Posted on 04/02/2015 3:09:25 AM PDT by Altura Ct.
The federal resettlement program began 35 years ago, and today includes some 190 sites across the country.
In New Hampshire, four cities Nashua, Manchester, Laconia and Concord take in refugees, but the numbers are not evenly distributed. Nationally, nearly 70,000 refugees immigrated to the U.S. in the last fiscal year; 373 of those came to New Hampshire, and 189 of those came to Concord.
The city of Concord has minimal say, and minimal official responsibilities, over refugee resettlement.
State and resettlement officials will typically share the information they receive about resettlement projections with local officials.
Concord, in turn, has an opportunity to provide some input on those projections. But as decisions are being made about how many new refugees will resettle here, theres rarely a discussion with Concord officials, at least about the current status of the local economy and what kind of resources are available, according to City Manager Tom Aspell.
City employees who work in public assistance programs, public safety or otherwise provide help to individual refugees as needed.
We just do what we normally do for anybody else that comes in, said Jacqueline Whatmough, the citys human services director.
The national refugee resettlement program runs as a partnership between the federal government and nine private resettlement agencies. Ascentria Care Alliance, which oversees resettlement in Concord, is a subsidiary of three of those private agencies.
Each year, the State Department announces resettlement projections for the coming fiscal year. States can then comment on those, raising concerns or requesting changes.
Barbara Seebart, New Hampshires refugee coordinator, said she regularly meets with school officials, health care workers, social service providers, state partners, volunteers, ESL teachers and local resettlement agencies to gather feedback.
New Hampshire receives a few hundred refugees each year. Since October, for instance, the state welcomed more than 160 new refugees from 16 different countries, according to federal data. Many come in pairs or groups.
Most of those newcomers come from Rwanda 41 total in the last five months. They are joined by 23 refugees from Nepal, 20 from Iraq, 16 from Namibia and 13 from Uganda, as well as others from Ethiopia, Malaysia, South Africa and elsewhere.
The number of refugees arriving annually in New Hampshire has waned in recent years, down from a peak of 559 in 2009 to 345 in 2014.
Those numbers represent a small fraction of the total number of refugees resettled nationally. During the last fiscal year, for example, 7,214 refugees arrived in Texas, 6,108 in California, 4,082 in New York, 4,006 in Michigan and 1,941 in Massachusetts. Connecticut and Maine resettled slightly more than New Hampshire; Vermont and Rhode Island resettled slightly fewer.
Not everyone stays put. Between 2005 and 2012, 648 resettled people moved out of New Hampshire, and 55 arrived from out of state, according to Seebart.
New Hampshires largest incoming populations are from Bhutan, the Congo and Iraq. While the Bhutanese are the biggest, their rate of growth is declining.
Syrian refugees could begin arriving in the state within the next couple of years. Some have already arrived in the states. The UNHCR hopes to resettle 130,000 Syrian refugees globally by 2016.
Amy Marchildon, director of Services for New Americans, the local Ascentria subsidiary, said New Hampshire is considered a third tier site, meaning it could be a few years before Syrians start arriving in any substantial numbers.
Overall, the influx of new refugees has not been a difficult burden for Concord. Rather, city officials said the new cultures have been a benefit to the community.
When folks first started being resettled here, people would notice people of different skin colors and different habits of dress downtown, maybe for the first year or two, Aspell said. People just expect it now. People know its a refugee resettlement community, and from what I can see, people welcome it.
They pick places that are quiet and safe, and “too White” and send them to hell.
Our mayor invited thousands of Burmese refugees to move to the opposite side of the city from where he lives. They are given money to buy homes and brand new SUVs. Their culture is still backward. They have been known to kill animals and cook them in their garages. We suspect the mayor got a nice bit of kickback money. This year we’re getting thousands of Africans (forget exactly which country within the continent) to add in to the mix. Melting pot we are not.
Sounds like where I live.
So have I. My family has been here for generations.
Lots of time, because of the smoke, I'll use the front yard.
Don't like it? Get a law passed outlawing it. Or move elsewhere. It's a free country, or used to be.
That was last week, with a device picked up off the side of the road. Real recycling. Beat up and ugly and holes in it.
/johnny
I thought that Congress passed a law banning “unfunded Government mandates”?
We now have no say about what our federal overloads have planned for us.
Thank you.
What’s wrong with cooking animals in the garage? It’s a great place to skin them too!
No we’re not a melting pot anymore. We’re an unassimilated boardinghouse for The Third World.
I meant pig roasts in unventilated garages. There ARE health laws in place but they don’t have the manpower to enforce. And no, I dont like it, JRandomCreep. Why do you feel the need to be a jerk about it?
The federal government was not supposed to be the monster with a boot on our throat as it now is.
It was supposed to be a relatively small bureaucracy to carry out the constitutional responsibilities that the sovereign citizens
and sovereign states agreed upon.
The federal government was supposed to be the servant of the people - not our master.
And to make it worse, the federal government has now decided that its function is to serve the interests of foreigners.
It doesn't matter what we American citizens want. As far as they are concerned we can just shut up and do as we are told or we get the boot.
I’m sorry. I’m still praying for you, Johnny.
“Whats wrong with cooking animals in the garage? Its a great place to skin them too!”
The electric winch over the floor drain in my garage isn’t just for lifting the hard top off of my Jeep.
That, I defend.
People have the option of putting an end to it, but it does take work, and maybe more than one law.
I hate to see the 'one size fits all' meme when that doesn't work.
And I'm a jerk because that's what I am. Check out my posting history back to 1999 when I was kd5cts.
/johnny
Yes, you are a jerk in the same way my brother was when I was a little girl. He'd stand in front of my chair and cut a big fart. If it makes you feel all manly, so be it. I'm still praying for your healing. I hope you'll pray for mine as well.
Yep, it sucks that there may have to be more than one law before the PTB decide you really won't put up with it.
People do need to realize that neighborhoods change, and they may have to fight to keep it. Not everyone lives the same, thank goodness.
If you took me being a jerk personally, that neither breaks my leg or picks my pocket. Have at it.
The personal is personal. The political gets loud. In my book, those are 2 diff things.
/johnny
Happy happy joy joy joy.
Our country went from the melting pot to an overflowing Chamber Pot.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.