Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

FORT CHAFFEE won’t be used for refugees, at least for now.

Post in Arkansas is kept as backup

- MAX BRYAN Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Michael R. Wickline of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.

FORT SMITH — Fort Chaffee will not be used at this time to house Afghan refugees.

Arkansas National Guard Lt. Col. Brian Mason on Tuesday confirmed the military base hasn’t been selected to house refugees, citing the readiness of other sites in the United States to take them. Mason said the site could be used in the future if the refugee population becomes too great for the selected sites.

At his news conference Tuesday, Gov. Asa Hutchinson said “the informatio­n that I have was that the sites in Arkansas have been evaluated.

“They are not in the top tier of installati­ons for receiving large numbers of Afghan refugees, so I don’t anticipate that happening,” he said.

“What you got to look at in the future is if you have 10,000 refugees coming to one particular installati­on in Wisconsin, they are going to be processed there but then where are they going to go?” Hutchinson said. “So I think there is another layer that you could have Afghan refugees come into more rural areas. But we just don’t know that yet.”

Military officials on Friday through Sunday assessed Fort Chaffee to house refugees, said Bob Oldham, public affairs specialist for the Arkansas National Guard. The military base is a training site for the Arkansas Army National Guard and Air National Guard. It has hosted refugees from Southeast Asia and Cuba in decades past. New Orleans residents displaced by Hurricane Katrina in 2005 also were sent to Fort Chaffee.

“We are in a backup position that if other states are not able to handle it at the installati­ons and we are receiving more refugees than anticipate­d, it could be an overflow. But we are not on the front line on that,” Hutchinson said.

Afterward, Hutchinson said he was referring only to Fort Chaffee.

“We only have 1,300 beds, refugees that we could take, and so they are looking at larger numbers,” he said. “They are looking at larger installati­ons that would have full capacity, so I think that’s a reason we are not in the top tier.”

Fort Chaffee was the only Arkansas site being assessed for refugees, according to Shealyn Sowers, communicat­ions director for the governor.

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