Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada inspires U.S. refugee settlement program

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Jan, 2023 10:50 AM
  • Canada inspires U.S. refugee settlement program

WASHINGTON - The United States is introducing a new private refugee sponsorship program that's based on a similar system in Canada.

State Department officials say the Canadian model helped inspire and inform the design and implementation of the U.S. program, known as the Welcome Corps.

The U.S. describes the program, which will allow ordinary Americans to privately sponsor refugees, as the boldest innovation in refugee resettlement in four decades.

They also acknowledge that it borrows heavily from Canada, where citizens have been able to privately help resettle refugees since the 1970s.

The new U.S. program hopes to enlist 10,000 private sponsors to help resettle some 5,000 new arrivals by the end of the year.

Officials who spoke at a State Department media briefing provided on the condition of anonymity described the Canadian program as "wildly successful" and cited it as an important model.

"We definitely drew lessons from our Canadian allies, from their program," one official told the briefing last week.

"We are very grateful to our friends and allies in Canada who gave us a lot of advice as we were designing this program, and we're really, really grateful to them for that."

MORE National ARTICLES

Trudeau 'extremely worried' about hospital strain

Trudeau 'extremely worried' about hospital strain
Justin Trudeau is urging Canadians to get vaccinated against both COVID-19 and influenza and says officials will consider the advice of public health authorities when it comes to measures like mandatory masks. He says it's everyone responsibility to "step up again" to get vaccinated and keep their families and communities safe from what could also be a resurgence of COVID-19.

Trudeau 'extremely worried' about hospital strain

Fortin found not guilty in sexual assault case

Fortin found not guilty in sexual assault case
Fortin was the military officer in charge of the federal government's COVID-19 vaccine rollout until May 2021, but he was removed from that position after the allegation came to light.

Fortin found not guilty in sexual assault case

Permanent residents can apply to join Armed Forces

Permanent residents can apply to join Armed Forces
Permanent residents can now apply to join the Canadian Armed Forces, regardless of whether they have been trained by a foreign military. It's the latest effort by Canada's military to boost recruitment numbers, which are lagging well behind the target of adding 5,900 new members by March.

Permanent residents can apply to join Armed Forces

Vancouver has Chinese ‘police station’: report

Vancouver has Chinese ‘police station’: report
Safeguard Defenders - a not-for-profit human rights group - says two of the new locations are in Canada: one in Vancouver and the second unknown. The group's previous report alleges employees from the overseas police system use intimidation and threats to enforce the “involuntary" return of immigrants back to China for persecution.

Vancouver has Chinese ‘police station’: report

B.C. urges flu vaccines for children as cases rise

B.C. urges flu vaccines for children as cases rise
Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry says after two years of low rates of flu, mostly due to travel restrictions, the province is seeing a "dramatic increase" in illness and it arrived sooner than normal.

B.C. urges flu vaccines for children as cases rise

BC Assessment warns values up but not current

BC Assessment warns values up but not current
BC Assessment says in a statement that most owners can expect to see a five to 15 per cent rise in values when notices are issued Jan. 3. However, it says those figures are based on the real estate market as of July 1, 2022, and conditions have changed.  

BC Assessment warns values up but not current