[fsf60k] Fwd: FEMA help for immigrants

  • From: akillelea@xxxxxxx
  • To: FSF60K@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Thu, 20 Dec 2012 11:24:14 -0500 (EST)

 Hope this is helpful,  Fran

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: LI Council of Churches <LI_Council_of_Churches@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: akillelea <akillelea@xxxxxxx>
Sent: Wed, Dec 19, 2012 11:24 am
Subject: FEMA help for immigrants


  
    
      
              
      
              
      
              
    
  
                                                                        Here is 
some additional info on FEMA’s help for immigrants in the wake of Superstorm 
Sandy:
                
                Qualified Aliens who may be eligible for FEMA monetary disaster 
assistance include Green Card holders – individuals with U.S. government 
permission to live and work in the country permanently.
                Others in the Qualified Alien category include those who have 
legal U.S. resident status because of:
                
                        
                                Asylum;
                        
                                Refugee status;
                        
                                Parole (admission into the United States for 
humanitarian purposes) for at least one year;
                        
                                Withholding of deportation;
                        
                                Immigration from Cuba or Haiti; and
                        
                                Severe forms of human trafficking, including 
persons with “T” and “U” visas.
                
                Applicants should consult an immigration expert concerning 
whether or not their immigration status falls within the Qualified Alien 
category.
                FEMA’s Individuals and Households Program is available to 
disaster-stricken U.S. citizens, non-citizen nationals and Qualified Aliens in 
counties with a federal disaster declaration. Federal disaster assistance for 
individuals and families can include money for rental assistance, essential 
home repairs for owners, personal property loss and other serious 
disaster-related needs not covered by insurance.
                Undocumented immigrants are not eligible for FEMA cash 
assistance or Disaster Unemployment Assistance.
                However, in households with varying citizenship status, only 
one member needs to be eligible to qualify that home for FEMA aid.
                An undocumented parent or guardian may apply for monetary aid 
on behalf of a minor child who is a U.S. citizen, non-citizen national or 
Qualified Alien. Although the adult will be expected to sign a Declaration and 
Release (FEMA Form 009-0-3) in the child’s name, no information will be 
gathered on the person signing for the child.
                All individuals, regardless of citizenship status, affected by 
a major disaster may be eligible for other non-monetary, in-kind emergency 
disaster relief programs. These include search and rescue, medical care, 
shelter, food and water as well as Disaster Legal Services and Crisis 
Counseling.
                People who don’t qualify for monetary assistance may still call 
the FEMA registration line for referrals to voluntary agencies.
                Individuals can register for help online at 
www.disasterassistance.gov or via smartphone or tablet at m.fema.gov. They may 
also call 800-621-3362. The TTY number is 800-462-7585. People who use 
711-Relay or Video Relay Services can call 800-621-3362. The toll-free 
telephone numbers operate 24 hours a day, seven days a week until further 
notice.
                For more information on New York’s disaster recovery, visit 
www.fema.gov/SandyNY, www.twitter.com/FEMASandy, www.facebook.com/FEMASandy and 
www.fema.gov/blog.
                 
                Many immigrants assume that they cannot receive help from FEMA 
in the wake of Superstorm Sandy—or that applying for assistance may jeopardize 
their immigration status. FEMA explains in United Way’s “Disaster Assistance 
Resource Guide”:
                 
                FEMA Assistance 
                FEMA provides funding and assistance to local residents 
(renters and homeowners) and businesses who have sustained loss of or damage to 
property that is not covered by insurance. Contact your insurance company 
first: If you are NOT covered for the storm damage by your insurance company, 
you may be eligible for federal aid. You will need to obtain a letter from your 
insurance company saying you are not covered for damage from the storm. 
Applicants can feel confident that the information they provide is used only to 
access disaster recovery assistance, according to the head of disaster recovery 
operations in New York for the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).
                The aid is available to citizens, non-citizen nationals, and 
qualified aliens. Qualified aliens include those with legal permanent residence 
(shown by green cards). Their status will not be jeopardized by requesting 
disaster assistance.
                A minor child who is a citizen, non-citizen national or 
qualified alien can have a parent or guardian who is not eligible apply for 
assistance on the child’s behalf. No information will be gathered on the 
adult’s status.
                The status of qualified alien includes:
                legal permanent residents (those with green cards),
                those with refugee or asylum status,
                those whose deportation has been withheld,
                those on parole into the U.S. for at least one year for 
humanitarian purposes,
                those with conditional entry,
                those who are Cuban-Haitian entrants,
                and those with petitions for relief based on battery or extreme 
cruelty by a family member.
                The application for assistance from the Federal Emergency 
Management Agency (FEMA) requires applicants to certify that they are either 
citizens, non-citizen nationals or qualified aliens. FEMA conducts random 
audits of applications to verify U.S. citizenship and qualified alien 
documentation issued by the Immigration and Naturalization Service. However, 
assistance can be given as long as someone in the household is entitled to it, 
and no information will be gathered regarding the status of others in the 
household.
                 
                FEMA Assistance for Immigrant Families 
                FEMA helps the household, therefore if anyone in the household 
qualifies (a child born on the US, or a parent with a green card), then the 
family would qualify for help.   
                 
                For further information about FEMA assistance, visit 
www.fema.gov 
                 
                For other services, and the updated version of United Way’s 
“Disaster Assistance Resource Guide,” visit www.211longisland.org
                 
                 
                A GREAT RESOURCE TO HELP CHILDREN IMPACTED BY THE HURRICANE
                -- available in English & Spanish
                If you work with children, parents, grandparents, other 
relatives, or will be volunteering in the hurricane recovery efforts, the 
attached coloring book, which was written by Mike Conner, PsyD, in the 1990's, 
is a wonderful tool for helping children who have been impacted by the storm to 
understand their feelings and how to cope with them. Dr. Connor has granted 
permission for this to be Xeroxed and widely distributed, as long as it is not 
used for commercial purposes. There is an English, as well as a Spanish, 
edition, along with a parents' guide.
                English:
                
http://www.mentorresearch.org/Documents/StormFloodColoringBookParentGuide.pdf
                Spanish(translated courtesy of the Childrens' Project Team of 
Project Recovery, Iowa Division of Mental Health and Disability Services):
                
http://www.mentorresearch.org/Documents/SpanishFlood%20StormRecoveryParenting.pdf
                 
                DEFERRED ACTION FOR CHILD ARRIVALS
                The Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which will 
allow qualifying undocumented youth to temporarily live and work in the US, has 
officially begun.
                Click here for details about how to apply and where you can 
find help.
                CARACEN, and Jobs with Justice are offering workshops on 
Deferred Action. Hosting such a workshop is a great service to those who may be 
eligible for this program and a great way to invite immigrant youth and young 
adults to your congregation. We’d be glad to pass the word about such 
workshops. Here’s info on workshops Jobs with Justice is doing:
                
                 
                INTERRELIGIOUS VISITS
                A recent Pew Report noted that more immigrants came to the U.S. 
in 2010 from Asia than from Latin America, which suggests that we may all need 
to get to know some new neighbors.
                The LICC’s Dialogue Committee wants to encourage 
inter-denominational and inter-religious visits to houses of worship, which is 
one way to create communities that welcome immigrants. When Christians meet 
local Sikhs, Bahais, and Jains, they are reminded that not all recent 
immigrants are from Latin America. And Latinos often find they need a little 
help in understanding Long Island’s astonishing religious diversity.
                If a picture is worth a thousand words, someone remarked once 
at a meeting of the Long Island Multi-Faith Forum, a visit is worth a thousand 
pictures. Would your church, synagogue, mosque,  gurudwara, temple or 
fellowship welcome interfaith visitors? If so, what are good times to come and 
whom should we list as a contact for visits? Is there anything you would like 
visitors to know about where they should sit, what they should wear, and what 
you would prefer that they do or not do? The Forum has done more than 275 
educational programs, mostly in English but also some in Spanish to help 
Latinas get to know people they are likely to encounter on Long Island.
                You might also consider hosting the Forum’s “Building Bridges” 
program or its “What’s My Faith?” game show. Both are great ways to help your 
congregation or community group to understand your immigrant neighbors. For 
more information, please visit www.liccny.org. To request a presentation, 
contact Bernice Suplee at jbsuplee@xxxxxxx or (631) 665-7033. Michael 
Fairchild, who produced the half-hour “Faiths of Long Island” video for the 
Long Island Multi-Faith Forum has loaded it onto YouTube. You can see the video 
at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ncnn5pd6Gu4 and  
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bOsL0LaClgU
                 
                HELP FOR IMMIGRANT WORKERS
                The State Department of Labor has a host of free programs 
designed to help immigrants break into the workforce. The New York State 
Department of Labor is addressing the language/employment barrier with a new 
program designed to help immigrants navigate the working world and learn 
English as well. Immigrant workforce counselors are set up at the State Labor 
Department's one-stop centers in the Bronx, Brooklyn, Flushing, Patchogue, 
Yonkers, Buffalo, Syracuse and Utica and they can provide assistance in a wide 
variety of languages. They also refer clients to English as a Second Language 
(ESL) classes. All of the Immigrant Workforce Project programs are free. For 
more information, visit http://www.labor.ny.gov.
                
                The Rev. Thomas W. Goodhue
                Executive Director
                Long  Island Council of Churches
                1644  Denton Green
                Hempstead, NY 11550
                516-565-0290  ext. 206 (voice)
                516-565-0291 (fax)
                tomgoodhue@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
                http://www.liccny.org
         




  
    
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