Utah getting more money and new bureaucracy for refugees

Thanks to the efforts and advocacy of Gov. Huntsman, Utah has a new refugee office and money to run it (and a new board too). 

The office needed to be created, DePaulis [director of Utah department of community and culture] said, because of “structural gaps and barriers to successful refugee resettlement.” The former Refugee Working Group was funded with federal money and was overseen by the state’s Department of Workforce Services. The funding was never enough, Brown [head of the new office] said, and the creation of the office will facilitate cooperation with state and county leaders without losing the federal money or disrupting the program’s position under Workforce Services.

Read the rest of the story here.

See our previous posts on Utah here and here.    Note that it appears the direct resettlement numbers have gone down in Utah but  there are more and more refugees coming, so I suspect that Salt Lake City is “welcoming” and they are getting secondary migration.  

Waterbury still buzzing over refugee problems, buzz is heard in Tennessee

The Republican-American in Waterbury, CT has an update on the situation there regarding complaints by Burmese Karen refugees that they have not received decent treatment from the International Institute of CT. Yesterday we reported on a critical report from the US State Department from a year earlier.    It is that document that the Republican-American reports on now.  This is how it begins:

WATERBURY — A year before the International Institute of Connecticut placed Burmese refugees in squalid Waterbury apartments, the U.S. State Department “expressed serious concern regarding substandard housing” for refugees the institute had resettled in Bridgeport.

The word about Waterbury is spreading and reporter Brian Mosely picked up the story in Shelbyville, TN.  You will recall that Mr. Mosely came under fire for his lengthy and often critical series in the Times-Gazette regarding Somali refugees brought to that southern city by employer Tysons Food.

Mosely begins:

As many of you well know, I took a lot of heat for my opinions about how the refugee resettlement program has handled the introduction of Somalis into our society, and particularly, the lack of help these folks get once they are deposited in this country.

Read the whole blog article here and don’t skip the comments.   I’m amused to see how loquacious those southerners are; almost no one comments in Waterbury!

Lutheran “church” group funded by you

Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service is one of the top 10 Volags selected each year by the US State Department to resettle refugees.   Yesterday I wanted to have a look at their Federal Form 990 tax return.  That’s the form that all non-profit groups have to file with the IRS.  But, guess what?  Churches are exempt and this volag has filed as a church, so no Form 990 is required.

Now, here is the funny part (not!) according to its own Financial report it is primarily funded by you–the taxpayer.  Its income side of the ledger for 2006 was $20,925,000 with $18,678,000 coming from the US Government—that is a whopping 89.3% of their budget. 

They receive $810,000 from churches (3.9%) and yet they can file as a church.   When you can’t see a Form 990, you can’t see how the money is spent—how much is going to salaries for instance?

If I were at another of the Top 10 volags, like Church World Service which does a Form 990 even though a larger percentage of its funds come from private people and churches, I’d be a little annoyed.  But, I suspect those Top 10’ers protect each other.

Where is the ACLU when you need them, shouldn’t this be a separation of church and state issue?

P.S.  When you look at the financial statement, the loan servicing fees are also government funds involved with refugee travel loans.

Public meeting on Refugees in Arizona week after next

According to this brief press announcement there will be a public meeting in Tucson on March 18th. 

The “public consultation” is to help the Department of Economic Security Community Services Administration “address the current state of refugee resettlement and to plan and coordinate services to refugees resettling in Arizona,” according to a news release from the state of Arizona.

Sounds to me like there might be a little problem brewing in Arizona or they wouldn’t be putting any of this before the public.   We’ve written before about Iraqi refugees among others going to Arizona here.

Also, check out this database.   As of 2005 there were over 36,000 refugee resettled in Arizona, the number must be over 40,000 by now.

This is the address in the Office of Refugee Resettlement database for the Arizona refugee agency:

Mr. Charles Shipman, Division of Aging & Adult Services Department of Economic Security, P.O. Box 6123, Site Code 086Z, Phoenix, AZ 85005, 602-542-6614 (P) 602-542-6400 (F) cshipman@azdes.gov

If you live near Tucson, you should consider attending the meeting.    Send me a firsthand report if you go!  Send to Ann@vigilantfreedom.com  .    

International Institute of Connecticut had problems back in 2006

 Update later today:  I just learned that there is an entire series of articles on the Burmese Karen refugees in Waterbury, CT at the Republican American here.

We have been following the case of the International Institute of Connecticut for a few weeks.  Most recently the volag was temporarily suspended from resettling new refugees stemming from complaints that Burmese Karen refugees had not been properly cared for.

Now it has come to our attention that this same subcontractor of the US Committee for Refugees and Immigrants (USCRI) had received a warning in March 2006 from the Office of Population, Refugees and Migration (PRM) of the US State Department.

In a summary of findings government investigators reported:

“……monitors expressed serious concerns regarding substandard housing and poor documentation of R & P (Reception and Placement Program) service delivery.  One housing complex frequently used by IIC (International Institute of Connecticut) to place refugees was in such poor condition that monitors strongly suggested the affiliate phase out the use of these buildings for refugee accomodation.”

The report goes on to document how large families, one a Meshketian Turk family of six and another Somali family of eight were living in two bedroom apartments.   And, although the families had been in the US for over 5 months at the time of the monitoring visit, neither had a family member employed.    A description of the living conditions of these families and a couple of others visited were shocking.  I want to remind readers that we have heard of this practice of placing refugees in substandard housing from other areas of the country as well.

The issue of lack of proper furniture is inexcusable because as we all know, furnishings are readily available through various charities and if the IIC just put out word they needed this or that, citizens would have happily donated the excess we all seem to have in our homes.

In its Response to PRM, IIC director Myra Oliver says the large families chose to continue to live in crowded conditions because they did not want to pay, or could not afford, higher rents.  That may well be so, but I suspect Connecticut has zoning laws that require a certain number of bedrooms for given family sizes as we have here in Maryland.  So, the refugees can’t choose to break laws, it’s up to the resettlement agency to figure out this problem.

In addition to zoning laws, the State Department sets certain guidelines for such things as appropriate apartment size as a condition for the non-profit group to receive federal funding.

In defense of IIC, it appears they attempted to find employment for able-bodied family members and a single Somali man, but the refugees themselves either refused the work or quit.    The Meshketian Turk refugees had been employed with the help of IIC at landscaping work, McDonalds, and a Holiday Inn.  They all quit their jobs.

The Somali family has employed members now after some initial fits and starts at various jobs.    The single Somali man, highlighted in the PRM report, had refused a job in a supermarket according to IIC’s response document which states:

“The PRM report inaccurately states that this client was offered two jobs as a butcher.  The client was actually offered two jobs at supermarkets–one was to clean the floors and the other to retrieve shopping carts. The client refused both jobs because there was pork present in the supermarket.”    [RRW: Muslim prohibition on eating pork, guess they can’t be within miles of it!]

What struck me as most interesting when reading through the complaint and the IIC’s response is that one got the definite impression (or at least I did) that the employees of the IIC were very annoyed to have been monitored, but more significantly I got the feeling that they didn’t really like the people they were responsible for resettling.  

I wondered if it’s possible that there is a disconnect of sorts.  People choose to go into this line of work—helping to resettle the Third World to America with this notion of how wonderful it will feel to see families with children working their way up the ladder of success in the United States.  You know–the image of the hardworking immigrant who betters himself and his family in the land of opportunity.  Then to be slapped constantly with the reality of  representatives of many cultures that do not, and never will have, the work and life ethic of Americans because they have come from a culture radically differant from ours.   It must be difficult because then resettlement work is just a job, just a federally funded pay check.