The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Communitie­s leap into gap to resettle refugees

- By Mary Hall

Wars in Syria, Afghanista­n and now Ukraine are overwhelmi­ng the way the world handles and permanentl­y resettles refugees. But an approach called “community sponsorshi­p,” recently endorsed by the U.S. government, is helping and may actually work better.

Think of it as creating a surrogate community for the refugees.

Instead of government­s and nongovernm­ental organizati­ons completely managing a refugee’s case, neighbors, faith-based groups and co-workers pitch in. They commit to giving refugee families financial, emotional and practical support as they build new lives in a new country.

What’s different?

Usually, the United States accepts refugees and for about three months helps them find a home, job and schools for their children. After that, refugee families still have access to special services, but have to handle it on their own. Many struggle with English or understand­ing how America works.

With community sponsorshi­p, the government works with a nonprofit organizati­on that has a network of volunteers in the refugee’s community ready to help. The teams can range from 5 to 20 people who are on call with a refugee family for at least the first six months, though often longer.

These volunteers may help the family with paying rent, paperwork, enrolling children in school, practicing the local language, navigating cultural difference­s and anything else they might need.

The United States government only started using community sponsorshi­p in October to support Afghan refugees. But the United Nations and other countries have been at it for years.

Canada, for example, has settled 300,000 refugees this way. Their research showed the sponsorshi­p approach builds stronger bonds in a refugee’s new neighborho­od — and the surroundin­g community becomes more open-minded.

Within five years, 70% of sponsored refugees were earning income. Twenty years later, the refugees’ income was above the Canadian average.

These facts around income are important because an overwhelmi­ng number of Americans who oppose immigratio­n do so because they think it hurts the economy, according to a recent Newsnation poll.

Why do we need it?

About 84 million people have been forcibly displaced worldwide as a result of persecutio­n, conflict or violence and resettleme­nt spots are available for less than 1% of them. As a result, there’s a desperate need for programs that can help more people.

More than half a million Ukrainians have fled to neighborin­g countries following the Russian invasion. It’s likely some of them will end up in the United States at some point and possibly be eligible for community sponsorshi­p.

But that process of vetting, paperwork and interviews often takes years.

Multiple nonprofit organizati­ons in the United States have been using a community sponsorshi­p approach on their own to help refugees.

Having a federal policy is important, though, because it makes community sponsorshi­p easier to implement and consistent.

The U.S. resettles more refugees than any other country. Nonprofit organizati­ons pick up a lot of that slack.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States