Friends of Refugees

A U.S. Refugee Resettlement Program Watchdog Group

Archive for the ‘Dallas/Fort Worth’ Category

Segue Refugee Partners Ministries Hopes To Convert Bhutanese In Dallas

Posted by Christopher Coen on February 23, 2012

A Baptist organization is hoping to lead Nepali-Bhutanese refugees in Dallas away from their Hindu cultural roots. Segue Refugee Partners Ministries will help out the refugees as a prelude to their agenda.

Will they be honest and upfront with the refugees and tell them what the plan is?

…Matthew Johnston and Elizabeth Hall lead Segue Refugee Partners Ministries, the nonprofit organization… They have been connecting with Bhutanese refugees for more than a year…Segue’s vision is to build partnerships and relationships between these Bhutanese refugees and American Christians who are willing to relate and help out in whatever way they can. The refugees have a variety of needs, from help them deal with insurance-related issues regarding health care to finding jobs in the city. The hope is also to lead the refugees from a Hindu background into a relationship with Jesus Christ… Read more here

Posted in Baptist, converting refugees, Dallas/Fort Worth, faith-based, Hindu, Nepali Bhutanese | Tagged: , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Are large passenger vans safe for transporting refugee clients?

Posted by Christopher Coen on June 15, 2011

12-passenger Chevrolet Express van

A charity has given Catholic Charities Fort Worth a grant for a new fleet of passenger vans according to an article in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. One of Catholic Charities’ first purchases is a 12-passenger Chevrolet Express van and the agency has already begun using it to transport refugee children.

FORT WORTH — With precious cargo inside, new vans donated to Catholic Charities Fort Worth won’t be traveling at high speeds.

But the spiffy rides are funded by folks who enjoy fast cars: the Texas chapter of Speedway Children’s Charities. A $146,431 grant from the group will pay for a fleet of four passenger vans for the nonprofit organization…

…The 2011 white vans, a 12-passenger Chevrolet Express and an eight-passenger Toyota Sienna, will springboard a new transportation program at Catholic Charities Fort Worth, which provides services for low-income families, seniors, refugees and immigrants in the 28-county diocese.

About 9,000 children are expected to ride in the vans this year to appointments, educational activities and fun outings. Their parents will get rides to parenting classes, support groups and other activities, said Heather Reynolds, chief executive officer and president of Catholic Charities Fort Worth

…On Tuesday, children piled into the vans for a field trip to the Fort Worth Museum of Science and History and Omni Theater. The 16 youngsters, all refugees who have been resettled in Fort Worth, have limited English skills, but their gratitude was unmistakable… Read more here

It concerns me the see this article due to the passenger van rollovers in Arizona and Georgia in the past two years in which so many refugees died or were seriously injured. Officials reported that a tire blowout was the cause of the rollover in Georgia.

A lawyer, Certified Insurance Counselor and member of the USA Baseball Medical/Safety Advisory Committee named John M. Sadler claims that research indicates that 12-passenger vans don’t fare much better than 15-passenger vans in rollovers. In a 2008 article he advised sports organizations as soon as possible to get rid of all 12-passenger and 15-passenger vans, and replace them with 7-passenger mini vans or school buses, which have a much lower rollover propensity at higher occupant loads. He also recommends – among other things – that those groups that do use these larger vans always use a trained, experienced driver who understands and is familiar with the handling characteristics of a fully loaded van. They should also insist that all occupants wear safety belts for the entire duration of the trip, move passengers and cargo forward of the rear axle, and check tires before any trip to make sure that they are properly inflated and not excessively worn.

Finally, agencies should check the pressure of each tire when “cold” and set to the recommended inflation pressure as specified on the vehicle placard in the owner’s manual (the typical recommended pressure for the rear tires can also be higher than for the front tires). Agencies should always equip vans with a tire gauge.

I think that refugee agencies also should never fully load these large vans with adult passengers, and if they insist on using these vans they should only buy or use vans that have electronic stability control (ESC).

Posted in Burma/Myanmar, Catholic, Catholic Charities Fort Worth, children, Dallas/Fort Worth, safety, transportation | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

Texas Experiences 85% Increase in Resettlement

Posted by Christopher Coen on October 20, 2010

Texas experienced an 85 percent increase in refugee resettlement this past year, according to an article in the Utne Reader. Apparently resettlement agencies that would normally have sent Iraqi refugees to Michigan were instead directing them to Texas while Michigan had its (now ended) moratorium on free-case refugees. The moratorium in Michigan was due to overwhelming numbers of new Iraqi refugees paired with the state’s dire economy.

…In the past year, Texas saw an 85 percent increase in official refugee arrivals. “We’re still reeling from it all,” says Caitriona Lyons, the Texas State Refugee Resettlement Program coordinator. National voluntary agencies have redirected to Texas refugees who otherwise might have gone to Michigan, a popular destination, or other economically troubled states. Between 2006 and 2009, 2,822 Iraqis officially resettled in Texas. Thousands more are on the way…Read more here

Caitriona Lyons is the state refugee coordinator who was disinterested (and unhelpful) earlier this year when gay Iraqi refugees were being mistreated by Catholic Charities in Houston.

The article goes on to describe experiences by Iraqi refugees in Dallas. Muhammad Haji, his wife Payman, and the couple’s three kids moved to Dallas after first being resettled in Milwaukee. Refugee Services of Texas said it would help the family find an apartment within 3 days, but then left the family on their own for 25 days. Finally, the agency placed them in an apartment – in a complex where drug deals were going down.

…In January 2008 the family resettled in Milwaukee, but the Hajis felt isolated—and cold. They came to Dallas looking for a larger Iraqi community and warmer climes. They assumed refugee assistance would follow them, but they were no longer eligible for the Department of State resettlement funds they had received in Milwaukee. When the family reached Dallas, Haji says, Refugee Services of Texas, a nonprofit agency, said it would find them an apartment within three days. The Hajis stayed with another Iraqi family. Three days passed, then 10, then 18. Their hosts called Refugee Services and said it wasn’t their job to take care of the Hajis.

For a week longer, the Hajis moved from house to house, but they finally wore out all welcomes. The family found themselves on the street, sitting at a gas station with nowhere to go. Haji called Refugee Services from the pay phone: “Help us, or I will call the police,” he said. The group finally found them an apartment—albeit in a complex with, the Hajis say, drug deals going down next door. Carol Roxburgh, the executive director of Refugee Services of Texas, says the Hajis were not officially transferred from their agency in Milwaukee to Dallas, so they “broke their contract” and were not eligible for housing. Given the circumstances, Roxburgh says, “We went above and beyond to help them the best we could without any funding.”…

Amira Matsuda, president of the Iraqi American Association of North Texas and head of the Texas Muslim Women’s Foundation, has helped dole out more than $80,000 in private funds to help Iraqi refugees in Dallas-Fort Worth. Her group does not have outside funding, but instead its members reach into their own pockets to help the refugees. She says that refugee organizations have been less than helpful.

…“On a personal level,” Matsuda says, “we take [Iraqi refugees] shopping to cover their basic needs, pay some of their utility bills, rent, collect donated furniture from our community, and distribute it to those who need it.” Matsuda also provides legal advice, translations, and help finding employment.

She is helping at least 150 Iraqi households and receives calls, she says, “at all hours.”…

…Matsuda has heard stories like the Hajis’ scores of times. “Many organizations were very unacceptable in how they treated Iraqi families here,” Matsuda says. But blame for the plight of families like the Hajis cannot be placed solely on the backs of local or state agencies. The policies, the source of the problem, are made in Washington…

Another recent Iraqi refugee arrival named Salah al Bagdadi reports that it took four months just to receive his social security card, during which time he could not look for work.

…At Zituna World Food Market in Richardson, Salah wears a baker’s toque. He was a reform activist during Saddam’s regime, and when his life was threatened, he left Iraq and lived in Yemen and Jordan. When his permit ran out in Jordan, he was imprisoned. In 2008 he was offered resettlement to the United States…

Salah had little choice but to come. For four months, he didn’t get his Social Security card and could not look for work. That bad patch is over, but things are hardly comfortable…His wife, Haifa, is working as a hairdresser, and his daughter is a cashier in the salon. With three wage earners, the family is able to scrape by…

Posted in Dallas/Fort Worth, Iraqi, Refugee Services of Texas, Refugee Services of Texas, Refugee Services of Texas, secondary migration, refugee | Tagged: , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Overage refugee students in Dallas must move to new school

Posted by Christopher Coen on August 10, 2010

The Dallas school district is ordering overage students, including overage refugee students, out of Dallas’ schools and out to a special “overage” high school in a remote and dusty location in the south-side. Dallas joins several other large Texas districts, including Houston, that have campuses for overage students.

Although all sorts of perks and advantages to this arrangement have been touted – social service advisers on hand, partnerships with community groups to help with jobs and child care, and dual-credit classes with community colleges — the real reason for the school seems to be that a former school district trustee had unsavory imaginings when thinking about overage male students sitting in classrooms next to 14-year-old girls.

Former DISD board trustee Ron Price proposed creating the overage school after visiting Madison High School, where he learned of a 21-year-old male enrolling as a freshman.

“The No. 1 problem is the idea of having an adult at the age of 21 with a 14-year-old girl who just left middle school,” he said. here

One reader commenting on the story, however, writes that principals may want to get rid of these students because they want schools’ scores to look better, and that the location for the new school is a horrible place to have a school – dirty, dusty and depressing. Another reader points out that the new location also hosts alternative schools for problem students who were kicked out of their regular schools.

A Nepali-Bhutanese refugee student said that in order for her to get to the new school she will have too take a 26-mile round trip ride on public transportation. Another reader says that this will be a problem as public transportation in Dallas is awful – it takes an hour and a half just to go 8 miles to downtown on a bus — with two transfers.

There also seems to have been some subterfuge in the way that refugee students were enrolled into the new overage high school.

Dallas trustees were told that students filled out and signed an enrollment form indicating they were interested in the overage school.

But Bashu Katel, a refugee from Nepal assigned to the overage campus, said he had little opportunity to discuss his placement when he was pulled out of class at the end of last school year and interviewed.

Katel said his parents, who don’t speak English and don’t have driver’s licenses, rely on him to drive them to work. Making the trek to and from the overage school will make that impossible, he said.

“I only have one more year remaining. I don’t know what I’m going to do,” said Katel, who is turning 20 in January and will be a senior in the fall. “I want to graduate from Conrad and not the overage high school.”

Posted in Dallas/Fort Worth, education, Nepali Bhutanese, school for refugee children, schools | Tagged: , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

 
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