The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Nonprofit gives boost to refugees

- By Aja Hannah and Lee Chilcote Of The Land For The Chronicle Of Philanthro­py

CLEVELAND » Hakizimana Muvunye, a refugee from Congo who lives in Cleveland, is a man doing his best. He’s the owner of Asante Landscapin­g but has only five clients so he also drives for Uber.

“I need to take care of my family,” he said. Muvunye and his wife, Irene Twizere, have five children.

Muvunye came to Cleveland in February 2016 from Uganda after fleeing armed conflict and insecurity in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Now he’s striving to build his business. He’s counting on US Together, a nonprofit that provides services to refugees and immigrants, and especially its Microenter­prise Developmen­t program to help him achieve this goal.

The program, which helps eligible refugees and immigrants develop, finance, and expand small businesses, was vital to starting Asante Landscapin­g. The staff helped Muvunye register the company with the Ohio Secretary of State and apply for loans that he needed.

Funded by the federal Office of Refugee Resettleme­nt for the past five years, the program has helped more than 30 entreprene­urs gain access to nearly $50,000 in startup capital and creditbuil­ding loans. In total, 89 participan­ts have registered to start a business. Three local participan­ts have opened brick-and-mortar stores, with a fourth on the way.

The partnershi­p between US Together and the federal resettleme­nt office is an example of how nonprofits and government agencies are working together here and in other regions, such as Buffalo, N.Y., to help as the number of refugees coming to the United States, especially from Afghanista­n and Ukraine, is increasing. Welcoming new refugees and immigrants matters to the Midwest and other regions because they may help shift declining population­s and boost local economies with new businesses.

US Together wants to expand what it does and who it serves, but right now it is working to find new sources of funding because the fiveyear federal grant that provided the program’s $70,000 annual budget expires in September. The nonprofit has applied to have the grant renewed.

“We have a little bridge funding available that might sustain us a few months past September,” said Evan Chwalek, economic integratio­n coordinato­r at US Together.

Also, the nonprofit is in the early stages of seeking other government and foundation grants to stabilize the program. Money from a new refugee-assistance program planned in Cuyahoga County could be tapped for help. And US Together hopes to partner with Global Cleveland, a nonprofit working to increase the number of internatio­nal newcomers to the region, to eventually develop a business incubator program.

Joe Cimperman. president of Global Cleveland, says programs to help newcomers need support from all sectors.

“Programs like this should absolutely be supported and roundly invested in, and not just by the public sector,” Cimperman said. “We need to wake up to this. People tend to look at immigrants and refugees as charity cases. Let’s make it easier for them to make money and hire people.”

Cleveland, like many other Midwestern cities, has seen a decline in population over the years. According to the U.S. census, Cleveland’s population decreased by 6 percent over the past 10 years. Northeast Ohio lost 1.6 percent of its population from 2007 to 2017, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland.

However, the number of immigrants and refugees coming to the region is increasing because of people fleeing Afghanista­n and Ukraine, said Maria Teverovsky, director of developmen­t at US Together. “We’ve had an unpreceden­ted wave of migration in Northeast Ohio, coupled with an unpreceden­ted migration crisis internatio­nally,” she said.

Ohio ranked sixth in the number of refugees resettled in 2019, just behind states with larger population­s like California, New York, and Texas. About 1,500 refugees resettled in Ohio in 2019, with about 500 coming yearly to Cleveland.

And as they arrive, many of them bring an entreprene­urial spirit. Studies show that refugees and immigrants are more likely than people born in the United States to start businesses. While migrants are 15 percent of the U.S. population, they represent 25 percent of entreprene­urs. Community Refugee and Immigratio­n Services, a nonprofit in Columbus, says refugee businesses generate $605.7 million per year in economic impact in the Columbus region alone.

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