Abilene's NPR Station

Local Refugee Community Anticipates Changes Under Biden Administration

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Abilene's IRC provides training, job placement, and other help to refugees resettling in the area.
courtesy of International Rescue Committee-Abilene

Some of the first actions President Biden took after his inauguration were aimed at reversing the course President Trump had set on immigration.  He halted work on the border wall, lifted a ban on travel from Muslim countries, and restored DACA, a program President Obama initiated.  But refugees are still waiting for action on their behalf.  Refugees apply for entry into the U.S. seeking escape from war, persecution, or personal threats in their home countries.  President Trump had lowered the maximum number of refugees that would be accepted by the U.S. to a historic low of just 15,000  for this year.  President Biden has said he’d like to increase the cap on refugees to 125,000.  But it will take time.  

KACU’s Heather Claborn spoke with Susanna Lubanga, director of the Abilene office of the International Rescue Committee.  They started by looking back at the history of refugee resettlement in America.  

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Heather Claborn joined KACU as news director in January 2018. She oversees daily newscast and feature reporting and works with KACU’s news anchors to develop newscasts. She also conducts two-way interviews, reports for newscast and feature stories and maintains the station’s social media and website content. In 2020, Claborn helped staff develop the daily newsletter that is delivered by email.