CHR
The Cranbrook Hub for Refugees
Cranbrook
Hub for Refugees holds its first public meeting
submitted
Donations
to the Cranbrook Hub for Refugees (CHR) now total almost $17,000 as the
organization prepares to have its first public meeting 7 p.m. Wednesday Jan. 6
at Christ Church Anglican Hall at 46 13th Ave. S. near the corner of
2nd St. S. and 13th Ave. S.
The first meeting of 2016 will be mainly devoted
to giving the public a chance to meet the CHR committee and to find out what
they can do to support a refugee family expected to arrive in Cranbrook by spring, says CHR Co-chair Bonnie Spence-Vinge.
“Even though we’ve raised enough money to
be certified as a refugee sponsor by the federal government, we’ll need more money
and volunteers to prepare for the refugees arrival and to support them for a
year after they get here,” she says.
Spence-Vinge says volunteers are needed
for a number of tasks and jobs that need to be done to support the refugees who
will be starting new lives far from their war-torn homes.
Some legal work will have to be done
before they arrive as well as finding them accommodation, furniture, clothing
and other items of basic support. After they get settled, more volunteers will
be needed to help the new family adjust to the Canadian life style by providing
ESL training, enrolling children in school, job training, shopping and food preparation,
trauma counselling, social support, recreational activities and a host of other
means of support, says Spence-Vinge.
“Most of all, we just want to make them
feel welcome and let them know that we will always be there to support them in
their new country,” she says.
Refugees coming to Cranbrook may be Syrian
or from another country where people are fleeing persecution and have been
defined as refugees by the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR).
The 6,000 or so Syrian refugees that have made it to Canada so far are mainly
privately sponsored by families and friends or organizations such as Oxfam and
Friends of Burma that have been helping refugees for years, says Gerry Warner,
CHR’s other co-chair.
“We are bringing them in on the UN’s BVOR
(Blended Visa Office-Referred Program) where we partner with Immigration,
Refugees and Citizenship Canada, (IRCC) to bring them over,” Warner says.
“The big advantage of the BVOR program is
that the federal government pays half the cost of the program, including health
care costs for the refugees,” Warner says. But the federal government only
subsidizes the program at social assistance rates, which is why more money is
needed as well as volunteers, he says.
“That’s why we’re looking to the public
for more support and will explain the program in detail to them at the Jan. 6
meeting,” Warner says.
For
more information, contact:
Bonnie Spence-Vinge – (250) 426-4274
Gerry Warner – (250) 489-3271
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