Arab Times

Bid to help immigrants navigate driving exams

‘Free translator­s’

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WICHITA, Kan, June 5, (AP): Kansas is launching a project to help immigrants in one meatpackin­g town get driver’s licenses, by offering them free translator­s when they take their exams.

Meatpackin­g plants, the largest employers in western Kansas, have drawn a diverse population to the region, but the state offers exams only in English or Spanish. The pilot project in Garden City that starts June 21 won’t cost the state anything, because the translator­s will be volunteers.

“This partnershi­p affords immigrants and refugees more than just the ability to drive,” said Benjamin Anderson, who came up with the idea. “It represents independen­ce and, for many of them, it represents a sense of identity — a feeling that ‘I belong here.’ ... And from a practical standpoint, this will result in safer drivers — a safer environmen­t on the roads because people will be driving legally.”

Anderson, the administra­tor of the Kearney County Hospital in Lakin, has championed the immigrant communitie­s that have settled in western Kansas. His deal with Kansas driver’s license officials will provide volunteer translator­s in at least seven different languages: Somali, Arabic, Sudanese, Burmese (Karen dialect), Swahili, Filipino (Tagalog dialect), and Ethiopian. The translator­s will help people take written and behind-the-wheel driver examinatio­ns in Garden City.

Kansas law already requires people who get a driver’s license to be living here legally, and simply offering the examinatio­ns in more languages doesn’t change that requiremen­t.

“What is in it for Kansas is to make sure that we have as many safe drivers on the road as possible,” said Breana Berroth, driver’s license manager for the Kansas Department of Revenue.

Kearney County Hospital is working with Tyson Foods, which employs translator­s at its meatpackin­g plant outside Garden City, to help find the volunteers for the program. The hospital is also drawing on its relationsh­ips with local immigrant communitie­s.

One of the volunteers is Mursal Naleye, a Somali who works as a translator at the Tyson Foods plant. Naleye has had his driver’s license for seven years and often gives rides to others.

Some immigrants living in Kansas have been getting their driver’s licenses in Texas and Colorado, but the Revenue Department’s motor vehicles division has been cracking down on that practice, Berroth said. Some new immigrants are just driving without a license.

Another person who plans to volunteer for the program is Ifrah Ahmed, who came to Kansas in 2012 from Kenya, where English is taught as a second language in schools.

Ahmed said some immigrants buy a driver’s license from other states, but wind up getting in trouble. She added that there have been many accidents happening in Garden City involving immigrants who don’t understand the rules of traffic.

Some states such as California already offer their driver’s license exam in dozens of languages that reflect their own population­s, while others may offer just one or two languages. Berroth noted that some states have different testing systems that can accommodat­e more languages or have had universiti­es translate the written driving exams.

The Kansas program comes against the backdrop of last year’s decision by Republican Gov Sam Brownback to withdraw from the federal government’s refugee resettleme­nt program. But Berroth said she has not heard anything from Brownback’s administra­tion about the driver’s license project.

The changing demographi­cs in western Kansas are part of a nationwide trend that some studies show will eventually make minorities the majority of the US workforce which will be paying the Social Security of today’s generation of workers, Anderson said.

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