| The Skanner
(Portland, Oregon)
November 30, 2006
CITY FOCUSES ON REFUGEE POPULATION
Immigrant task force to address needs of growing community
By Brian Stimson
With a foreign-born population numbering in the tens of
thousands, Portland has become home for immigrants and refugees;
in some neighborhoods, one in three residents hail from another
country.
On Dec. 6, the City Council will hear a report from Portland
State University Capstone students on immigrant demographics
and the issues affecting those communities. The information
is intended to help a soon-to-be formed task force determine
the issues affecting Portland’s immigrant and refugee population.
The task force will ultimately present recommendations to
the council about how that community could be better served.
The City Council, with the help of several immigrant-rights
and multicultural organizations, passed a resolution on Oct.
18 aimed at creating stronger ties between city government
and the sometimes-disconnected immigrant communities and reaffirming
their civil rights.
The resolution calls for the creation of the task force to
identify barriers between immigrants and refugees in civic
and public life. It also acknowledges the mistrust created
by federal anti-terrorism and immigration policies; affirms
that they are protected from undue scrutiny from law enforcement;
and it “urges (the) federal government to create a fair and
humane immigration reform” policy.
Several groups worked with Mayor Tom Potter’s office in
the construction of the resolution, including the Center for
Intercultural Organizing, the Latino Network and the American
Friends Service Committee, according to Carmen Rubio, community
affairs director for the mayor.
In the wake of similar actions taken in Seattle and other
cities, Kayse Jama, founder of the Center for Intercultural
Organizing, decided to formally address immigration rights
in Portland with the creation of the resolution. Jama, who
teaches a Capstone Program class at Portland State University
on the politics of immigration, organized a forum last December
at City Hall that brought 200 refugees to their government
offices. The Capstone Program focuses on the immigrant/refugee
experience. Out of that 2005 forum was born Bridgetown Voices,
a collaboration for immigrant and refugee communities.
“We’ve always been asked what we think – but no follow-up,”
Jama said, adding that the formation of the task force should
guarantee that follow-up. Jama and many others in the immigrant
community say there is a disconnect between city government
and their population. The task force aims to bridge that divide.
Rubio said the makeup of the task force should be determined
by end of the year. The exact size and composition of the
group is yet to be decided, but it is working on hiring a
project facilitator. Compared to other government commissions
and think tanks, this task force’s mission will be relatively
short-lived. The city plans to hear the group’s findings and
recommendations within a year.
According to Rubio and others, various community groups
already have surveyed and questioned immigrant populations
about the barriers they face in Portland.
One surveyor, Phyllis Laners, said she found many similar
problems faced by today’s immigrants and refugees. Laners,
project coordinator for the Immigrant and Refugee Community
Organization, surveyed mostly refugees from Southeast Asia,
Eastern Europe and the Caribbean and found most reported two
basic problems: the surveys themselves and culture shock.
Many refugees had trouble with text questionnaires because
they feared government retribution, similar to experiences
in their country of origin. Community-based surveyors found
face-to-face meetings much more beneficial, but also more
time-consuming. Many refugees also said they planned to return
to their home countries, seeing no direct benefit for answering
the surveys.
For new immigrants, adjusting to a culture is one of the
biggest hurdles, said Laners; employment, housing, literacy,
health care — even something as simple as at-home child care
— can be a big change for many of these “involuntary immigrants.”
Surprisingly, Laners said language was less of a barrier than
they expected.
A member of Bridgetown Voices and an immigrant herself,
Evelyne Ello-Hart said newcomers face a variety of challenges
when adjusting to life in Portland. Ello-Hart, who has several
degrees from Cote d’Ivoire, said she was forced to take several
minimum-wage jobs to support herself. In Portland for nearly
five years now, Ello-Hart is program supervisor for the Africa
Women’s Coalition.
The Cote d’Ivoire native said she hopes the resolution and
its resulting recommendations can build cross-cultural alliances
and nurture social change.
“We are part of Portland,” she said. “We don’t feel like
we are begging. … These are our struggles.”
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