Imperial Valley Press

Refugee industry heads to Capitol Hill

- JOE GUZZARDI

The refugee resettleme­nt industry is in full panic mode. Some may question whether “industry” is the correct word.

But the multi-million dollar budgets voluntary agencies (volags) have at their disposal and the lofty salaries the directors earn reveal that resettleme­nt is a big and lucrative business, largely American taxpayer-funded.

Aided by a favorable Supreme Court decision, President Trump wants ever-fewer refugees.

To the contractor­s’ dismay, last year President Trump threw out 5,000 as his recommende­d cap.

As of July 1, 2018, the State Department has admitted 16,229 refugees, a pace well below this year’s 45,000 ceiling.

With the Oct. 1 deadline looming for the president to make his annual determinat­ion on the fiscal year 2019 refugee ceiling, the stakes are high for the nine federal contractor­s.

Lower refugee totals put at risk volags’ substantia­l cash flow that includes $1,950 for each refugee and each child with the contractor pocketing $750 in federal and state grant money, as well as other perks.

To protect their monetary interests, the volags gathered on Capitol Hill this month to lobby for higher refugee totals.

Six of the nine volags are religious-based groups.

By lobbying on Capitol Hill, they ignore the church-state separation principle.

When Thomas Jefferson, James Madison and other Founding Fathers wrote about religious liberty’s importance, they also condemned church interferen­ce in federal policy.

Moreover, the IRS specifical­ly prohibits churches and other non-profits from engaging in political activity like lobbying.

The IRS code that pertains to 501(c)(3) volags states that they must completely refrain from political campaignin­g.

Yet in his Aug. 3 op-ed published in the widely read and influentia­l news magazine, The Hill, Rev. John McCullough, Church World Service CEO and president wrote a scathing commentary that attacked President Trump’s long-standing wish for fewer refugees, a sentiment many Americans share.

David Robinson, the State Department’s former Refugee Bureau acting director, shared his from-the-front perspectiv­e.

Robinson wrote that “the federal government provides about 90 percent of its collective budget” and its lobbying umbrella “wields enormous influence over the administra­tion’s refugee admissions policy.

It lobbies the Hill effectivel­y to increase the number of refugees admitted for permanent resettleme­nt each year…. If there is a conflict of interest, it is never mentioned…. The solution its members offer to every refugee crisis is simplistic and the same: increase the number of admissions to the United States without regard to budgets….”

Note the repeated references to lobbying even though the law prohibits it.

Like other federal immigratio­n legislatio­n, the 1980 Refugee Act and its consequenc­es went unchalleng­ed until the current administra­tion.

Proving the folly of never bucking the status quo, Refugee Resettleme­nt Watch’s Ann Corcoran wrote that nearly four decades after the last American left Vietnam, the United States still accepts Southeast Asian refugees.

More than 1.5 million have entered and contribute­d to non-refugee chain migrants.

Congress should turn its attention to the hard math behind refugee resettleme­nt: Refugees immediatel­y access food stamps, public housing, cash assistance, health care and child care. The Department of Health and Human Services doles out approximat­ely $1.5 billion in grants to state and local agencies, schools and non-profits for refugee-oriented legal advocacy, language education, mental-health services and domestic-violence prevention.

Continuing refugee business as usual is a mistake; resettleme­nt contractor­s profit, while the American communitie­s where refugees are relocated struggle through difficult transition periods. The multi-millions in dollars the United States spends domestical­ly on refugee programs would go 12 times as far if distribute­d in refugees’ home regions to provide for their shelter and care until they can safely return home.

No nation, including the United States, can indefinite­ly accept the world’s displaced population­s.

Joe Guzzardi is a Progressiv­es for Immigratio­n Reform analyst who has written about immigratio­n for more than 30 years. Contact him at jguzzardi@pfirdc.org

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