Weekly Opinion Editorial
REFUGEES
PART 3:
TAKE CARE OF OUR OWN
by Steve Fair
In 1980, the United States
Congress created the Federal Refugee Resettlement
Program (FRRP)to provide for the effective resettlement of refugees and to
assist them to achieve economic self-sufficiency as quickly as possible after
arrival in the United States. The Senate
author was Senator Edward Kennedy and it unanimously passed the Senate. The act
was signed into law by President Carter and became effective on April 1,
1980. That first year (1980) 207,000
refugees entered the country. According
to the Pew Research Center, most of the refugees initially came from Eastern
Europe, Middle East and Cuba. Since 2002,
the most refugees have come from Burma (177,700), Iraq (144,400) and Somalia
(104,100). In 2019, D.R. Congo accounted for nearly 13,000 refugees followed by
Burma (Myanmar), Ukraine, Eritrea, and Afghanistan. Last year Texas took 2,500 refugees, the most
of any state.
There were many concerns in
1980 the FRRP would allow enemies of the U.S. to infiltrate the country. Proponents of FRRP assured the pubic each
refugee would be fully ‘vetted’ before being admitted. Vetting has proven to be difficult because
often the countries from which the refugee is fleeing is either uncooperative
or does not maintain sound records.
A May 2018 poll conducted by
Pew Research found that about half of Americans (51%) believed the U.S. had a
responsibility to accept refugees into the country, while 43% said it does not.
Of those approving, three-quarters were
Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents.
Only 26% of those who identified as Republican or leaning Republican
thought FRRP was good policy.
President Trump has set a
maximum of 18,000 refugees in fiscal year 2020, down from a cap of 30,000 in 2019. This is the lowest number of refugees
resettled by the U.S. in a single year since 1980, when Congress created the
FRRP. Trump has steadily reduced the
number of refugees allowed into the US since he took office.
The FRRP uses nine (9)
non-governmental organizations that are paid to help refugees resettle in the
United States. These religious or
community-based organizations are referred to as voluntary agencies (volags). The volags(using taxpayer dollars) provide each
refugee housing, food, and clothing and English lessons. They help them enroll for federal, state and
local welfare programs and refer them to social service providers. The
estimated cost for refugee resettlement totaled $976 million in 2019 and is
projected to be $892 million in 2020. Each of the 30,000 resettled refugees in
2019 cost American taxpayers an estimated $32,533. Many of the volag leaders have
been calling on President Trump to increase the refugee resettlement ceiling to
75,000 for 2019, because Trump’s refugee policy has cost them money.
On September 26th,
President Trump signed an executive order that allows for states, cities, and
counties to ‘opt out’ of allowing refugees be re-settled in their area. Governor Greg Abbott of Texas became the
first governor to ‘opt out,’ stating Texas had enough refugees and illegals to
take care of now. On Wednesday a federal
judge in Maryland suspended the policy because he said the EO would likely be
found to be illegal. The issue will likely be settled by the Supreme Court
after the impeachment trial. Four thoughts:
First, a federal judge should
not have more authority than the president or a governor. Second, the FRRP was conceived, implemented and
sustained by liberals. Third, there is no reliable, dependable ‘vetting’
process for refugees fleeing third world countries. Fourth, FRRP is big business for the volags
and Trump’s policy is hurting business.
Opposing FRRP is not popular because people see opposition as being cold
hearted and callous, but American taxpayers do more than their fair share of
charitable work around the world. It’s
time to take care of those in need in our country.
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