State Department and refugee lobby group work on
private sponsorship scheme to get more refugees into the US, by Ann Corcoran 10/4/16
So, as it is
described by one commenter: Instead of buying a $10,000 car in the coming year, what the heck adopt
a Syrian refugee instead.
I would be a
proponent of private sponsorship if it accompanied the complete abolition of the
present system that involves middlemen federal contractors (the VOLAGs)
being paid billions of tax dollars, and required the sponsor to pay for all
costs associated with the refugees for a year or two. Congress would, of
course, have the final say on numbers, security screening and nationalities
permitted entry to the US in my hypothetical re-write of refugee law.
Matthew LaCorte
(one of the brains behind the plan) thinks $10,000 will get him a refugee—what
for a month or two! Then what? The refugee he sponsored is on us!
But, this plan, which they are apparently hatching
within the State Department and in cooperation with the Refugee Council USA
(the resettlement industry’s lobbying arm), is a plan to bring in additional
refugees over and above what Congress is willing to pay for.
(For those of you who think we have no impact, this indicates to me that
the industry knows there are limits to how much of your money the Congress is
willing to shell out to bring hundreds of thousands of impoverished refugees to your towns.)
This really is a pretty audacious
concept since they apparently think they can do this ‘in house’ and not involve
rewriting refugee law. (Congress writes the laws, or have they
forgotten?)
Here is the jaw-dropping (Bloomberg,
of course!) story at the Chicago Tribune (hat tip: Julia):
Americans might be
able to bring a refugee to the U.S. on their own dime if talks between the
Obama administration and the nation’s leading refugee advocacy group come to
fruition.
The State Department is considering a
pilot program that would let citizens sponsor a refugee from their country of
choice by paying for airfare, housing, clothing, food and other resettlement
costs. Conversations began in July and are expected to continue in the coming
year, said Naomi Steinberg, director of the Refugee Council USA.
The program, modeled after a similar
one in Canada, is designed to crack open new sources of funding as growing
anti-refugee sentiment in Congress threatens to cut resettlement programs.
“It puts Americans in the driver’s
seat,” said Matthew La Corte, policy analyst at the Niskanen Center***, a
Washington-based libertarian think tank that was an early supporter of the
program. “It allows them to say ‘I have a spare
bedroom. I was thinking of buying a new car but I’ll instead take that $10,000
and put it toward bringing a Syrian refugee over.”‘
Such
a program would mark one of the biggest structural changes to U.S. refugee
policy in three decades, and would allow Barack Obama or future presidents to
skirt opposition by shifting financial responsibility to everyday Americans.
[I’m all for shifting all of the costs
to those who are promoting refugee resettlement—ed]
For fiscal 2016,
Congress appropriated $3.1 billion for refugee and migration assistance
programs, the same level as two years earlier, according to
figures from the agency.
Private sponsorship
“is a good option in terms of increasing numbers without increasing budget
outlays,” said Kevin Appleby, senior director of international migration policy
at the Center for Migration Studies in New York. [Appleby
was formerly the lobbyist in DC for the US Conference of Catholic Bishops, we
have a lot on him here at RRW—ed]
Refugee Council USA
and the state department began talks about private sponsorship this summer, said
Steinberg, director at the Washington-based agency, which is an umbrella group
for 22 organizations.
The State Department plans to work on
the issue “in the year to come,” according to a statement from Mark Storella, a
deputy assistant secretary. [Looks
like they are pretty confident Hillary will be in the White
House.—ed]
Before any program is launched,
critical points must be addressed, said Steinberg. The group wants to ensure
that sponsorship does not replace existing government programs.
“The only private
resettlement program that we could support would be one that increases the
number of refugees who arrive in the U.S., while at the same time maintaining
and even strengthening the U.S. government commitments,” Steinberg said. Continue reading here.
https://refugeeresettlementwatch.wordpress.com/2016/10/04/state-department-and-refugee-lobby-group-work-on-private-sponsorship-scheme-to-get-more-refugees-into-the-us/
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