The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Broken by Trump, refugee program aims to return stronger

- By Julie Watson

Krish Vignarajah has been in survival mode for four years as the Trump administra­tion slashed refugee admissions by 85%. She had to close a third of her resettleme­nt agency’s 48 offices and lay off more than 120 employees, some with decades of experience.

Now, she is scrambling to not only rehire staff but double the capacity of her Lutheran Immigratio­n and Refugee Service, an expansion not seen since the agency scaled up for the wave of refugees that arrived after the fall of Saigon in 1975.

All nine U.S. resettleme­nt agencies are experienci­ng the whiplash. They are gearing up to handle 125,000 refugees this year, and possibly more after that, if President Joe Biden makes good on his promise to restore the number of people able to start new lives in America after fleeing persecutio­n or war.

‘Destructio­n’

Agencies say they welcome the challenge after being pushed to the brink. But the last four years illustrate­s the need to make the 41-year-old program that has long enjoyed bipartisan support less vulnerable to political whims, if America is to regain its position as a leader in providing sanctuary for the world’s oppressed.

“We’ve seen how the sole concentrat­ion of refugee policy in the White House can wreak such destructio­n in the wrong hands,” Vignarajah said.

The Trump administra­tion sowed so many obstacles that there are doubts whether the pipeline can rebound quickly enough to meet Biden’s expected

target this year, especially during the coronaviru­s pandemic that has restricted the ability to safely interview refugees in camps and crowded cities.

“The foundation of the system has been so broken that to even get to 125,000 next year, there’s a big question mark,” said Jennifer Foy, vice president of U.S. programs with World Relief, a resettleme­nt agency.

Refugee admissions are determined by the president each year, and federal funding for resettleme­nt agencies is based on the number of people they resettle in a given year.

As president, Donald Trump targeted the refugee program under his antiimmigr­ation policies, dropping admissions yearly until they reached a record low of 15,000 for fiscal year 2021, which started in October. Historical­ly, the average has been 95,000 under

Republican and Democratic administra­tions.

The Trump administra­tion defended the cuts as protecting American jobs during the pandemic and said it sought to have refugees settle closer to their home countries while working on solving the crises that caused them to flee.

More than 100 U.S. resettleme­nt offices closed during Trump’s term, including eight of 27 belonging to World Relief, Foy’s agency. Its warehouses of donated household goods have grown sparse, and its relationsh­ips with hundreds of landlords have waned because almost no refugees are arriving.

The Trump administra­tion also cut or reassigned U.S. support staff overseas who processed applicatio­ns.

‘Global need’

Despite potential problems reopening the pipeline,

advocates say it is important that Biden set this year’s ceiling at 125,000 people, to start building back up the program.

He has also vowed to seek legislatio­n setting an annual baseline of 95,000 refugee admissions, which would help stabilize funding for resettleme­nt agencies. Biden’s campaign said the number could go beyond that “commensura­te with our responsibi­lity, our values and the unpreceden­ted global need.”

Biden, who co-sponsored legislatio­n forming the refugee program in 1980, says reopening the doors to refugees is “how we will restore the soul of our nation.”

“Resettling refugees helps reunite families, enriches the fabric of America, and enhances our standing, influence and security in the world,” Biden said in June for World Refugee Day.

For decades, America admitted more refugees each year than all other countries combined, only to fall behind Canada in 2018. While the U.S. program shrank and a dozen other countries followed in shutting their doors, refugee numbers worldwide ballooned to a record 26 million, because of political strife, violence and famine.

Biden has said he wants to make it easier for refugees to get to the United States by expanding efforts to register and process them abroad, and making highereduc­ation visas available to those seeking safety. He has also indicated more priority should be given to Latin Americans, especially Venezuelan­s whose numbers now rival Syrians among the largest group of displaced people.

Refugees already underwent more rigorous screening than any other person entering the U.S. before additional requiremen­ts under Trump slowed the process to almost a standstill, according to the Internatio­nal Refugee Assistance Project.

Last year, the Trump administra­tion started requiring refugees to provide addresses dating back 10 years, a near-impossible task for people living in exile.

“The Trump administra­tion began to incorporat­e novel and untested techniques that overwhelme­d the system with delays and dubious vetting results,” said Vignarajah, the CEO of Lutheran Immigratio­n and Refugee Service.

Still, changing that won’t be easy.

“It’s easy to ratchet it up, very difficult to ratchet it down, and that’s not to say some of those duplicativ­e layers of vetting actually make us safer,” she said.

Questions to answer

There are also questions about whom should be at the front of the line.

The Trump administra­tion changed the eligibilit­y rules, setting up its own categories of whom qualifies, rather than using the long-standing referral system by the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees that makes selections based on a person’s need to be resettled.

For instance, there was no category for people fleeing war, like Syrians.

As a result, tens of thousands of refugees conditiona­lly approved by the Department of Homeland Security suddenly were disqualifi­ed.

Advocates want such cases to get priority.

Mahmoud Mansour, who fled Syria’s civil war to Jordan, hopes to regain his spot. His family had completed the work to go to the United States, when the Trump administra­tion issued its travel ban barring people from Syria indefinite­ly and suspending the refugee program for 120 days.

“The past four years, during Trump’s term, our lives were ruined,” said Mansour, a tailor who has been out of work for a year and relies on help from his two brothers in the U.S. to survive. “In one moment, our dreams vanished.”

Now, Mansour feels optimistic again. The 47-yearold father said Biden sent a strong message about restoring humanitari­an policies when he lifted the travel ban on his first day in office.

Mansour hopes his family will finally be reunited. And he wants the new president to know, “We will not be a burden. We will be workers there. You will benefit from us, and of course, we will benefit from you.”

 ?? OMAR AKOUR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Syrian refugee Mahmoud Mansour, 47, helps his youngest daughter Sahar, 8, with her homework at his rented apartment in Amman, Jordan, on Wednesday. Mansour’s family had completed the work to go to the United States when the Trump administra­tion issued its travel ban barring people from Syria indefinite­ly and suspending the refugee program for 120 days.
OMAR AKOUR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Syrian refugee Mahmoud Mansour, 47, helps his youngest daughter Sahar, 8, with her homework at his rented apartment in Amman, Jordan, on Wednesday. Mansour’s family had completed the work to go to the United States when the Trump administra­tion issued its travel ban barring people from Syria indefinite­ly and suspending the refugee program for 120 days.

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