Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

HHS Announces $2.3 Million to Help Refugees Settle in U.S.

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • HHS Announces $2.3 Million to Help Refugees Settle in U.S.

    HHS Announces $2.3 Million to Help Refugees Settle in U.S.


    LOUISVILLE, Ky., Sept. 20 /U.S. Newswire/ -- HHS Secretary Tommy G.
    Thompson today awarded a $3.2 million grant to the Catholic Charities
    of Louisville to provide medical care, job training and other services
    to 2,000 recent refugees to the United States.

    The Catholic Charities of Louisville's Kentucky Wilson-Fish Program
    will use the grant to help refugees integrate into American society by
    offering cash and medical assistance, helping them learn English, and
    providing social services such as job training.

    "Kentucky compassionately opens its arms to refugees from around the
    world," Secretary Thompson said. "This grant is another example of
    President Bush working with our nation's faith-based communities to
    ensure that new refugees' arrival in the United States is as smooth as
    possible."

    Administered by HHS' Administration for Children and Families, the
    $3.2 million grant will allow the Kentucky Wilson-Fish Program to
    serve 2,000 refugees, asylum seekers, or victims of human
    trafficking. More than 1,300 of the refugees who will be served
    recently arrived in the United States, while 640 of the refugees have
    been in the United States for a longer period of time but will be
    served by the programs.

    "As a faith-based community, Catholic Charities has had a long history
    of collaborating with the federal government to provide social
    services to the greater community," said Steve Bogus, executive
    director of Catholic Charities, Archdiocese of Louisville. "Catholic
    Charities is honored to accept this award which will allow us to
    practice the precepts of our faith on a daily basis, Catholic social
    teaching, and to fulfill our commitment to faithful citizenship."

    The Kentucky Wilson-Fish Program, one of the largest of its kind in
    the nation, provides day-to-day assistance to refugees to help them
    better integrate into American society and sets a goal of finding jobs
    for refugees within four months of their arrival in the United
    States. The program assists refugees from such countries as Ethiopia,
    Sudan, Congo, Liberia, Togo, Rwanda, Somalia, Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan,
    Kosovo, Bosnia, Azerbaijan, the former Soviet Union, Armenia, Vietnam
    and Columbia.

    The grant is part of President Bush's Faith-Based and Community
    Initiative, which enables some of the most effective social service
    providers in American to compete for federal funding to make a
    difference in the lives of our most vulnerable citizens -- without
    compromising the provider's religious character and independence.

    As part of this initiative, HHS' Compassion Capital Fund was created
    three years ago and has awarded more than $150 million to support
    efforts in local communities provide services to our neediest
    neighbors. President Bush's budget proposal for fiscal year 2005 would
    increase support for the Compassion Capital Fund to $161 million.

    ---

    Note: All HHS press releases, fact sheets and other press materials
    are available at http://www.hhs.gov/news.

    http://www.usnewswire.com

    Contact: ACF Press Office, 202-401-9215

    09/20 18:51
Working...
X