Friends of Refugees

A U.S. Refugee Resettlement Program Watchdog Group

Archive for the ‘Salt Lake City’ Category

Deadly for refugee youth: emphasis on competition while ignoring isolation & bullying

Posted by Christopher Coen on December 7, 2011

It’s hard to imagine what its like for some refugee teenagers after we plop them down into our schools when they have little schooling, no English, and no knowledge of the local culture. Imagine not understanding how to get lunch or open a locker for weeks and no one notices. Or worse, being bullied or ignored by other students when adults make little effort to prevent that, or help students understand refugee teenagers’ plight. An article in The Salt Lake Tribune tells the story on young refugee that the refugee program and a school are trying for a better outcome with:

…For typical American teenagers, high school holds both excitement and liberal doses of adolescent angst. Now imagine being dropped into that social pressure cooker with little schooling, no English, and no knowledge of the local culture…

…Rising problems with drugs and gang violence, particularly among refugees in the 18-21 age group, has prompted the [Utah Refugee Services Office] to redouble its efforts with youth.

[Gerald Brown], the refugee services director, says he has attended four funerals for young refugee men in the past two years due to violence or drugs.

“We’re determined to do something about it,” Brown says. “There’s no single answer, but I think if we can put a lot of different things together, then we do have a real chance.”

Part of it is helping students succeed academically, he says. Too often, youths become frustrated when they cannot compete with their peers in school. They find other ways to stand out… Read more here

Posted in Karen, language, men, Salt Lake City, schools, teenagers, teens, Utah, young adults | Tagged: , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

Iraqi refugee interpreter dies alone in Utah apartment

Posted by Christopher Coen on September 26, 2011

Diyar al-Bayati, 24, died last week of unknown causes after living as a refugee in Utah for three years. Before his death, he struggled with physical and emotional issues directly tied to his service during the Iraq War, including PTSD and the loss of both legs and the use of one arm in a 2006 roadside explosion in Iraq. An article in the Deseret News first told about Diyar’s arrival in the US in 2008:

By the time his plane landed in Salt Lake City late on the night of April 11 [2008], things weren’t going very well for Diyar al-Bayati. His motorized wheelchair had been mangled on the flight from Jordan to New Jersey, and then his luggage was lost. Still, al-Bayati was optimistic about one thing: that he would be greeted in Salt Lake City by Americans who were happy to see him.

After all, hadn’t he lost both his legs while working as an interpreter for the U.S. Army in Baghdad?

But there were no grateful soldiers at the airport that night. Instead there was one Somali refugee, sent by Catholic Community Services. The man insisted on speaking Arabic, in an accent al-Bayati couldn’t understand, and he wanted to take al-Bayati to the home of another Somali refugee.

“I said, ‘no, dude,’” remembers al-Bayati, who had perfected his American slang during his 200 combat missions with the 4th Infantry Division in 2005 and 2006. When Catholic Community Services then wanted to put him in a cheap hotel — “with the drugs dealers,” says al-Bayati — he said “no” again… Read more here

Now an article in the Salt Lake Tribune details Diyar’s last days:

…Still in his mid-20s, [Diyar Al-Bayati] left life last week, seated in his chair, neatly groomed for a dental appointment, his hairbrush in his hand…

…”As a soldier, interpreter, he was one of the most courageous people, soldier or Iraqi, I’ve ever worked with,” his Army commander, Dan Makay, said Saturday from Afghanistan. “He was a patriot, not just for Iraq but for America.”

Here in Utah, though, Al-Bayati lived alone in an apartment, said Debi Clark, a clinical social worker who was working with war trauma survivors when she met him in 2008….

Injury-related night tremors and post-traumatic stress robbed him of sleep

But for years, Al-Bayati kept his “bright spirit” alive, Clark said, despite many more surgeries, infections and the pain medications that ultimately led to addiction.

“He was an amazing young man,” she said. “The first time I met him, I was just so worried. ‘What am I going to say to this young kid after having his life totally altered helping the military while we were invading his country?’ But he had such a good heart, and he was willing to help everyone.”

For a couple of years, Al-Bayati kept his equilibrium, enduring agonizing treatments with courage and optimism, said Ramin Rahimian, a photographer who spent a year making a video about him.

“He was ridiculously strong. He was a fort,” Rahimian said. “I’ve never seen anyone so strong. No one else I knew could go through such a thing.”…

…”He wanted legs, prosthetics. He was a very proud man, energetic. But he couldn’t reach his potential, and I think he felt that every day,” Makay said.

Al-Bayati never got the right prosthetics, and his AIG insurance — he worked for the private L-3 Communications, under contract with the U.S. government — paid less than $500 a month…

For now, his friends and families can only mourn his passing amid regret that nothing he wanted — a family, new legs, an education — came to him.

“The light in his eyes, it was gone,” Clark said. “I want to remember him with that bright light.”Read more here

Posted in disabled refugees, Iraqi, PTSD, Salt Lake City, SIV (Special Immigrant Visa) immigrants | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

Chaotic beginnings for refugees resettled to Utah

Posted by Christopher Coen on June 12, 2011

Hello?

We get a glimpse into resettlement experiences of two Iraqi refugee
cases assigned to resettlement contractors in Salt Lake City, Utah, in articles in
KSL Broadcasting and Deseret News. An Iraqi woman arrived to an empty apartment. She turned a broken TV that she had scavenged on its side as a makeshift table. An television journalist forced out of the country with his wife and children by Iraqi militia members reports that although the family spoke no English at all, no one met them at the Dallas airport during a flight connection, nor did anyone meet them at the airport once they arrived in Salt Lake City. Instead, a security guard referred them to the airport FBI office.

…Suhad Kudhair and many in her “large family” in Iraq had English language skills and worked with American companies, which labeled them as disloyal to Iraq and attracted threats to their lives, mostly from Iraqi militia. She and her two sons fled to Egypt in 2006, where the process of accomplishing refugee resettlement to the United States took three years. “I told them I have a sister in California. They said California was too expensive, and I was going to Utah.”…

…Once in Utah she worked long hours on a farm, at a day care, as a medical translator, and now works for Catholic Community Services doing what a lot of other Iraqi refugees do once they are established: She is a case manager for new refugees who are in the process of resettlement.

She knows as well as anyone what it is like to arrive in a strange country at the end of 36 hours on airplanes to a place where there are no friends, no family, no job and an apartment with no furniture.

Kudhair said she scavenged a TV set that did not work properly but made a makeshift table when laid on its side. Turned on, the picture tube made an interesting blue glow in the room that people found curious enough they would take pictures of it when they visited the apartment… Read more here

And this about the Iraqi television journalist and his family who were
also resettled to Salt Lake City:

My name is Mohammed Mushib. I live in Salt Lake City, but I was born in Baghdad and lived there until 2007. In Baghdad, I was a television journalist. In Salt Lake City, I am a refugee. Once I reported stories, now I am part of a story…

…I had a nice house, a nice car, and my wife Faeza and I started our family…

…In 2003, the war started. Iraq was in chaos. We did not have a government for one and a half years, so the people established security units for each neighborhood. I was a security guard in my neighborhood. In 2005, the civil war started. The militias killed many people. I lost friends, I lost relatives, there was death all around…

…In February of 2008, the United Nations told us that we could go to the U.S. as refugees…

…We, along with about 20 other families, flew to Turkey, on to New York, then to Dallas, then to Salt Lake City. The other families went different ways in New York, we flew alone to Dallas. We spoke no English. No one met our plane. I saw a salesclerk at the airport who was wearing a hijab. She was from Somalia, and she only spoke a little Arabic. I was very relieved and grateful for her help – she gave us cake and cola and a banana, which she paid for – that I cried. God sent her to us at that moment.

We arrived in Salt Lake City, no one met us. I found the exit, there was no one except a security guard. who pointed me toward the FBI, which I knew from movies. They told me that our contacts from the International Rescue Committee were outside! They took us to a motel for the night, and after 1 or 2 hours of sleep, there was a knock on the door. It was a woman who spoke Arabic and identified herself as the person whose name I had gotten from my brother. She brought us food and welcomed us to Utah. In the morning, our case worker, Travis, took us to our apartment and to WalMart to shop, and our new life began… Read more here

The good news is that Utah and the Salt Lake community has actually taken proactive and creative efforts to help refugees who have advanced skills and degrees – so different from what we saw in nearby California when Iraqi SIVs (Special Immigrant Visa holders) were arriving in Sacramento in late 2009. (In that case state refugee coordinator Thuan Nguyen gave us endless excuses and misreferrals in our attempt to aid two Iraqi engineers whom a resettlement contractor had referred to low-skill, low-pay jobs. In one case that involved a job at a distant food market beginning at 5am before buses operated, and in another case involved a set-up at a gas station where the resettlement contractor first took a relative in to be interviewed before coming out and canceling the SIV refugee’s interview.)

Efforts in Utah involve the New-American Academic Network, which seeks to place refugees with professional credentials in jobs and training that will help them to find proper employment for economic self-sufficiency.

…”As particularly the Iraqi population was coming into the valley, we were experiencing sort of a new phenomenon in the sense that many of the Iraqi population or individuals had training — undergraduate, graduate and professional positions,” said Rosmarie Hunter, special assistant to the president for campus community partnerships at the University of Utah.

“They were coming over as engineers, doctors, lawyers, journalists, but were coming here and being resettled in much the same way where they were going into entry-level positions,” she said, which left some unable to afford to live here, or unable to afford professional testing and retraining needed to work in their profession.

“People were going back, and perhaps in very unsafe circumstances,” Hunter said.

The New American Academic Network was created to help those professionals re-certify to work in their fields of expertise. NAAN is a partnership between the University of Utah, University Neighborhood Partners, the International Center, Workforce Services and resettlement organizations in Utah.

“The main problem is the financial problems for the refuges,” said Muthana Maktouf, also from Iraq. “The NAAN program tries to find other help, other resources, started to find internships for the students.”… Read more here

Posted in Catholic Community Services of Utah, economic self-sufficiency, education, employment/jobs for refugees, furnishings, lack of, Iraqi, IRC, meeting refugees at the airport, professionals, Salt Lake City, SIV (Special Immigrant Visa) immigrants, Utah | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments »

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 »

 
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