Massachusetts expected to resettle 2,000 Afghans
BOSTON (AP) » Massachusetts is expecting to receive twice as many Afghan refugees as it had anticipated following the Taliban takeover of the country last summer, one of the state’s major refugee resettlement agencies said Monday.
Jeffrey Thielman, president and CEO of the International Institute of New England, said around 2,000 evacuees are expected to be settled in the state by the end of next month. That’s up from the roughly 1,100 evacuees state officials anticipated in September, as thousands of Afghans were expected to arrive in states across the country as part of the first wave of evacuees.
Thielman said the state’s nonprofit resettlement agencies are prepared to handle the influx.
“This has been the most intense period of resettlement that we’ve ever experienced,” he said. “We are all these people have when they first arrive, so the demand is very intense.”
From October to last week, the International Institute of New England has resettled nearly 450 Afghan nationals in Massachusetts and New Hampshire — more than the organization resettled in the last three fiscal years combined, Thielman said.
Of those, about 150 Afghans have been settled in the Boston area, nearly 200 in Lowell and more than 80 in Manchester, New Hampshire, he said. Nearly 200 of the new arrivals are children.
The efforts received a boost last month when Republican Gov. Charlie Baker signed into law a supplemental budget allocating
$12 million to help resettle Afghan nationals, making Massachusetts one of the few states to provide local money to support federally-funded resettlement efforts.
Thielman said Massachusetts’ Afghan refugee population expected to exceed other New England states.
Neighboring New Hampshire is expected to take in more than 150 Afghans, he said. Connecticut has settled nearly 600 and Maine has settled more than 100, officials in those states said Monday. Rhode Island officials expect to settle about 250 Afghans while Vermont officials say the state will take in 250.