Feds tickled, just short of 85,000 refugee
ceiling for FY 2016 achieved, more “clients” on the way this week, by Ann Corcoran on 10/3/16
Voice of America has a wrap-up article for the FY16
UN/US State Department Refugee Admissions Program (saves us looking up the
numbers). What tickled me was the US Conference of Catholic Bishops head
lobbyist referring to refugees as their “clients.” We’ve been telling you that
this is a business—big business—a several $ billion a year business.
Voice
of America: WASHINGTON —The United States narrowly
missed its refugee cap for the fiscal year, closing out 12 months of political
turbulence over admissions policies just five people short of the
administration’s target of 85,000
Bill Caney (at
the UN) is the head honcho for the US Conference of Catholic Bishops. Here he
confirms for us what we knew—refugees are “clients” because this is a business,
a lucrative one! The USCCB is paid by the head for each refugee it resettles,
so this has been a good year financially.
State
Department data as of midnight October 1, the start of the 2017 fiscal year and
the reset point for the government’s financial calendar, is the closest the
refugee program has come to meeting the presidentially established limit in 24
years. [You knew they would
bring them in here fast and not thoroughly vetted because Obama had to speed up
his seeding plan—ed]
Among the
largest groups of refugees this year were more than 12,500 Syrians, following a
self-declared goal by the administration last September to admit at least
10,000 people fleeing civil war and Islamic State violence there.
Refugee
Arrivals to the U.S. for FY2016
Dem. Rep.
Congo: 16,370
Syria: 12,587
Myanmar: 12,347
Iraq: 9,880
Somalia: 9,020
Bhutan: 5,817
Iran: 3,750
Afghanistan: 2,737
Ukraine: 2,543
Syria: 12,587
Myanmar: 12,347
Iraq: 9,880
Somalia: 9,020
Bhutan: 5,817
Iran: 3,750
Afghanistan: 2,737
Ukraine: 2,543
Refugee and
resettlement officials told VOA last week that travel for some refugees who
were scheduled to arrive by the end of September was postponed because the
limit had been met. A State Department spokesperson did not confirm how many
refugees were affected, but said that those who were delayed would be included
in the coming fiscal year, which begins October 1. [See our post
of a week ago about the
“ceiling” each year—ed] Our additional “clients” will be arriving shortly says USCCB honcho!
“We understand that some clients may be held
back these days and booked immediately in October. Thus, we expect no effect on
clients,” said Bill Canny, who heads migration and refugee services for one of
the country’s longest-serving resettlement agencies, the U.S. Conference of
Catholic Bishops.
More resettlement cities have been chosen….Ann Richard, Asst. Sec. of State for
PRM and a former VP at a federal contractor (International Rescue Committee) is
delighted to report that they have secretly chosen more towns in which to place
refugees (they have 350 towns already) she says.
The article
also says that the largest category for FY17 (for the first time) will be the
Near East and South Asia category. We will be taking 40,000 of
those. (Near East and South Asia includes: Afghanistan, Bhutan/Nepal,
Iran, Iraq, Sri Lanka, Pakistan and Syria.)
Anne Richard,
Asst. Secretary of State for Population, Refugees and Migration, reported to
VOA on the growing number of cities that will ‘welcome’ refugees! We knew
that!***
Richard also said the number of cities where
refugees are resettled in the U.S. is “likely to grow” in the coming months.
Programs are already in place in roughly 350 cities in nearly every state.
The refugee
industry’s lobbying arm weighed in with this:
Naomi Steinberg, director of Refugee Council
USA, an advocacy group for 22 NGOs that work in refugee resettlement, said that
what stood out for her after what she called “a difficult year of nasty
political rhetoric” is that the U.S. continued a “proud tradition” of welcoming those fleeing
persecution. “We
know that as loud as those anti-refugee voices are, that they are still in the
minority,” said Steinberg.
Please get
your testimony off to Senator Sessions today or at the latest tomorrow! Let
Sessions know that Ms. Steinberg is blowing smoke!
These are the
new towns/cities we have learned about so far (we have heard that there are 47
new ones!). The selection process is mostly done quietly and out of public
view.
Asheville, NC
Rutland, VT
Reno, NV
Ithaca, NY
Missoula, MT
Aberdeen, SD
Charleston, WV
Fayetteville,
AR
Blacksburg, VA
Pittsfield, MA
Northhampton,
MA
Flint, Michigan
Bloomington, IN
https://refugeeresettlementwatch.wordpress.com/2016/10/03/feds-tickled-just-short-of-85000-refugee-ceiling-for-fy-2016-achieved-more-clients-on-the-way-this-week/
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