California Pushes to Expand Immigrant Health Care

President Barack Obama’s executive order to spare some immigrants from deportation has galvanized Democrats, immigration groups and health care advocates in California to push for expanding health coverage to a segment of the population that remains uninsured.

The president’s action excludes immigrants who came to the country illegally from qualifying for federal health benefits. But California has its own policy of providing health coverage with state money to low-income immigrants with so-called “deferred action” that allow them to avoid deportation. Immigrant and health care advocates say that means Obama’s executive order will enable hundreds of thousands of low-income immigrants in California to apply for Medi-Cal, California’s version of Medicaid.

Anthony Wright, executive director of Health Access California, said allowing this expanded group of immigrants to participate in the Medicaid program will enable people to get primary and preventive care, “rather than just at the emergency room.”

The California Department of Health Care Services, however, has yet to receive formal guidance. A state official said it’s too early to tell how the immigration program will impact the overall Medi-Cal program, which is consuming an increasing share of state funds.

Medi-Cal is a health program for the poor paid for by the federal government and the state. It has grown by about 3 million people in California under federal health care reform and now covers more than 11 million Californians, about 30 percent of the state’s population. The federal government is paying for the expansion, but the state will eventually pay 10 percent of additional costs to cover low-income adults, many of whom are childless.

The state is expected to spend more than $17 billion of its own money on the program this year, up 3.5 percent a year ago, according to the Legislative Analyst’s Office.

“We are assessing what some of the potential impacts could be, but it would be premature for us to comment until we have more specific information available,” said Norman Williams, a spokesman for the Department of Health Care Services.

The president’s action has also emboldened a Democratic lawmaker to revive a bill that would provide health coverage to all Californians, regardless of their immigration status.

Sen. Ricardo Lara, D-Bell Gardens, plans to reintroduce his Health4All bill on Monday to open Medi-Cal to immigrants, as well as extending subsidized health benefits in a new insurance marketplace for those without legal status. The proposal, which previously carried a cost as high as $1.3 billion a year, stalled in a legislative committee last cycle and Republicans had criticized the cost of the expansion.

“The president’s action covers almost half of California’s undocumented population, but that still leaves over a million people with no access to health care. We can do better. The bill will cover those remaining uninsured that will not benefit from Obama’s action,” Lara said.

According to the Center for American Progress, a progressive think tank in Washington, D.C., the president’s action lifts the threat of deportation to as many as 1.2 million immigrants living illegally in California. There are an estimated 2.6 million people living illegally in the state.

The issue of benefits for immigrants who are illegally in the United States is a sensitive one.

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Immigrant students helping others like them

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) – Inside the tiny Benson apartment, in a kitchen filled with boxes of donations, stood two teenagers washing dishes.

Side by side, the pair of immigrants – a girl from Mexico, a boy from Thailand – worked through the piles of plates, mugs, glasses and silverware. They washed, they dried and they put them into once-empty cabinets while their friends in a unique high school club ran the vacuum, filled the fridge with fresh cabbage and made signs that said “Welcome.”

The Omaha Northwest Thrive Club was preparing Apartment 11 for a refugee family due in that night, the Omaha World-Herald (http://bit.ly/1uIHrfj ) reported.

The setup work was just part of a larger commitment the students, nearly all of them foreign-born, are making to the newcomers. And it is a measure of how far the students have come since their own arrivals to America.

The Northwest students know all too well the challenges ahead: adjusting to a sometimes-frigid climate, a new language and even creature comforts like a bed.

“I wasn’t used to a mattress at all,” recalled 19-year-old Hei Blut Htoo, an Omaha Northwest senior, about his first night in America seven years ago. “I slept on the floor. The carpet was warm and soft.”

Hei Blut Htoo is president of his school’s Thrive Club, an after-school group at five Omaha public high schools. The club is aimed at migrant students who are either new to Omaha or who work or have parents working in an agricultural field such as meatpacking. Generally such students are from other countries, many of them refugees who had come from meager conditions without a lot of modern conveniences or consistent schooling.

Once they get to America, the learning curve is steep. Many refugee students, insecure about their broken English, tend to clam up in the classroom and not get involved in activities where they could make friends and build stronger school connections.

That’s where Thrive comes in. The club meets weekly and uses a leadership curriculum that teaches students about character traits and service and encourages them to branch out beyond their ethnic groups. The four-year-old club also encourages students to do more than merely survive – they are pushed to thrive. A number of former club members are now in college.

Club participation requires a service project, and past projects have involved generic acts of kindness, like picking up litter. This year, the Northwest Thrive Club wanted to do something more personal.

So the club teamed up with Lutheran Family Services, a refugee resettlement agency, and spent a few days helping transform bleak, empty Apartment 11 into a warm, welcoming home – with help from an Omaha firefighter who had collected furniture, hauled it in and set it up.

Some students went grocery shopping, choosing the fresh, familiar fruits and vegetables that the incoming family from a Thai refugee camp would appreciate. Some went to Family Dollar to buy new towels and a shower curtain.

Others, like Hei Blut Htoo and Fernanda Compean, unpacked boxes. Each had a unique immigrant story.

Hei Blut Htoo’s parents, members of a persecuted ethnic minority in Burma called the Karen, had fled to Thailand. Hei Blut Htoo was born in a Thai refugee camp. He lived in a bamboo hut with no electricity, though he could go to a common area to watch American movies. Schooling was spotty. Fire was a constant risk: The refugee camp where he was born burned down, and his family had to go to a different camp.

When his family landed in Houston, a sponsor drove them to an apartment. What Hei Blut Htoo remembers is how hungry he was. After two days of travel, he hadn’t had any rice and he really, really, really wanted rice. Instead, waiting for him in America was a strange meal: a box of Walmart chicken.

Story Continues →

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Immigrant dream runs into detour as GOP backer from Closter wages bankruptcy battle


Munr Kazmir’s story appeared to be a remarkable tale of immigrant success.

Munr Kazmir founded the Premier American School in Lahore, Pakistan, using a $2.5 million federal government loan, which he defaulted on.


He came to the U.S. in 1984 from Pakistan, where he trained to become a doctor. He gained wealth launching a string of health care companies in Bergen County and prominence as a Republican campaign donor and fundraiser at the highest levels, notably for former President George W. Bush and Governor Christie, who named him to government boards.

Munr Kazmir founded the Premier American School in Lahore, Pakistan, using a $2.5 million federal government loan, which he defaulted on.



Along the way the Closter businessman realized a dream, opening a school promoting American ideals in his native Pakistan.


But the school struggled early, draining Kazmir’s finances, forcing him to default on a $2.5 million government loan he used to help build the school and leading him to file for bankruptcy reorganization.

Munr Kazmir founded the Premier American School in Lahore, Pakistan, using a $2.5 million federal government loan, which he defaulted on.



The issues surrounding Kazmir’s financial plight are now being played out in Bankruptcy Court, where a federal lending agency is opposing his bid for court protection. It has accused him in court papers of making “false representations” about his finances in the information he submitted to secure the loan for the company he formed to build the school. With a hearing scheduled for mid-December in Newark, the judge in the case has expressed skepticism that Kazmir will be able to successfully emerge from his growing pile of debts, which include mortgages on extensive real estate holdings.


Kazmir’s predicament has raised questions about his ability to raise money for causes and politicians he has helped in the past, most of whom declined to comment on him or his situation. It has also placed a cloud over an otherwise impressive résumé.


Kazmir, who filed for bankruptcy reorganization in May claiming $16 million in debts, contends that the lending agency, the Overseas Private Investment Corp., is being unnecessarily tough on him, suggesting in an interview that it is a case of “political victimization” by a Democratic administration because he is a noted Republican fundraiser.


OPIC, which lends capital to overseas projects that promote America’s values, says it is just trying to get repayment on a 7-year-old, still unpaid loan.


“Dr. Kazmir personally guaranteed the loan,” said Charlie Stadtlander, a spokesman for the agency.


This is not the first time Kazmir has been in a dispute with the government and accused its agencies of retribution.


In the 1990s, he was investigated by the state Division of Consumer Affairs for allegedly helping therapists working for one of his health care companies cheat on the national licensing examination. He accused the outgoing Democratic administration of trying to punish him because he was a Republican. In 1998, he signed a consent agreement in which he admitted no wrongdoing but agreed to pay $26,000 in fines and costs — including $1,000 for each of the 22 times an employee of his company, Quality Health Care, “worked as an unlicensed respiratory health care therapist,” according to the agreement.


Born to an Israeli mother and Pakistani father in 1957 in Pakistan, Kazmir came to the U.S. in his late 20s, and would gain attention as a devout Jew committed to promoting American values in a staunchly Muslim country. Although he never qualified to become a doctor in the U.S., his training led him to found a number of health care companies, mostly based in Leonia, including Direct Meds Inc., licensed to provide prescription medicines throughout the U.S.


As his business interests swelled, so did his political and civic activities. He has strongly supported Jewish causes as well as law enforcement agencies, and since 1999 he has donated more than $590,000 to Washington politicians from both parties, though mostly to Republicans, according to the InfluenceExplorer.com website database.


In 2004, Kazmir became one of Bush’s Rangers — fundraisers who collected more than $200,000 for the president’s campaign.


“Munr always had the reputation as a strong fundraiser,” said a Republican fundraiser who declined to be identified. “Certainly, all New Jersey statewide candidates would call on him.”


Kazmir’s extensive contacts led to several non-salaried government appointments. In 2001, three years after his consent agreement with consumer affairs, outgoing Gov. Christie Whitman made him chairman of the New Jersey Lottery Commission. Bush appointed Kazmir to the U.S. Medicare Coverage Advisory Committee in 2003. And in 2011, Christie put Kazmir on the board of the state Health Care Facilities Financing Authority.


Evidence of Kazmir’s status as a political insider lines the walls of his modest office in Leonia. There are mementos and numerous photographs of him with politicians, including seven with Christie, one with Christie’s wife, and many with Bush. There are also a dozen framed personal notes from the former president, including one from 2009, wishing Kazmir a happy birthday.


Political insiders say Kazmir has often thrown open his million-dollar Closter home for parties to support Jewish causes and for political fundraisers, including a $500-a-head fundraising lunch for Christie in 2009.


“I think, like many people, he wants to be part of the process,” said state Sen. Joseph Kyrillos, R-Monmouth, whose 2012 campaign for the U.S. Senate Kazmir supported. “I think he was grateful to the country that has absorbed him and has allowed him to succeed.”


Kazmir said he came up with the idea for a school in Pakistan after the 9/11 terrorist attacks highlighted the anger of radical Muslims toward the U.S. He created the American International School System, now known as the Premier American School, with a former FBI agent who worked on terrorism cases. The school aims to teach Muslim children “equality, individualism and competitiveness,” according to an article Kazmir wrote for the Huffington Post website.


Set on an 11-acre campus in densely populated Lahore, the school has a swimming pool, an amphitheater and a high-tech auditorium — a long way from the poverty that mires much of the country.


Kazmir said he expected the school to be profitable enough to use tuition to pay off the $2.5 million loan from OPIC. But when it opened in 2007, only 12 students had registered — well below the 400 he had expected and the 1,000 that the school was built to hold, Kazmir said. The next few years were tough, too, as political turmoil and the threat of violence from anti-American extremists dissuaded some parents from sending their children to the school, Kazmir said. That also pushed up expenses, as the school had to increase security to protect students and teachers — many of whom were from the U.S., Europe and other developed countries, he said.


As a result, he said, he has had to put up his own money — including loans from his Leonia businesses — to cover the school’s operating costs. He said he has now lent $7.5 million to the school.


To date, Kazmir has repaid little of the 2007 OPIC loan in contentious negotiations that have included two defaults, a restructuring and a bounced check. Since the second default, in August 2012, he has paid just $45,000. The matter was seemingly settled in June 2013 with Kazmir’s agreeing to pay a $2.8 million judgment — but no payments followed.


Kazmir claimed that after the restructuring, he didn’t make the payments because he and the school were being audited by the IRS, during which his bank accounts were frozen for nine months at the end of 2012. By the time the accounts were unfrozen, OPIC had filed suit seeking the judgment, and later — after the two sides settled — the agency refused to agree to a payment schedule sought by Kazmir, he said.


In May of this year, a week after filing for bankruptcy reorganization, Kazmir sent a letter to the inspector general for the U.S. Agency for International Development, accusing OPIC of mounting an “illegal, abusive and harassing campaign” to get the loan repaid. Among the actions he cited was OPIC’s enlisting help from the Bergen County Sheriff’s Office to get information on Kazmir’s businesses and bank accounts.

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Immigrant dream runs into detour as GOP backer from Closter wages bankruptcy battle
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MOSAIC tackles ‘honour-based’ violence against women and girls (with video)

Published: November 28, 2014

"There is No Honour in Violence Against Women" Campaign

“There is No Honour in Violence Against Women” Campaign

LARISSA CAHUTE
VANCOUVER DESI

Non-profit immigrant settlement agency MOSAIC B.C. launched a campaign Friday to raise awareness about ‘honour-based’ violence against women and girls.

The Status of Women Canada-funded project, There is No Honour in Violence Against Women, is the result of a two-year project led by MOSAIC B.C. Over the past 20 months, the organization conducted focus groups with clients from various local anti-violence service providers and women from immigrant and refugee communities.

And according to MOSAIC’s senior manager of specialized services, Marc Larrivée, half of those service providers reported dealing with cases that dealt with violence “in the name of honour.”

The project has resulted in the media awareness campaign — which includes posters on buses across Metro Vancouver and PSAs on local TV channels — in an attempt to provide more resources and information to women from vulnerable communities, as well as a training module — which one of the local service providers will eventually pilot — to better equip front line workers to deal with this violence.

According to Larrivée, one of the key findings was that labelling it as “honour-based” violence may be what’s preventing many women from getting help and accessing the available services, because it’s “stigmatizing to immigrant and refugee women.”

“That term is objectionable,” he said. “It creates a stigma.”

“When you … make it culturally specific … you’re looking at (it) as something wrong with (them) because they’re part of that culture.”

“It’s actually violence against women — ultimately, it comes down to that.”

Violence against women is cross-cultural, said Larrivée, adding that if a boyfriend sees his girlfriend flirting with another man and as a result commits an act of violence, “that can be looked at as honour-based as well.”

“Our work has shown that the focus must remain on violence against women and not to stigmatize immigrant women with the notion that what they may have experienced is vastly different from what Canadian-born women have faced,” Larrivée said, adding that the common question from most focus groups was, ‘Why is what’s happening to me so different than my Caucasian (neighbour)?’

“It’s really important that immigrant and refugee people don’t feel as though their culture … is being put up as something vastly different,” he said. “It’s not going to help women come forward.”

For more information on the project, visit www.honourforwomen.ca.

lcahute@theprovince.com

twitter.co/larissacahute


“There is No Honour in Violence Against Women” Campaign

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Inisyal na tagumpay para sa kanilang karapatan, nakamit ng immigrants sa US

Rali ng iba't ibang grupo ng mga Pilipino sa US. Mula sa <b>Nafcon FB account</b>

Rali ng iba’t ibang grupo ng mga Pilipino sa US. Mula sa Nafcon FB account

Resulta ng sama-samang pagkilos laban sa kriminalisasyon ng di-dokumentadong mga immigrant at migrante sa Estados Unidos (US) ang bagong lagdang Executive Action on Immigration dito.

Ito ang sabi ng Migrante International matapos lagdaan ni Pang. Barack Obama ng Estados Unidos (US). Pero ayon sa grupo, simula pa lamang ito ng laban para sa ganap na pagkilala sa karapatan ng immigrants at migrante, kabilang ang mga Pilipino, sa US.

Inanunsiyo ni Obama noong Nob. 20 ang naturang Executive Action na nagpapataw ng “istriktong mga rekisito” para di-madeport ang di-dokumentadong mga indibidwal mula sa ibang bansa tulad ng Pilipinas.

Dahil sa mga limitasyon ng aksiyon ni Obama, pili lang ang maaaring makinabang dito, ayon sa Migrante.

Kikilalanin lang ng ng Executive Action ang isang immigrant sa US kapag pasok sa sumusunod na mga pamantayan: nanirahan siya sa bansa sa loob ng limang taon; ang mga anak ay mga mamamayan na ng US; pasado siya sa criminal background check; at sang-ayon siyang “magbayad ng karampatang buwis.”

“Tumugon si Obama sa ilan taon nang iginigiit ng ating komunidad, pero ang executive order na ito ay pansamantala lang at malayo para maging sapat. Dapat nating ipagpatuloy ang pagtulak sa relief na kailangan ng ating mga komunidad,” pahayag sa wikang Ingles ni Terrence Valen, presidente ng National Alliance for Filipino Concerns, o Nafcon, sa US.

Iginigiit ng maraming grupo ng mga immigrant, pati ng Nafcon at Migrante International ang panawagang “Legalization for All” o paglelegalisa ng lahat ng di-dokumentadong mga immigrant na natulak lang na pumunta sa US dahil sa krisis (pang-ekonomiya man o pulitikal) sa kanilang bansa.

Sa panawagang legalisasyon para sa lahat, di-batayan ang haba ng panahon na paninirahan, affiliation, o pang-ekonomiyang kalagayan ng indibiduwal para kilalanin ang legal na karapatan sa ilalim ng batas ng US ng immigrant o migrante.

Walang tao na ilegal. Ang pagiging di-dokumentado ay di-kailanman dahilan para pagkaitan ng batayang karapatang pantao,” sabi pa ng Migrante.

Tinutugunan ng mga di-dokumentadong manggagawa mula sa ibang bansa ang pangangailangang lakas-paggawa ng US. Sila rin umano ang pinaka-bulnerable sa pagsasamantala at mardyinalisasyon.

Malaki ang ambag nila sa mga ekonomiya ng host countries sa pamamagitan ng kanilang lakas-paggawa, palitang kultural, pang-ekonomiyang pangkonsumo, at pagbayad ng buwis sa pamamagitan ng mga bayarin, yutilidad at pamimili,” sabi pa ng Migrante.

Panandalian lang ang Executive Action at magiging epektibo lang sa isang takdang panahon sa 2015, kaya panawagan ng Migrante na magmatiyag ang mga immigrant at migrante sa US at maging sa ibang bahagi ng mundo.

 

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Inisyal na tagumpay para sa kanilang karapatan, nakamit ng immigrants sa US
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Giving Thanks: Immigrant Entrepreneur's Tale

In 1978, Eric Roudi came from Iran to Massachusetts to attend college. But when revolution broke out in his native country, Roudi was forced to strike out on his own in the U.S.  

For this week’s Salute to American Success, we talked to Roudi about his growing franchise business, OpenWorks, a facility maintenance services company – and what he’s thankful for as an immigrant entrepreneur.

“When I graduated, I had to figure out something to do … Through franchising, I could tap into my entrepreneurial spirit,” Roudi said.

So after receiving his degree from Tufts University, Roudi set off for Phoenix, Arizona, and started developing a plan to enter into the commercial cleaning business.

“When you walk into a McDonald’s, everything was uniform. I wanted to bring some uniformity to a fragmented industry,” Roudi said. After launching OpenWorks, Roudi sold his first franchise in 1984.

Now more than 30 years later, Roudi has grown OpenWorks to include 350 franchises in the country. He says the business is doing roughly $35 million annually in revenue and is adding as many as 70 new franchises each year.

With a prestigious degree under his belt, Roudi said he didn’t face too many challenges as an immigrant. But he did encounter the many hurdles that face all new entrepreneurs, regardless of where they’re born.

“I had no clue what I was doing – I was 20 years old when I graduated from school! It’s difficult to be able to establish credibility at that age with vendors and employees,” Roudi said. “But I worked my way up from that and didn’t take no for an answer.”

And according to him, there’s no better place to start a business in the United States.

“I’m thankful for everything that this country has to offer. This country offers the chance for anybody from anywhere in the world, from any walk of life, to become successful,” Roudi explained. “This country is not run by nobility, and it’s not based on where you came from or who your father was or mother was.”

“It’s based on hard work, and there’s no better environment in the world to nurture that kind of spirit.”

Source Article from http://smallbusiness.foxbusiness.com/entrepreneurs/2014/11/28/immigrant-entrepreneur-thankful-for-opportunities-in-us/
Giving Thanks: Immigrant Entrepreneur's Tale
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Giving Thanks: Immigrant Entrepreneur's Tale

In 1978, Eric Roudi came from Iran to Massachusetts to attend college. But when revolution broke out in his native country, Roudi was forced to strike out on his own in the U.S.  

For this week’s Salute to American Success, we talked to Roudi about his growing franchise business, OpenWorks, a facility maintenance services company – and what he’s thankful for as an immigrant entrepreneur.

“When I graduated, I had to figure out something to do … Through franchising, I could tap into my entrepreneurial spirit,” Roudi said.

So after receiving his degree from Tufts University, Roudi set off for Phoenix, Arizona, and started developing a plan to enter into the commercial cleaning business.

“When you walk into a McDonald’s, everything was uniform. I wanted to bring some uniformity to a fragmented industry,” Roudi said. After launching OpenWorks, Roudi sold his first franchise in 1984.

Now more than 30 years later, Roudi has grown OpenWorks to include 350 franchises in the country. He says the business is doing roughly $35 million annually in revenue and is adding as many as 70 new franchises each year.

With a prestigious degree under his belt, Roudi said he didn’t face too many challenges as an immigrant. But he did encounter the many hurdles that face all new entrepreneurs, regardless of where they’re born.

“I had no clue what I was doing – I was 20 years old when I graduated from school! It’s difficult to be able to establish credibility at that age with vendors and employees,” Roudi said. “But I worked my way up from that and didn’t take no for an answer.”

And according to him, there’s no better place to start a business in the United States.

“I’m thankful for everything that this country has to offer. This country offers the chance for anybody from anywhere in the world, from any walk of life, to become successful,” Roudi explained. “This country is not run by nobility, and it’s not based on where you came from or who your father was or mother was.”

“It’s based on hard work, and there’s no better environment in the world to nurture that kind of spirit.”

Source Article from http://smallbusiness.foxbusiness.com/entrepreneurs/2014/11/28/immigrant-entrepreneur-thankful-for-opportunities-in-us/
Giving Thanks: Immigrant Entrepreneur's Tale
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Immigrant students at Chinatown school savor first Thanksgiving














click to enlarge Students at the Chinese Education Center  which acts as a transition school for students whose families just moved to the U.S. and are still learning English  gobbled up their first Thanksgiving meal Tuesday. Students families were invited to take part in the event. - GABRIELLE LURIE/SPECIAL TO THE S.F. EXAMINER
  • Gabrielle Lurie/special to the s.f. examiner
  • Students at the Chinese Education Center — which acts as a transition school for students whose families just moved to the U.S. and are still learning English — gobbled up their first Thanksgiving meal Tuesday. Students’ families were invited to take part in the event.

Halfway through his first Thanksgiving meal of turkey, stuffing, mashed potatoes and green beans, Jacky Ma, 8, and his fellow immigrant students at the Chinese Education Center in Chinatown partook in a cross-cultural tradition — toasting — with a beverage they had only recently been accustomed to drinking.

“Now I like it,” Jacky said in Cantonese, taking a sip from his carton of low-fat milk.

The second-grader and many of the 86 students at the newcomer school, who predominantly lived in China and spoke no English before moving to San Francisco, previously did not have safe or frequent access to dairy products. For the students, all attending the San Francisco Unified School District program for less than a year, Tuesday’s meal accompanied with Chinese sticky rice was their first taste of the American holiday.

Jacky’s favorite Thanksgiving staple was turkey.

“The taste was very good,” said the Guangdong Province native.

What he did not find quite as appetizing was the “white stuff” he had never tried before.

“It was like it had no taste,” Jacky said, referring to the mashed potatoes.

The school at 657 Merchant St. — the only Chinese-speaking newcomer school in the country according to Principal Victor Tam — has hosted Thanksgiving meals for immigrant students and their families since 1972, a few years after the school opened its doors.

On Tuesday, the kindergarten to fifth-graders had no trouble devouring the Thanksgiving feast. That wasn’t the case several decades ago, noted Marlene Tran, 68, a retired teacher of the school. When she taught, part of her job was to instruct kindergartners on how to open milk cartons and get used to eating American fare.

“There was a lot of acculturation that needed to be done because they used to come more from villages,” Tran said. “Nowadays, many of the kids are from the bigger cities.”

While the school currently has close to 90 students, enrollment grows as students enter from China. When the school year started in August, there were 51 students.

“This year, it looks like we will need to add at least one class in January and possibly one later in the school year as well,” Tam said.

Funding has remained stable from the district, which runs one other newcomer-only school for kindergartners to fifth-graders, the Mission Education Center, catering to Spanish-speaking immigrant children. The Mission and Chinese Education Centers are structured to give immigrant students a year to acclimate to American schools in their native language and then transition to schools with an English focus.

Students at the Chinese Education Center sang songs in Cantonese, Mandarin and English, and the Thanksgiving meal was a special part of their American cultural experience.

“I think it’s very warm how we’re able to create this environment,” said second-grade teacher Candy Lee, 25, “because they would not have that at home.”








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Immigrant Welcome Center opens in Aurora school building this month

AURORA — A centralized resource hub for refugees living in Aurora will take up residence at a former Aurora Public Schools building at the end of the month.

The Immigrant Welcome Centerwas formed through the cooperation of several organizations that were looking for a way to actively integrate newcomers to the country, and to Aurora, at a single location.

The result is a nonprofit welcome center where people can take English, parenting and leadership classes, get citizenship support and find legal and other referrals.

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Aurora Public Schools offered up one of its recently vacated administrative buildings on Peoria Street and East 11th Avenue for a reduced lease rate for three years, and the city accepted.

Roberto Venegas, an Aurora assistant city manager, said the approximately 3,000-square-foot space will house partner groups like Rights for All People, the Lowry Family Center, the Denver Foundation’s Strengthening Neighborhoods Program, Focus Points Family Resource Center, El Centro Humanitario, and the Colorado African Organization.

Some of the organizations will offer services in a satellite capacity because of limited space.

“There will be various levels of presence,” Venegas said. “This is just a start; it’s certainly not everything that we’ll have, especially as more space becomes available.” He said Aurora Mental Health is also considering a partnership with the welcome center.

Some start-up money for the move will be provided by the Buck Foundation, the Denver Foundation and merged funds from Rights for All People, Venegas said.

Councilwoman Sally Mounier said there are 34 percent foreign-born citizens in Ward 1, where the welcome center will be. In fact, one in five people who live in Aurora were born in another country.

During a study session Monday, council voted to appoint a new full-time representative to the welcome center’s advisory board in January. That advisory board has seven members now.

City staff is in the process of finalizing a governing board of directors for the welcome center out of representatives from the partner organizations.

Megan Mitchell: 303-954-2650, mmitchell@denverpost.com or twitter.com/Mmitchelldp

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Thanksgiving – an American holiday that holds special significance for every proud immigrant

NEW YORK, Nov. 24, 2014 /PRNewswire/ — With our personal calendars filled with holidays that range from religious observances to children’s birthdays there is only one day of the year that we can all sit down together as one large, diverse family of Americans and celebrate who we are, where we came from and why this remains an extraordinary country of opportunity. Welcome Thanksgiving.

The holiday is particularly important to the first generation immigrant. It might not have been so very long ago when he or she was in a distant country dreaming of becoming an American citizen. Perhaps it was an economic decision to immigrate, as so many previous families can attest to. Perhaps it was the threat of religious or political persecution that motivated the immigrant to seek the New World. In the end, it doesn’t really matter what the reason was. The fact remains that America has been built and sustained by successive waves of immigrants who have fervently believed that they and their families could become anything they wanted to in a nation that offered freedom and unlimited opportunity.

This Thanksgiving, in dining rooms and kitchens, in sparse apartments or spacious homes, immigrants will gather with their loved ones and friends. They will confront the turkey and its traditional side dishes, knowing that while it may be an exotic dish requiring, for some, an acquired taste after years of their own native cuisine, they will, nevertheless, serve it with pride.  By doing so they will be starting a personal tradition that marks their embrace of this uniquely American holiday and their own American journey. One suspects they may also introduce to the table some traditional dishes from their native lands which will only serve to remind us that we are a true melting pot of cultures and ethnicities.

The holiday also comes at a time when there is a fierce argument over the President’s decision to seek immigration reform through executive order. The anger and vitriol from both sides threatens to obscure the enormous role of the American immigrant today, and throughout the centuries of our nation’s history. For those who came here seeking legal entry and eventual citizenship it is a particularly painful debate as we can see both sides of the issue quite clearly.

This author came to the United States from Iran in 1969. I had no grand plan. Rather, I only had the promise of a job in the emerging information technology field with a young family to support. But I knew, like every hopeful immigrant around the globe knows, that only in America can success be achieved through hard work, since, regardless of all our societal problems, it is our work ethic that remains the most important criteria by which we judge our fellow citizens.

When these new American citizens sit down for their holiday meal this week, the odds are they personally locked up their businesses and shops to observe the day. The Fiscal Policy Institute (FPI) reports that foreign-born individuals start their own businesses across the nation at more than twice the rate of those born here (with the Greek community holding the top honors in their analysis of which immigrant group is most likely to open a small business). In New York, our nation’s most famed melting pot, the last census data available reveals that some 48% of the city’s entrepreneurs were foreign-born.

All of this is not just a reflection on these proud, diverse, hardworking American citizens. Rather, it is a celebration of our nation’s spirit and heritage, allowing us all to reflect on the fact that the first Thanksgiving dinner convened so many centuries ago had at the head of the table an immigrant who embraced a new start in a new world.

Mr. Kazeminy is a technology entrepreneur who launched the certification industry in America and globally, creating over 200,000 jobs and certifying the specific knowledge of over 60 million individuals in a variety of fields from doctors, nurses, networking engineers, computer programmers, secretarial, digital literacy as well as other sectors. Humanitarian issues of particular interest to Mr. Kazeminy are those affecting the health, education and welfare of children where he has provided substantial financial support.  He is also a supporter of democracy throughout the world as the major benefactor of the Foundation for Promotion of Democracy and serves as Chairman of NECO

http://www.neco.org

To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/thanksgiving–an-american-holiday-that-holds-special-significance-for-every-proud-immigrant-300000403.html

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