Immigrant family heads to DC to plead its case

Arturo Hernandez Garcia stands next to pastor Mike Morran in the basement of the First Unitarian Church of Denver in Denver on Monday, Oct. 27, 2014.

DENVER (AP) — The family of a man seeking shelter from immigration agents in a Denver church is flying to Washington to plead his case.

Arturo Hernandez’s wife and two daughters are scheduled to leave for the nation’s capital to try to convince immigration officials to spare Hernandez. He’s been fighting deportation attempts for four years and took shelter in a Denver church in October as the date of his exit neared. If it were not for the longstanding deportation order against him, Hernandez would qualify for President Obama’s new program to keep immigrant families together.

One of Hernandez’s daughters is a U.S. citizen and the rest of his family also qualifies for deportation relief under Obama’s various immigration programs.

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Big drop in immigrant deportation, new border patrol report shows

Washington (CNN) — The number of immigrant deportations on President Barack Obama’s watch fell to an all-time low this past year, according to a new border patrol report.

As border crossings continue to rise, deportations dropped by about 14 percent in the year that ended Sept. 30 compared to the year before, according to a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement draft report first obtained by the L.A. Times and published Thursday. Nearly 316,000 people were removed from the U.S.

A slowdown of deportations might help Obama score higher the Latino community, which overwhelmingly voted for Obama over his GOP challengers, but have been critical of the president’s deportation policies, some even calling him a “Deporter in Chief.”

Over the course of his presidency, Obama’s administration has deported about 2 million people — putting him on track to have deported more illegal immigrants than any other President in history.

Obama’s immigration reform ‘commonsense’

Texas AG announces lawsuit against Obama

His popularity in the Latino community has inched up since he issued an executive order last month. The action would limit deportations for about 5 million people.

While this policy is favored by most Americans, 56% said they opposed Obama’s use of executive action.

Poll: Obama’s immigration policy popular, but approach isn’t

House Republicans have approved a measure to challenge Obama’s executive order — and these new deportation numbers could also add fuel to the fire for Congressional Republicans, who say that less deportations will lead to more illegal immigration.

“We essentially tell citizens of other countries, ‘If you come here, you can stay — don’t worry, we won’t deport you,’” said Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas), chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, in a statement to the L.A. Times. “The reality on the ground is that unless you commit multiple crimes, the chances of your being removed from this country are close to zero.”

Immigration anger fuels House vote

Eighty-five percent of immigrants deported during the year from within the country had a criminal conviction, according to the report.

In a statement to CNN, Gillian Christensen, the agency’s press secretary, said that I.C.E.’s effort “prioritizes the removal of convicted criminals and recent border entrants.”

That squares with Obama’s dedication to focus on “felons, not families,” as he said in his executive action speech, honing in on criminal offenses instead of more broad sweeping deportation policies.

Christensen noted that numerous factors might contribute to fluctuating year-to-year data, including local court decisions, migration patterns and scheduling air transportation.

Most deported immigrants were sent back to their home country: Mexico.

Notably, higher than usual numbers of immigrants crossing the border in the past year came from countries other than Mexico, including Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador, the report reveals, potentially making the process to obtain travel documents and book flights to distant locations more complicated and more expensive.


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Immigrant job assistance topic of Michigan meeting

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Immigrant starts clothing line inspired by humanity

That’s why he’s included the skull in an image that represents a map of Nova Scotia for a clothing line he’s started called Maritime Culture Clothing.

“The skull itself reminds me that we’re all humans.”

Adebayo moved from Africa to Nova Scotia and studied in Halifax and later moved to Pictou County with his wife at the time.  While the cold and culture differences took a while to get used to he’s come to love the Maritime way of life. He is now studying welding inspection at the Nova Scotia Community College in Stellarton and has two children.

While welding inspection will be his main job, he said clothing has always been an interest of his and he wanted to do something like this for a while.

“For me it’s a lifestyle,” he said.

With some help from friend’s he was able to get the logo completed and printed onto sweaters which he is now selling at a couple local stores including the vapour shop in Stellarton and Jemma’s Jewels.

If it makes money, Adebayo said he’ll be happy. But even if it doesn’t, he’s content just to be doing it.

“I’m not trying to compete with nobody,” he said. “I just want people to know we’re all the same.”

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Covered California Partners With National Immigrant Rights Organizations To Reassure Consumers In California And …

LOS ANGELES, Dec. 3, 2014 /PRNewswire/ – Leading national and California immigrant rights organizations joined with Covered California to announce a partnership to spread the word to all communities that immigration status should not deter anyone who can benefit from obtaining coverage under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. The federal government’s leading official overseeing health insurance marketplaces across the nation joined the effort Tuesday to reinforce the fact that information shared in health coverage applications will be kept secure and confidential.

Any U.S. citizen or person who is lawfully present in California is eligible for health insurance through Covered California even if they have family members in their household who are undocumented.

With the president’s recent executive order, there is renewed attention on undocumented residents, and they need to feel confident that they can apply for coverage for legal family members without any consequences.

“We want everyone to know that when you apply for health insurance through a health insurance marketplace like Covered California, all of your information is kept private and secure,” said Covered California Executive Director Peter V. Lee. “It will not be shared with or used by any immigration agency to enforce immigration laws. All information you submit is used strictly to determine your eligibility for health insurance programs available under the Affordable Care Act.”

The partnership involves MALDEF (the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund), the National Immigration Law Center, Asian Americans Advancing Justice — Los Angeles, the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials (NALEO) Educational Fund, the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles and the California Immigrant Policy Center.

“Families need adequate health coverage, so no family should have to avoid seeking coverage because of understandable concerns about a political atmosphere that continues to demonize certain immigrants,” said Thomas A. Saenz, MALDEF president and general counsel. “We are thankful that Covered California and the Department of Homeland Security have made it crystal clear that immigration enforcement and health coverage should not and will not mix.”

“We are very excited about our partnership with Covered California informing our communities that they do not need to fear sharing their immigration status,” said Stewart Kwoh, president and executive director of Asian Americans Advancing Justice — Los Angeles. “There are an estimated 1.3 million undocumented Asian-Americans and Pacific Islanders in the nation, and we hope that this guidance encourages members of our community to seek coverage without fear of getting a family member deported.”

“With the highest rates of being uninsured, Latino immigrants who are eligible must take advantage of the opportunity to pursue health insurance coverage for themselves and their families,” said Arturo Vargas, NALEO Educational Fund executive director. “The health of Latinos will determine the future health of the state. Given the high stakes, we will continue to work to ensure that the Latino community is aware that any information given to Covered California or HealthCare.gov being used for purposes of health coverage eligibility determinations is strictly confidential and will not be shared with any other government agency, state or federal.”

In October 2013, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, an arm of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, issued a letter assuring consumers that information provided by individuals for coverage at Covered California — and other health care exchanges — would not be used for any other purpose than to ensure the efficient operation of the exchange (the full letter can be found at www.ice.gov/doclib/ero-outreach/pdf/ice-aca-memo.pdf). 

The partners in this effort want all consumers to know that noncitizens or undocumented family members on an application for insurance for other legal resident members of the household are not at risk. If a household includes both legal residents and non-legal residents, the legal residents can apply for coverage without fear. Their information will remain safe, secure and confidential and will not be used for immigration enforcement purposes. In addition, applying for insurance through Covered California does not affect an individual’s immigration status, nor will it affect the immigration status of any family member on the application or their ability to become U.S. citizens or permanent residents in the future.

As part of this effort, the partners have developed and will distribute a fact sheet for California in English and Spanish, as well as a fact sheet for other states. Plans are in the works to produce fact sheets in other languages, including Chinese, Korean and Vietnamese. The available fact sheets are online at the following links:

California fact sheets:

Fact sheet for other states: www.CoveredCA.com/news/PDFs/immigration-fact-sheet-us.pdf.  

Finally, while noncitizens or undocumented residents will not be eligible for Covered California health insurance plans, they may be eligible for specific, limited Medi-Cal programs. Individual consumers and their families are encouraged to research their options through Covered California to see what health coverage options are available to them. Help is available in local communities by visiting www.CoveredCA.com and clicking “Find Local Help.” On that page, families can find a Certified Enrollment Counselor or a Certified Insurance Agent near them who can answer any question or concern and can help consumers enroll in an affordable, quality health plan. 

About Covered California
Covered California is the state’s marketplace for the federal Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. Covered California, in partnership with the California Department of Health Care Services, was charged with creating a new health insurance marketplace in which individuals and small businesses can get access to affordable health insurance plans. Covered California helps individuals determine whether they are eligible for premium assistance that is available on a sliding-scale basis to reduce insurance costs or whether they are eligible for low-cost or no-cost Medi-Cal. Consumers can then compare health insurance plans and choose the plan that works best for their health needs and budget. Small businesses can purchase competitively priced health insurance plans and offer their employees the ability to choose from an array of plans and may qualify for federal tax credits.

Covered California is an independent part of the state government whose job is to make the new market work for California’s consumers. It is overseen by a five-member board appointed by the governor and the Legislature. For more information about Covered California, please visit www.CoveredCA.com.

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Chinese immigrants learn new techniques on parenting in SF














click to enlarge Community Youth Center of San Francisco members talk about the new book We Are All Wizards, a Chinese printing that offers immigrant families parenting tips. - MIKE KOOZMIN/THE S.F. EXAMINER
  • Mike Koozmin/The S.f. Examiner
  • Community Youth Center of San Francisco members talk about the new book “We Are All Wizards,” a Chinese printing that offers immigrant families parenting tips.

An immigrant to San Francisco from Guangzhou, Fanny Feng grew up with the Chinese belief that if something is bad, it should be taken away.

Now a 41-year-old mother of an 8-year-old son and a 12-year-old daughter in a new country, Feng found that the cultural practices from her home country weren’t translating into effective disciplinary measures here — especially with using modern electronics as toys.

“My kids often played on their iPhones and school became secondary to them, so I would lock away the electronics so they could not find them,” Feng said in Cantonese. “I realized they became more rebellious.”

After attending classes by the Community Youth Center of San Francisco — modeled after the internationally used Strengthening Families Program, a family-skills training program to reduce problem behaviors — Feng instead offered her children an agreement to finish their homework first and then have unlimited access to their electronics.

“They were much more obedient,” she said. “After their homework, they would come back to mom and ask for permission.”

Such techniques are weaved into the second edition of a 1987 parenting book, “Ten Principles on Raising Chinese-American Teens,” by the late Dr. Evelyn Lee, a psychologist who immigrated from Hong Kong.

Like the original, the new version, “We Are All Wizards,” is the only book of its kind in San Francisco specifically for immigrant parents raising Chinese-American children, said Citania Tam, a licensed clinical social worker who served as a consultant for the latest book.

“There are a lot of workbooks in China and mainstream USA. but not about Chinese-American kids,” Tam said. “Immigrant parents and kids that grow up here have language, generational and cultural gaps.”

The gaps have led to mental health issues that aren’t widely associated with Asian and Pacific Islander communities in The City, community social workers say. A May report, “Asian and Pacific Islander Health and Wellbeing: A San Francisco Neighborhood Analysis,” by the Asian Pacific Islander Council, cites that Asian-American females ages 15 to 24 and older Chinese women have especially high rates of suicide compared to the overall population.

“There’s always been a stigma in the community that people don’t talk about [problems]. That is why the Community Youth Center started providing counseling and clinical therapy services six years ago,” said Sarah Wan, executive director for the center, which printed 500 copies of the book with a $5,000 grant.

Copies of the book will be given out for free at an immigrant parent summit at Gordon J. Lau Elementary School on Saturday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.

The parenting tips in the book include topics like surfing the Internet, which Un Un Che, 45, an immigrant from Macau, China, and a mother of four, initially did not know how to address with her children.

“I felt stuck in the middle,” she said in Cantonese. “That I had to let them use the Internet because they use social media to meet friends, but at the same time I don’t know how to set the limit and they can become addicted.”

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Illegal immigrant used false name to get passport

AN illegal immigrant attended courts under a false name and opened bank accounts with a dud driving licence and passport, a Southampton judge heard.

Prosecutor Andy Houston said Dino Martin, 37, arrived at Gatwick in 1999 but was refused leave to enter as authorities wouldn’t accept he was only staying in Britain for a month.

But on the eve of his flight back to Montego Bay, the Jamaican national absconded from the airport and was at large for almost three years until he was arrested as Adam Jones.

Southampton Crown Court heard he later applied for a British passport under the same name, giving the address of Cheryl Childs who lived at Wyndham Court.

Martin was arrested in August, 2003, for a domestic incident and admitted he was an illegal immigrant but applied for asylum on the basis he had two children in the UK and was the father of Childs’s son.

His application however was rejected and he was deported to Jamaica in October but a passport in the name of Jones was delivered to her flat and she “hot footed” it to the island where they were married a week later.

The court heard Martin later re-entered Britain on the false passport and used her address as he enrolled at Solent University in 2005 to study music technology and in 2006 on a BSC internet application courses but on each occasion he withdrew from them.

In 2007, he enrolled for a third time, this time taking out a student loan to study computer games development but no cash was repaid.

He used the passport to open a bank account that closed following a fraudulent payment of £6,000 into it and illegally obtained a driving licence, using it to open a bank account that closed with £12,000 overdue.

Mr Houston said Martin had also appeared in other courts under the alias for drugs and other offences. Childs applied for him to be put on the voters register as Jones, saying he was living with her.

However, “the balloon went up” when a social worker saw Childs for family background and she gave “a convoluted story.”

A former girlfriend also confirmed to police Jones was really Martin and he was an illegal immigrant When challenged over his name on the electoral role, Childs claimed he was an ex-boy friend and had never been to her address, but when it was searched, children’s birth certificates named Martin as their father.

Martin, of Sullivan Road, Southampton, admitted 15 charges of attempting to pervert the course of justice, possessing false identity documents, acquiring criminal property, fraud and breaching the Immigration Act. He was jailed for three years.

In mitigation, Richard Onslow said he faced deportation but would take his case to appeal.

“He is deeply attached to his young children and has acted as a father should do. Many people want to come to this country relying on being looked after but he has worked from time to time.”

Childs, 38, of the same address, admitted one count of assisting an offender under the Immigration Act and received a 12 suspended month sentence and six months supervision.

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Immigrant detention centers under scrutiny in Japan after fourth death

TOKYO (Reuters) – Japanese authorities are investigating the death of a Sri Lankan man at an immigration detention center in Tokyo, the fourth such case in just over a year, amid criticism the facilities are overcrowded and understaffed.

Tokyo’s Immigration Office confirmed that a Sri Lankan man died in detention, but refused to identify him citing an ongoing investigation.

Mitsuru Miyasako of the Provisional Release Association in Japan, a group representing refugees and immigrants, said Nickeles Fernando, 57, died at the Shinagawa Immigration Center last month after complaining of chest pains.

Miyasako, who is in contact with the man’s family, said he was advised the Sri Lankan had requested emergency medical help, but was denied it.

Sachiko Asai from the Tokyo Immigration Office said that staff carried out first aid and called an ambulance. The man was later confirmed dead in hospital.

“The responsibility for the well-being of the detainees lies in the hands of those who detain,” said Kanae Doi from Human Rights Watch in Tokyo. “This incident should be investigated and those responsible held accountable for what happened.”

Last month the Justice Ministry found a detention center in Ibaraki, north of Tokyo, had inadequate medical care after an investigation sparked by the deaths of a Cameroonian man and an Iranian man in separate incidents in March.

Japan, which imposes strict immigration policies, detained 15,000 people in 2013, according to Justice Ministry data.

Lawyers and human rights advocates say Japan’s immigration centers are outdated and understaffed. The Shinagawa facility, where the Sri Lankan national was held, can hold up to 800 detainees.

A Rohingya detainee died of a brain hemorrhage at the Shinagawa facility in October last year.

(Reporting by Antoni Slodkowski)

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The Mentoring Partnership Announces Plans to Grow, Celebrates Changing Thousands of Lives For the Better

  • Established skilled immigrant mentoring program reaches landmark of
    10,000 mentoring matches over 10 years
  • The Mentoring Partnership announces development plan through an
    investment by LEAP: The Centre for Social Impact, bringing
    transformative hands-on support over five years at its Annual
    Recognition Reception
  • The Mentoring Partnership’s Annual Recognition Reception will also
    celebrate outstanding corporate and volunteer mentors

TORONTO, Dec. 2, 2014 /CNW/ – The Mentoring Partnership, a program of the Toronto Region Immigrant Employment Council (TRIEC), has made more than 10,000 mentoring matches between skilled
immigrants and professionals in their field. The program celebrated
this achievement today at its 10th Anniversary Celebration and Annual Recognition Reception. Emceed by CBC-TV’s Our Toronto host Marivel Taruc at CBC’s Barbara Frum Atrium in Toronto, the event also honoured the
outstanding work of the program’s mentors in 2014 and launched exciting
plans to reach thousands more skilled immigrants.

TRIEC announced the investment by LEAP: The Centre for Social Impact in The Mentoring Partnership at the event. By combining the strengths of
its staff, advisors and sector partners – The Boston Consulting Group,
McCarthy Tétrault, Cossette, Ernst & Young and The Offord Group – the
Centre catalyzes massive social change in Canada. The partnership
between the Centre and TRIEC will help scale The Mentoring Partnership,
a program addressing unemployment and underemployment of skilled
immigrants in the GTA and across Canada.

The Mentoring Partnership brings together recent skilled immigrants and
established professionals in occupation-specific mentoring
relationships. This relationship has become a powerful way of
supporting newcomers to the GTA in their search for meaningful
employment. Mentors are given the opportunity to hone their leadership
skills in an increasingly diversifying workplace, with more than 75
percent of mentees finding work in their professional field after 12
months.

“In 2014, The Mentoring Partnership reached two historic milestones: the
10th anniversary of the program and 10,000 successful mentor-mentee matches
that have changed thousands of lives for the better,” said Margaret Eaton, Executive Director, Toronto Region Immigrant Employment Council. “Our new partnership with the Centre will allow us to change even more
lives, as we enter a new era of the program.”

The Mentoring Partnership’s success to date has been driven by its
employer and service delivery partners. CIBC is one such partner: their employees have mentored more than 500
immigrant professionals via the program. The company was recognized at
the Annual Recognition Reception for helping newcomers find their way
to a rewarding career in the Greater Toronto Area.

“CIBC’s employee participation in The Mentoring Partnership furthers our
commitment to enhance the experience for newcomers to Canada.  Through
this TRIEC program, we too have been mentored,” said Gillian Whitebread, Vice-President, Diversity, Inclusion & Executive
Talent Management
. “The program has provided our employees with a stronger appreciation
of international talent and an opportunity to think with a global
mindset, while further developing our employee’s coaching skills- a
win-win for all.”

EY received special recognition for its efforts in matching 100 skilled
immigrants with leaders in their chosen industries. The Mentoring
Partnership also honoured individual mentors from EY who have made a difference in the lives of 10
or more skilled immigrants in 2014
and mentee-turned-mentors in the program.

For more information on TRIEC and The Mentoring Partnership, and to read
stories from some of the program’s participants, please visit TRIEC.ca, TheMentoringPartnership.com or @TRIEC. Follow the hashtag #TMP10 to join the celebration!

About TRIEC and The Mentoring Partnership
The Mentoring Partnership is a collaboration of employer and community
partners and operates as a program of TRIEC. TRIEC creates and
champions solutions to better integrate skilled immigrants in the
Greater Toronto Region labour market.

Prominent employer partners in The Mentoring Partnership include the
City of Toronto and TD Canada Trust, who have previously reached 1000
mentoring matches, and Scotiabank and CIBC, who have made more than 500
matches between skilled immigrant professionals and their staff.

The Mentoring Partnership’s 10th Anniversary Celebration and Annual Recognition Reception was sponsored
by TD Canada Trust. The venue sponsor was the CBC Inclusion and
Diversity department, and beverages were sponsored by Steam Whistle
Brewery.

About LEAP: The Centre for Social Impact
LEAP: The Centre for Social Impact employs venture philanthropy to
create massive social change in Canada. We apply the discipline of
private equity investing to select, support and scale charities with
quantifiable social impact.

The Centre is pioneering a new model that teams up high-potential
charities with forward-thinking investors and private sector expertise
to create measurable and sustainable benefits to society.
Transformative hands-on support to scale impact across Canada is
delivered by the Centre, our board, advisors and sector partners: The
Boston Consulting Group, McCarthy Tétrault, Cossette, Ernst & Young and
The Offord Group. LEAP was incubated in the Pecaut Centre.

SOURCE Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce

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Donation of recycled computers, brings Christmas early for immigrant youth and families

Local businessman gives back through donation of computers to Calgary newcomers adjusting to life in Canada

CALGARY, Dec. 1, 2014 /CNW/ – Tomorrow, the ERA will donate 60 personal computers to a local charity, The Calgary Bridge Foundation for Youth (CBFY), so they can be distributed to high-needs immigrant youth and families within their programs. Bojan Paduh, founder and president of the Electronic Recycling Association (ERA), received a donated computer shortly after he and his family immigrated to Canada nearly two decades ago. Now, through a partnership facilitated by Alberta’s Promise, this good deed will be paid forward.

Too often, the lack of a computer creates challenge for immigrant families, especially those from low-income backgrounds. “I’ve been in the shoes of these youth, rapidly trying to learn a new language and culture without the support systems or comforts of home, and I know how isolating it can be. A computer can help with the transition in a lot of ways,” says Paduh. “I am grateful to be able to give back to a cause I feel so strongly about, especially during the holiday season.”

When newcomers arrive to Calgary they focus on finding a home, acquiring a job and ensuring their kids are safe, settled and able to find a sense of belonging. “These computers will be essential for some of our newcomer youth and families who are unable to access a computer because accessibility and financial constraints. Families will be given the opportunity to expand their community networks, enrich their digital literacy skills, locate the information resources they need to empower their skills and stay connected with their families abroad,” says Umashanie Reddy, executive director of CBFY.

The computer donations will make a tangible difference to many immigrant families in Calgary: a single mom of a toddler and teen whose eldest requires a computer for homework assignments, a family whose children want to connect by Skype with family and grandparents back home, and a young woman who needs a computer to look for employment and take online courses to improve her English. These are just some of individuals whose lives are going to be impacted immensely by this donation.

This donation was made possible through a partnership facilitated by Alberta’s Promise, a charitable organization that works with businesses, non-profits and community partners to match needs and resources for children and youth in our communities. “Thousands of immigrants begin a new life in Alberta each year. Thanks to the partnership efforts of two Promise Partners, newcomers to Calgary will find the transition more manageable,” says Judy Eng-Hum, Executive Director of Alberta’s Promise.

To the families accessing CBFY’s programs, a computer is more than a piece of equipment.  It is the ability to complete and submit schoolwork, look up transit schedules and maps, find a grocery store, connect with their families back home, translate a word they do not understand, or submit a job application. To them, a computer is an opportunity to be empowered and succeed in Canadian society.

The ERA will deliver a truck full of computers to CBFY at 10am.

About the Electronics Recycling Association
Established in 2004, the ERA specializes in waste electronics management, reuse and recycling in Canada. We are unwaveringly committed to reducing electronic waste by extending their lifecycle through electronics donating services, recycling non-reusable electronics, computers, laptops, phones and more. With depots all across Canada, the ERA provides a great way to recycle electronic equipment safely and securely.

About the Calgary Bridge Foundation for Youth
CBFY is a non-profit agency that helps over 10,000 immigrant youth and families successfully integrate into Calgary each year. The Calgary Bridge Foundation for Youth engages immigrant youth and families to fulfill their potential in Canadian society

About Alberta’s Promise
Alberta’s Promise is dedicated to improving the lives of children and youth by giving the young people of this province every opportunity to realize their full potential.  Since 2003, the organization has worked with business, non-profit and community partners to pair needs and resources and enhance local resources for kids and their families.

Note:
Several recipients of the computer donations will be available on-location for interviews with media.

SOURCE Electronic Recycling Association

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