January 23, 2004
Unpublished Letter From An Anonymous VDARE.COM Reader To The State
[Columbia S.C.]
Dear Editor:
Regarding the Oct 19 letter to the
editor about the work of
Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Services and
resettlement plans for Cayce: the recent resettlement
effort in Cayce was not the first to be changed by the
State Department.
Holyoke, Mass was taken off the list of resettlement
sites due to citizen concern. Also, Senator Sam
Brownback, at one time chair of the Senate immigration
subcommittee, stopped an initial resettlement plan of
Somali Bantu to his state of Kansas
saying ""I oppose any resettlement of Somali Bantu
refugees in the State of Kansas…Our office has contacted
the Department of State asking them to not resettle any
Somali Bantus in Kansas…Simply put this should not
occur".
Lutheran Immigration and Refugee
Services (LIRS) would be taken more seriously if it
devoted its own resources to its causes.
During the 90's the U.S. State
Department offered a program, known as the
Private Sector Initiative, under which refugee
sponsoring organizations such as LIRS could bring over
refugees if they paid all costs associated with
resettlement. Like all the other refugee agencies, LIRS
refused to use this program, preferring instead the model
under which they actually
make money by bringing in refugees.
LIRS makes money from the refugee
program in many ways:
- A per capita grant from the U.S.
State Department for each refugee it sponsors.
- 25% of every transportation loan
it collects from refugees it sponsors.
- LIRS receives up to $2,000 dollars
for each refugee by participating in a DHS program
known as the
Matching Grant Program. To get the $2,000, LIRS
needs only provide $200 in actual money plus 800
dollars worth of
donated clothes and furniture.
-
All expenses and administrative
overhead for its
Washington area headquarters are paid by the U.S.
government.
-
Money is available from an array
of other federal and state grants as well.
One may well ask why LIRS should get
any form of government assistance as the refugees it
sponsors are eligible for all
forms of welfare within 1 month of arrival. After 4
months LIRS has no legal responsibility towards
the refugees it brought over.
The
Good Samaritan returned to the Inn where he brought
the man who had been beaten by robbers. He paid the
expenses that had accumulated to that point and
promised to pay future expenses.
He didn't leave the bill to others
while claiming the moral high ground for himself.