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  • Immigrant programs starving for support

    Windsor Star (Ontario)
    March 15, 2005 Tuesday
    Final Edition

    Immigrant programs starving for support

    by Monica Wolfson, Windsor Star


    Iraqi immigrant Badri Naser, 25, is so committed to learning English
    that she would cut back on groceries before giving up her class.

    The married mother of a two-year-old daughter gets free bus tickets
    to go to school, but she's in jeopardy of losing the subsidy because
    of budget cuts.

    Naser spends $50 a week on food for her family, while a month's worth
    of two-way bus tickets costs $47.

    Ceasing to go to school isn't an option, said Manjola Vasil, 26, who
    arrived from Albania eight months ago. She needs to speak English in
    order to work, she said.

    The free bus ticket program offered by the Women's Enterprise Skills
    Training of Windsor Inc. is just one of many local immigrant services
    that providers say is underfunded. The $8,000 bus ticket assistance
    will be slashed in half in April and disappear in 2006. Rose Anguiano
    Hurst, executive director of WEST, said she'll avoid nixing the
    program if the federal government delivers on its budget promise to
    boost funding for immigrant services by $398 million over the next
    five years.

    Free child care is another essential service newcomers rely on to
    attend English classes.

    Gayane Avagyan, a 32-year-old Armenian immigrant with a two-year-old
    son, said she'd have to give up learning English if the New
    Canadians' Centre of Excellence didn't provide child care while she
    studied.

    "It would be very difficult, hard for me," Avagyan said while her
    child played in an adjacent room under the watchful eye of child care
    workers who speak three languages each.

    Child care could cost Avagyan up to $48 per day if the free
    babysitting didn't exist.

    The Excellence Centre cares for about 40 children per language
    session, which are held three times a day. Children must be at least
    18 months old.

    "Infant care is what we are asking the government to fund," said Reza
    Shahbazi, executive director of the Excellence Centre. "Some parents
    will have a four-year-old and an infant and can't take the training
    because they don't have anyone to care for the baby."

    Shahbazi said he needs an additional $300,000, but requests for more
    money have been ignored.

    Most immigrant service providers said they'd use new funding to
    eliminate child care waiting lists and expand employment, settlement
    and adaptation programs. The Windsor Essex County Family YMCA/New
    Canadians' Center offers training to help immigrants adjust to
    Canadian culture.

    "Basic settlement, language, employment, these are key to a
    successful transition to a community," said Dan Pelletier, chief
    executive officer of the YMCA.

    The federal government has pledged to give Ontario the bulk of new
    immigration money, confirmed the Ministry of Citizenship and
    Immigration. Officials couldn't say how much cash Windsor would get.

    Windsor's immigrant population has exploded in the past decade as
    24,305 newcomers came here between 1991 and 2001, a 126 per cent
    increase from the previous decade.

    BOTTOM LINE

    According to Citizenship and Immigration Canada, last year Ontario
    got $127 million to aid about 133,440 new immigrants. By comparison,
    Quebec received $149 million for about 32,489 newcomers. Windsor was
    awarded $5.6 million for its 2,418 new immigrants.
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