catholic Charities administration. …with more than 180 employees the need for accounting, human resources, technology services, development and executive management is important.

…A unique feature of the top floor is the Regence Life Learning Center. Internally, the large room will be used for board of directors meetings and employee gatherings.

…Within an intimate area of the Regence Life Learning Center is a unique space – an oratory dedicated to the Holy Family donated by Mark and Leslie Ganz.  This chapel-like space, with beautiful sculptures of the Holy Family and the risen Christ, offers the opportunity for quiet reflection for the staff during what can be challenging and stressful daily work.

A significant component of the complex is an empty second floor. This space allows for the development of new programs in the future.

The Clark Family Center was designed by Lundin Cole Architects and incorporates many green features including sun shades to sunlight, electric car charging stations and permeable pavement. here

The question that comes to my mind, however, is how Catholic Charities is able to raise such sizable funding for this type of complex while seemingly not being able to pay for minimum, basic services for their refugee clients.

The State Department’s most recent inspection report of Catholic Charities, from October 2006, indicates that the resettlement agency placed a Somali refugee family of nine into a three-bedroom apartment. Yet, according to Portland’s occupancy codes a dwelling unit is deemed overcrowded (29.30.220) “if there are more residents than one plus one additional resident for every 100 square feet of floor area of the habitable rooms in the dwelling unit”. The family had arrived 7 weeks earlier and the head of the household said that Catholic Charities had not given them winter coats, hats, or mittens, and that no one from catholic Charities had advised the family about immigration issues or advised them about repaying their IOM refugee travel loans. The family also had no personal hygiene items in the bathroom, and there were no towels anywhere in the apartment even though Catholic Charities represented in the case files that they had given the family towels.

An Ethiopian refugee family of four also indicated that no one from Catholic Charities had provided them with information about their immigration status or about repaying their IOM travel loans.

An elderly husband and wife refugee couple from Cuba that arrived five months earlier was found living in a three-bedroom home crowded with eleven people, all relatives (his son and family had been resettled just 11 months earlier and appeared to be struggling with their own resettlement). The elderly refugee man was suffering from epilepsy, diabetes, and chronic depression, and was hospitalized twice since arriving. His doctor advised him to find a separate apartment due to high activity and noise levels in the house. The couple told the State Department monitors that they wished that Catholic Charities had offered them more support.

The monitors also found that Catholic Charities’ case files were haphazard and disorganized. Of particular concern was lack of compliance regarding services to refugee minors, including lack of post-arrival assessment, home visits, and regular in-person contact with the minor for 90 days after arrival.

I know that refugee resettlement agencies always claim that they don’t have enough public funding for minimum-required services for their refugee clients, but then how are agencies such as Catholic Charities at the same time able to afford multi-million dollar new headquarters?

 It would be nice if mainstream journalists would ask some of these tough questions.

Posted in Catholic Charities Archdiocese of San Antonio Inc., children, clothes, Cuban, Ethiopian, faith-based, housing, housing, overcrowding, immigration assistance, lavish new offices, Oregon, Portland, Somali, State Department, Travel Loan Program, USCCB | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

 
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