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  1. #1
    Senior Member moosetracks's Avatar
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    Refugees cause worry in Mich. economy

    News
    07/25/2007 07:47:36 EST Paul Sancya/AP Photo

    Refugees Cause Worry About Mich. Economy
    By JEFF KAROUB
    Associated Press Writer

    The area in southeast Michigan where 2,000 Iraqi refugees are expected to resettle already has 169,000 people out of work. Some fear the influx will push the state's unemployment rate even higher.

    Imad Hamad, regional director of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, is concerned that the area cannot support many more people without significant federal aid. He likened it to "bringing more passengers to a ship that is already sinking."

    The mayor of Warren, which has a large Arab-American population, recently said the refugees will strain services and drag down an already struggling state economy.

    But others, such as University of Michigan economist Donald Grimes, say the entrepreneurial attitude and advanced degrees of many Iraqis might help turn the ship of state around.

    "It's one of the things that could help Michigan recover," he said.

    Federal officials expect about 7,000 Iraqis fleeing the fighting in their homeland to move to the United States by September, with up to half of them eventually going to Michigan. The first few should arrive this month in the Detroit area, home to about 300,000 people who trace their roots to the Middle East.

    Michigan's unemployment rate climbed to 7.2 percent in June - the highest in the nation. The rate hit 7.7 percent in Detroit and the surrounding area last month.

    Kurt Metzger, a Detroit-area demographer, said there are reasons to be concerned about high unemployment and cutbacks in retail and service jobs, since many earlier Arab-American immigrants found jobs in small shops and stores or started their own ventures.

    But he said local Arabs and Chaldeans - Iraqi Catholics - have a history of owning businesses and helping out newcomers.

    "The immigrants are willing to put in long, hard hours at jobs that Americans will not take. ... (They) aren't coming over here to get on the public dole," said Metzger, research director of the United Way for Southeastern Michigan.

    Metzger said refugees can help revitalize aging communities that are losing population. He cited the example of Hamtramck, a city surrounded by Detroit. The population of the once predominantly Polish enclave grew by 25 percent between 1990 and 2000 - after dropping for 50 years.

    "If you look ... at the main thoroughfares, there are Yemeni, Bangladeshi, Bosnian and Serbian communities developing," he said. "New restaurants, grocery stores and other development are being driven by these new immigrant groups.

    "By and large what you're seeing is a rebirth of the city because of immigration."

    Still, the state struggled to meet the needs of those who fled Iraq in the 1990s in the aftermath of the Persian Gulf War, Hamad said.

    "Even with all the conveniences in Michigan, language and culture-wise ... I don't think that the state or social workers were fully ready and well-trained," he said. "The state received additional funds from the federal government, but not enough to address the needs of the influx of refugees."

    Warren Mayor Mark Steenbergh doesn't oppose refugees, said his spokesman Joe Munem. He based his concerns about a surge of refugees on estimates that ran as high as 15,000 new Iraqi immigrants.

    "People who have lived here their whole lives are having trouble finding jobs," said Munem, a first-generation Arab-American. "If you're going to have refugees coming here and you want them to be self-sustaining, why aren't we talking about sending them to Texas and Florida, which have a comparatively booming economy?"


    Rafat Ita, who came to the U.S. in 1994 from Iraq and now helps other refugees in his job with Lutheran Social Services of Michigan, said it's unfair to deny those who have been traumatized in their homeland from rejoining friends and family here.

    Ita's agency is the local affiliate for Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Services and Episcopal Migration Ministries, one of the main resettlement agencies working with the U.S. State Department.

    "I know we're struggling with the economy, but we're going to reach out to the communities and other agencies to help out and serve those refugees," he said. "We're not going to back off from doing that."

    Once resettled in Michigan, Ita said he worked two jobs and was able to buy a house after two years. He followed his brother, who lives in Warren.

    "He's serving in the U.S. Army now, overseas," Ita said. "Is this a burden to the community or an asset to the country?"
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    Do not vote for Party this year, vote for America and American workers!

  2. #2
    Senior Member americangirl's Avatar
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    Look....this just proves that the U.S. cannot take in every single refugee (political, religious, economic, or otherwise), from every country in the world!

    We have to stop this madness NOW!! We are endangering the quality of life of Americans!!
    Calderon was absolutely right when he said...."Where there is a Mexican, there is Mexico".

  3. #3
    Senior Member moosetracks's Avatar
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    Yes, american

    But how? We have politicians that won't stand up for America anymore. Many are working for just one race, not all Americans.

    Most are putting their careers above the Country and us.

    I truly believe we need a 3rd Party and maybe more citizens will pay attention this time, and listen to a 3rd Party.

    If you notice, those immigrants that came here, are now getting upset because more are coming....but they never mentioned the jobs Americans lost by their coming here in the first place......it's all about them, whether Latino, Arab....this is about their not wanting things for all Americans, it's what they want for themselves!
    Do not vote for Party this year, vote for America and American workers!

  4. #4
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    You know I have been thinking about these Iraqi refugees.

    IF we are bringing democracy to Iraq and the Iraqi people want us there and if we are fighting Al Queda rather than Iraqis - then what do these people have to fear?

    It would seem that if we are doing good things for Iraq, these people who helped would be OK in their own country.

    This smells, of course everything our government does these days seems suspect to me. Also, it looks as if these people would be better off somewhere else - maybe Egypt. Some other country over there where they might be closer to their culture. Of course, maybe Michigan is where their culture is. I can't see, however, they will be safer here in America. Americans aren't safe - what's to make anything think the government can keep these people safe.

    Perhaps they are not being brought here for their safety??????
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