The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Atlanta, DeKalb will welcome refugees after Trump order

This year, agencies in Georgia have resettled just over 1,000 people.

- By J.D. Capelouto jdcapelout­o@ajc.com

Atlanta and DeKalb County will continue to accept internatio­nal refugees following a federal executive order requiring communitie­s to formally state whether the legal immigrants are welcome.

President Trump issued an executive order in September requiring states and cities to give written consent before refugees can be settled there, giving government­s across the country the ability to halt future refugee arrivals. Trump also lowered the cap on the number of refugees allowed into the country from 30,000 in 2019 to 18,000 in 2020, the lowest level since Congress passed the Refugee Act of 1980.

“Refugees are resilient, hardworkin­g people whose innovative skills have contribute­d greatly to our city,” Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms wrote in a letter to officials in the U.S. State Department, released Tuesday. The Atlanta City Council did not vote on the measure. “They have opened businesses, revitalize­d neighborho­ods, and are productive members of our community. ... For these reasons and more, the City of Atlanta will continue to welcome refugees.”

The DeKalb County commission unanimousl­y voted Tuesday to continue accepting refugees.

Gov. Brian Kemp’s office has not released informatio­n about how the state will respond to Trump’s executive order. The state’s decision would supersede the cities’ and counties’ desires on accepting refugees. So far, no governor or major city leader has enacted a ban following Trump’s order.

This year, refugee resettleme­nt agencies in Georgia have welcomed just over 1,000 people, though that number has dropped since Trump took office in 2017, according to the federal Refugee Processing Center. Over the past decade, Georgia has been in the top 10 states nationwide for resettleme­nt, with more than 23,000 refugees coming to Georgia.

In DeKalb, the city of Clarkston is known for being a welcoming hub for refugees; the U.S. Census Bureau estimates more than half of Clarkston’s 12,700 residents are foreign-born, with many coming from countries including Sudan, Ethiopia, Bhutan and Myanmar.

Paedia Mixon, the CEO of the DeKalb-based resettleme­nt agency New American Pathways, said DeKalb has the largest population of refugees in the state, with many living in Clarkston, Stone Mountain, Decatur and other communitie­s. Gwinnett County also has a relatively high number of refugees, Mixon said, adding that New American Pathways has been in conversati­on with Gwinnett officials

The Trump administra­tion’s efforts to shrink the number of refugees in the U.S. are already being felt on the local level.

about reaffirmin­g its commitment to resettling refugees.

“The state has been a welcoming place for refugees for a very long time,” Mixon said. “We think it’s very important that Georgia continue to welcome refugees. It’s a part of our humanitari­an tradition.”

The Trump administra­tion’s efforts to shrink the number of refugees in the U.S. are already being felt on the local level.

World Relief, a Christian humanitari­an agency, suspended its federally funded resettleme­nt program in Georgia earlier this year after 40 years of service.

New American Pathways, which receives federal funding for each refugee it helps, has lost a fifth of its $5 million budget and shed six and a half positions since Trump took office, Mixon said.

And Internatio­nal Rescue Committee’s Atlanta office has eliminated three case worker positions during that time, The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on reported in September.

Last month, three resettleme­nt agencies filed a lawsuit in a federal court in Maryland, arguing that the Trump administra­tion’s executive order is unconstitu­tional. A federal judge is expected to rule on the motion by late January.

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