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ACA forced to shut down refugee resettlement program

ACA forced to shut down refugee resettlement program

Yahoo21-02-2025
BINGHAMTON, N.Y. (WIVT/WBGH) – A local agency has already lost federal funding it used to settle refugees in Greater Binghamton.
The American Civic Association has effectively shut down its Refugee Reception and Placement Program.
The Trump Administration has paused the federal financial support which had been providing $1,500 per person to cover resettlement costs for the first 90 days after a refugee arrives in our area.
ACA Executive Director Hussein Adams says the newcomers are hard workers who contribute more to the community than they take from it.
'Most of the local employers that have received our refugees and who are currently still employed, have had nothing but positive things to say about their work ethic, about their consistency, about their mentality, about what they have brought to the organization, to their business,' said Adams.
Adams says the ACA has resettled roughly 100 refugees since the start of 2024, including some at the start of this year.
He says his organization plans to use some state funding as well as money from foundations and other private donors to continue to support the people who are already here.
Adams says the federal refugee program is currently undergoing a 90-day review by the administration.
Meanwhile, President Trump has barred additional asylum-seekers from entering the country.
Adams says that forced some refugees to cancel their travel plans to come to Greater Binghamton.
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Michigan museum preserves Civil Rights artifacts amid federal efforts to downplay Black history
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San Francisco Chronicle​

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The building was taken apart and carried the more than 1,000 miles (1,600 kilometers) to be reconstructed in Greenfield Village at the Henry Ford, and archivists are digitizing and cataloguing some 6,000 items contained within. They illustrate the movement's efforts to seek equal rights despite the often violent response of angry mobs and the police. 'The fact that the Jackson family saved things for this long, even though they may have been out of date or old, they knew the significance of all the things that were in that home, and they saved them and preserved them,' Mooradian said. A different view of American history The second Trump administration has made it clear that viewing history through what it considers a 'woke' or anti-white lens will not be tolerated. The president has made specific moves to remove any reference to divisions over race, gender or sexuality in national institutions. Last week, the Smithsonian Institution removed from an exhibit a reference to Trump's two impeachments in 2019 and in 2021. The Democratic majority in the House voted each time for impeachment. The Republican-led Senate each time acquitted Trump. A Smithsonian spokesman said the exhibit eventually 'will include all impeachments.' The U.S. has withdrawn from the United Nation's cultural agency because, according to the White House, UNESCO 'supports woke, divisive cultural and social causes that are totally out-of-step with the commonsense policies that Americans voted for in November.' Trump also fired the Kennedy Center board and slashed funding for the National Endowment for the Arts and National Endowment for the Humanities. And the president issued an executive order titled 'Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History," that condemns the Smithsonian Institution — a vast complex of museums, galleries and a zoo — for what he calls its 'widespread effort to rewrite history.' 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