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Otters capitalize on Freedom errors to win third straight game

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For the second time in just over a week, Jeff Gardner threw out the tying run at the plate in the late going, helping the Evansville Otters snuck by the Florence Freedom with an 8-7 win on Saturday night at UC Health Stadium.

With the bases loaded in the first inning, Florence struck first as Jordan Brower brought home a run with a walk to force in Caleb Lopes from third base.

The Otters tied the game in the second. Brant Whiting doubled to lead off the inning and advanced to third on a ground ball. Austin Bush brought Whiting home from third with an RBI ground out to tie the score at 1-1.

Evansville took the lead for the first time thanks a leaky Florence defense. With David Cronin at second, Ryan Long grounded out to short and the first baseman Jacob Wark attempted to throw out Cronin who was advancing to third base, but Wark airmailed the ball into the stands to allow Cronin to score and put the Otters ahead 2-1.

Florence scored three in the fourth to pull ahead. Lopes tied the game with a sacrifice fly and Skylar Ewing pushed Florence in front with a two-run double.

In the top of the sixth, Cronin crushed a two-run homer, his second of the year, to put Evansville ahead 6-4.

John Price Jr. brought the Freedom to within one run thanks to a solo homer in the bottom of the sixth.

The Freedom tied the score at 7-7 on a Taylor Bryant RBI double in the seventh.

Evansville went back in front with two runs in the eighth. With men at first and second, J.J Gould singled to right and an error from Ricky Ramirez Jr. allowed the go ahead run to score from second and put runners at second and third. A wild pitch then let Taylor Lane scamper home from third to put the Otters ahead 8-6.

Florence got a run back in the bottom of the eighth on an RBI single from Jordan Brower but Gardner threw out the potential tying run at the plate to keep Evansville ahead 8-7.

Jeff Thompson came on in the ninth and pitched a perfect frame to earn his first save of the year as the Otters emerged victorious, 8-7.

Matt Chavarria picks up his fourth win of the year, his second in as many nights for the Otters. The righty pitched 1.1 innings allowing one run on three hits.

Cody Gray is hit with the loss for Florence. In 1.2 innings, Gray allowed two runs, one earned while striking out four and allowing three hits.

Ty Hensley started for the Otters and received a no-decision. Coming off his no-hit performance, Hensley went 3.2 innings, allowing, four runs, one earned, on six hits and six walks.

Chuck Weaver went six innings in his start for the Freedom but also gets a no-decision. Weaver allowed six runs, four earned, on nine hits, one walk while punching out three.

The Otters wrap up their series with the Freedom tomorrow afternoon at 2:35 p.m. ET at UC Health Stadium.

Ellis Park: Catalano hoping Manny Wah stays on Breeders’ Cup course

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Owner Susan Moulton, trainer Wayne Catalano and jockey Channing Hill team for both of Ellis Park’s $75,000 2-year-old stakes Sunday, with Spice It Up in the Debutante for fillies and Manny Wah in the Juvenile.
Manny Wah has shown enough in two races — a second to a nice horse at Churchill Downs, followed by neck win after battling for the lead through fast fractions at Arlington Park — that Catalano isn’t afraid to mention hopes of making the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Nov. 2 at his main base of Churchill Downs. Spice It Up, however, is more of an unknown.
Moulton bought the filly July 9 at Fasig-Tipton Kentucky’s horses of racing age sale for $140,000. In her only start, when trained by Ohio-based Tim Hamm and co-owned by breeder Three Chimneys, Spice It Up came from a stalking position to win by 8 3/4 lengths at Thistledown.
“Definitely,” Catalano said of having the Breeders’ Cup at home on his mind. “Definitely with Manny Wah. The filly, we’ve got to see. Manny Wah is going to get better. He’s got everything it takes. His daddy was a runner. His mama could run. He looks like he can run on anything. He’s run a couple good races; his second race was a pretty darn game race.”
Spice It Up’s team is hoping for the immediate success that they enjoyed with another horse bought out of the same sale: the 3-year-old filly Altamura, who in her first start after Moulton bought her for $205,000 won Laurel’s Camptown Stakes for Virginia-breds on Aug. 4.
“We like everything about her,” Catalano said of Spice It Up, a daughter of 2010 Kentucky Derby winner Super Saver. “The filly has been in the program five, six weeks and is really coming around very nice. Obviously she ran well her first out. We’ll see when she runs back, we’ll get a better feel of how she is.”
Manny Wah comes by his distinctive blaze and white markings below his jaw honestly, being a son of Will Take Charge, the 3-year-old champion of 2013 who had his own distinctive “chrome.”
Hill says Manny Wah was impressive in his initial defeat. “He was ready, but he wasn’t like top-notch ready,” he said. “He ran really well. He really moved forward from being a little green and showed he had a lot of promise. When he won at Arlington, that was just as impressive. He ended up making the lead and was a little green down on the inside. But I was never worried that the other horse was going to outrun him. And they just sold that horse who ran second to him for $200,000.
“Wayne has stated from the beginning that this is his Breeders’ Cup horse. Obviously I think that’s the goal. If he comes with a big effort Sunday, you’d have to think he’d be competitive in the Breeders’ Cup. It looks like a pretty good little race Sunday. If we can beat Whiskey Echo (third in Saratoga’s Sanford), then we belong with the horses at Saratoga. Hopefully that horse-racing math adds up. I’m really looking forward to it. Not only does he have the talent but the right frame of mind, too.”
Hill is married to Wayne and Renee Catalano’s daughter, Shelbi. It could be a big week for the family as Hill will ride the Catalano-trained Farrell in Saratoga’s Grade I Personal Ensign on next Saturday’s Travers Stakes card. Hill guided the 4-year-old Farrell to victory in Saratoga’s Grade 3 Shuvee in her last start.
Winchell Thoroughbreds going for sweep as well
Ron Winchell’s Winchell Thoroughbreds also could pull off a parlay with Kristizar in the Debutante and favored Whiskey Echo in the Juvenile. Both are trained by Hall of Famer Steve Asmussen, winner of Ellis Park’s last two training titles.
Kristizar won her debut on opening day at Ellis Park by 5 1/2 lengths but faded badly to fourth after engaging in a speed duel in an Ellis allowance race won by Debutante contender Profound Legacy.
“Was less impressive? Is that the phrase you’re looking for?” David Fiske said, speaking with the humor and candor that comes with being the Winchell racing and bloodstock manager for decades. “I don’t know if there was anything definite that happened to her that day. Kind of mystery, I guess. We figured we’d give her another chance. She’s out of a Giant’s Causeway mare, so hopefully the distance isn’t a problem. Tapizar (her sire) won the Breeders’ Cup Mile so you’d think she could handle seven-eighths.”
Whiskey Echo — a $225,000 yearling purchase by Winchell and Willis Horton who is the Ellis Park Juvenile’s 9-5 favorite — was the front-running winner of his debut at Belmont Park, then a closing third in Saratoga’s Grade 3 Sanford, a race in which the rider dropped the whip about the sixteenth pole.
“Whiskey Echo is a different kind of horse than some of the others we’ve already started, just by his breeding (by two-time Breeders’ Cup Classic winner Tiznow) and his size,” Fiske said. “He looks more like a distance horse, a two-turn horse. So running against sprinters at Saratoga might not have been his cup of tea. And I don’t think Steve liked the way he was training at Saratoga, so he sent him back to Churchill. But I think the farther he goes, the better he’ll be.”
Owners hoping Tobacco Road another ‘Lee’ – but 3 lengths faster
Steve Asmussen also trains Juvenile contender Tobacco Road, whose parallels so far to stablemate Lookin At Lee are not lost on Lee Levinson, who with sons Mike and Andy and partner Don Nelson own both horses.
Both horses were fifth at Churchill Downs in their first start at 2, then won their second start at Ellis Park. Tobacco Road now will try to join Lookin At Lee as winner of the Ellis Park Juvenile. As Asmussen points out, Tobacco Road still has to become a millionaire to keep up the comparisons, with Lookin at Lee grinding out seven figures honestly through seconds, thirds and fourth in America’s biggest races.
That most famously includes second in the 2017 Kentucky Derby, when he closed from far back to finish 2 3/4 lengths behind victorious Always Dreaming after getting a rail-skipping ride from Corey Lanerie, who rode Tobacco Road in his victory and will be back on Sunday.
“We hope,” Lee Levinson said via speaker phone in a conversation that included Mike. “Tobacco Road has really responded well. The last race at Ellis, the way he came at the end of that race, boy, it looked similar to me. Just hope he improves. It looks like he wants to go longer, so that is a good thing. Let’s put it this way: I hope Tobacco Road can run two lengths faster than Looking At Lee, and we’ll be in good shape. That’s all we’re asking for: Tobacco Road to be three lengths faster than Lookin At Lee.”
Both horses also were inexpensive as far as buying classic horses go. Lookin At Lee cost $70,000, while Tobacco Road was purchased privately for $30,000 after the son of Quality Road failed to reach the predetermined minimum sales price in the ring.
“It’s like you want to replay it again: One of the greatest times ever,” Lee said of the equine Lee going to the Breeders’ Cup, Triple Crown and all the preps to get him there. “You want to replay it so bad, and you just hope he’s got a whole lot more to give. But it’s something really exciting. Because once you have that experience, you want to relive it again. Reliving another fantastic moment, that’s all. Especially going to the Kentucky Derby, the Breeders’ Cup, just the thrill, excitement, the people you’re around. It’s an out-of-the-world experience.”
Said Mike: “In 2016 to 2017, we literally got to do all the big horse-racing events.” Still, they said, Ellis Park is their favorite track.
“We love Ellis Park,” Lee said. “I like the time of the year it runs. The horses there are highly competitive. And if you compare the maidens at Ellis Park, they can compete with anybody. You’ve got good horses at Ellis Park, and it’s a good way to find out what you have. It’s an excellent test ground for your horses. We love racing there.”
 Ellis Park Debutante
Purse: $75,000. Distance: 7 furlongs. Division: 2-year-old fillies
Post time: Sunday at 4:10 p.m. CT (eighth race)       odds
PP horse (weight)          jockey/trainer
  1. Lucky Girasol (118)       Esquilin/Gorostieta      30-1
  2. Spice It Up (120)         Hill/Catalano           12-1
  3. Kristizar (120)           McMahon/Asmussen    12-1
  4. Profound Legacy (122)    Hernandez/Wilkes       5-1
  5. Wakeeta (120)           Perez/Gorham         20-1
  6. Somewhere (120)        Albarado/Bradley        9-2
  7. Bivian B (120)           Morales/Hancock        8-1
  8. La Coyota (120)         Camacho/Gonzalez      30-1
  9. Serengeti Empress (120)   Lanerie/Amoss          3-1
  10. Include Edition (120)      Graham/V. Foley        10-1
  11. Shanghai Rain (120)      Saez/Calhoun           4-1
Ellis Park Juvenile
Purse: $75,000. Distance: 7 furlongs. Division: 2-year-olds
Post time: Sunday at 4:40 p.m. CT (ninth race)
PP horse (weight)           jockey/trainer           odds
  1. Pradar (120)            Gilligan/Yanakov         20-1
  2. Lady’s Weekend (120)     Rocco/Demeritte        15-1
  3. SS Trooper (120)         Castanon/Johnson       20-1
  4. Manny Wah (120)        Hill/Catalano             5-1
  5. Giant Act (120)          Camacho/Helmbrecht     30-1
  6. Veritas (120)            Pedroza/Wohlers         15-1
  7. Shanghaied Roo (120)    Saez/Calhoun            8-1
8. Overanalyzer (120)       Ulloa/Elliott              8-1
9. Tobacco Road (120)      Lanerie/Asmussen         9-2
10. Mine Inspector (120)     Graham/V. Foley           8-1
11. Whiskey Echo (120)      Bridgmohan/Asmussen     9-5

“READERS FORUM” AUGUST 19, 2018

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We hope that today’s “Readers Forum” will provoke honest and open dialogue concerning issues that we, as responsible citizens of this community, need to address in a rational and responsible way?

 WHATS ON YOUR MIND TODAY?

Todays“Readers Poll” question is: Are you pleased with all of the new development in downtown Evansville?

Please take time and read our articles entitled “STATEHOUSE Files, CHANNEL 44 NEWS, LAW ENFORCEMENT, READERS POLL, BIRTHDAYS, HOT JOBS” and “LOCAL SPORTS”.  You now are able to subscribe to get the CCO daily.

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We understand that sometimes people don’t always agree and discussions may become a little heated.  The use of offensive language, insults against commenters will not be tolerated and will be removed from our site

Commentary: Journalism Education Not Immune From Anti-Media Rhetoric

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Commentary: Journalism Education Not Immune From Anti-Media Rhetoric

By Ryan Gunterman

TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – One’s first, professional press credential is something that is celebrated in the world of student journalism. For many, the feeling is an emotional combination of Christmas morning, a surprise birthday party and the season premiere of their favorite Netflix show.

As a journalism educator of 15 years, the thrill of seeing this joy was equally as fulfilling. Therefore, it was a moment of celebration when both the Clinton and Obama campaigns approved access for several of my students during the 2008 Indiana Primary. In 2016, the enthusiasm was replaced with fear when the Trump campaign granted similar privileges to one of my high school seniors.

This emotional 180 had nothing to do with politics. My students have covered candidates of both parties at the local, state and national levels. Not once did I hesitate in encouraging them to do so.

Until 2016, when the safety and wellbeing of the young adult for which I was responsible could not be guaranteed due to one, five-letter word on her lanyard.

Attacks on the media do not discriminate between those journalists who are working toward the honor roll or Pulitzer Prize. President Trump does not inform his crowds and Twitter legion that a high school diploma is required to be the “enemy of the people.” There’s not a minimum print circulation or Nielsen rating to be labeled “fake news.”

“The dirty war on the free press” targets all in the field. Including our children.

While the motivation behind this “war” is to discredit accurate information and credible journalists, its casualties are increasingly becoming the very institutions responsible for preventing the journalistic falsities President Trump claims to despise.

The Indiana High School Press Association has championed the core values of truth, courage, integrity and freedom since 1922, and the state’s scholastic journalism programs have a long history of adhering to those very principles. Hoosiers should be proud to know the top middle and high school media outlets can be found right here, and our academic standards for journalism, publications, and mass media courses are a national model.

However, the anti-media message that had been reserved for CNN and The Washington Post is now being utilized to discredit, and even suppress, Indiana’s young reporters. Examples of school administrators and community leaders engaged in the restriction of classroom press freedom can be found from Evansville to Fort Wayne, New Albany to Gary, Richmond to Terre Haute and every region in between.

This opposition even made its way into the Statehouse during the recent legislative session. When the House defeated a bill to protect the First Amendment rights of student journalists for the second, consecutive year, one heard the phrase “fake news” echoing on the chamber floor.

While explaining why his fellow representatives should join him to deny freedom of the press within Indiana school hallways, Rep. Bob Morris, R-Fort Wayne, said the legislation was an effort “to make the school look the same way as these people that write about the fake news on a daily basis.”

Following his remarks, a bill that was approved 88-4 by the very same elected officials in 2017 failed when it received 42 more “no” votes in 2018.

However, students aren’t the only ones finding themselves caught up in a “war”, not of their own making. This conflict has also enveloped those adults responsible for molding the objective, fair information distributors for which the #MAGA crowd says it clamors.

Indiana is one of the few states that requires educators leading journalism and student media courses to be certified in the area of study just as those who teach math and English. These teachers have trained experts and the foundation of the First Amendment.

All of that importance and credibility is shattered by an angry, baseless accusation mimicked from the commander in chief.

The lessons of responsible reporting and resolving a societal ill are rendered irrelevant. It is undone by the continuation of these fake news, “enemy of the people” talking points that advance an agenda so those in charge can “win” over those who should be holding them accountable.

As a result, we have situations where journalists are being attacked, verbally and physically, and large segments of the public are more likely to believe false information from someone in power rather than the truth via those who are not.

The most-skilled, beloved journalism teacher would find little success in countering these tactics when they originate from the community, students’ parents and even their own supervisors.

What little hope does the truth have against such opposition?

This isn’t 2008 anymore.

FOOTNOTE: Ryan Gunterman is executive director of the Indiana High School Press Association and an editor with TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

The City-County Observer posted this article without opinion, bias or editing.

HOLA Latino Festival Draws Big Crowd

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HOLA Latino Festival Draws Big Crowd

Bosse Field was packed Saturday afternoon but not for a baseball game. But for the 3rd annual HOLA Latino Festival.

Over 30 Latin food vendors were on hand dishing out their best dishes. In addition, food trucks, plenty of drinks, games, art and crafts and more.

Despite a passing shower and a humid afternoon. Many were out enjoying their favorite Latin American food.

Maytes Rivera, treasure for HOLA Evansville said, “The weather has helped out, it rained for a little bit but I mean it’s been amazing, the crowd loves it and they come out and enjoy it regardless of what the weather is like.”

HOLA representatives say more people know about the festival and it gets bigger and better each year.

There was something for everyone’s pallet, whether spicy or sweet, including a variety of cold and frozen beverages.

Isaiah Flemming of Evansville said, “From what I’ve seen so far it’s a lot bigger than the other festivals that we’ve had here lately, i just feel like we have a lot more variety here on this one.”

Gorditas Mama Licha makes a homemade deep fried tortilla stuffed with chicken or pork. It’s grandmas homemade recipe with her added special seasoning.

Rosa said, “Americans really love to try the different ethnicities of our foods, they get a taste of our Mexico, especially from out grandmas seasoning which is the best.”

The festival brings a taste of Latin America right to the river city.

Rivera said, “It’s a blending of America, it’s a good way for the Latino culture to not only for the Latino culture, you get Americans and everyone combine and fun in a big fiesta.”

Hannah Paulson returned for her second year of the HOLA Festival, “Thought it was really interesting how so many countries are represented there is all kinds of good food, drinks and live music so it was a blast.”

The festival also included some award winning live entertainment from around the country. Latin American bands and singers from Indianapolis, Chicago, Corpus Christi and Mexico were on hand.

July Indiana Employment Report

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Indiana’s unemployment rate stands at 3.4 percent for July and remains lower than the national rate of 3.9 percent. With the exception of one month when it was equal (October 2014), Indiana’s unemployment rate now has been below the U.S. rate for more than four years. The monthly unemployment rate is a U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) indicator that reflects the number of unemployed people seeking employment within the prior four weeks as a percentage of the labor force.

Indiana’s labor force had a net increase of 15,564 over the previous month. This was a result of a 2,964 increase in unemployed residents and an increase of 12,600 employed residents. Indiana’s total labor force, which includes both Hoosiers employed and those seeking employment, stands at 3.38 million, and the state’s 64.8 percent labor force participation rate remains above the national rate of 62.9 percent. Indiana’s labor force growth of 67,519 over the past six months represents the state’s largest six-month increase since 1995 in the state.

In addition, Indiana’s initial unemployment insurance claims continue to be at historical lows.

Learn more about how unemployment rates are calculated here: http://www.hoosierdata.in.gov/infographics/employment-status.asp.

July 2018 Employment Charts

Employment by Sector

Private sector employment has grown by more than 24,800 over the year, and has increased by 5,600 over the previous month, primarily due to gains in the Professional & Business Services (2,700) and the Construction (2,000) sectors. Gains were partially offset by losses in the Other (-1,000), which includes Mining and Logging, IT and Other Services, and the Financial Activities (-400) sectors. Total private employment stands at 2,703,800 and is 14,900 above the December 2017 peak.

Midwest Unemployment Rates

July 2018 Midwest Unemployment Rates

  

Ellis Park Accredited to 24 Race Tracks in the U.S. and Canada

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Ellis Park Accredited to 24 Race Tracks in the U.S. and Canada

Ellis Park now has active accreditations to 24 racetracks in the U.S. and Canada, including every Thoroughbred track in Kentucky.

The National Thoroughbred Racing Association (NTRA) announced today that Ellis park has received its initial accreditation from the NTRA Safety and Integrity Alliance.

“On behalf of the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission (KHRC) and its Safety and Welfare Committee we appreciate the commitment from each of Kentucky’s racetracks to achieve accreditation,” said Hall of Fame jockey Pat Day, Chair of the KHRC Safety and Welfare Committee. “We look forward to a continued partnership with all of Kentucky’s tracks, our horsemen, and the Safety & Integrity Alliance in promoting the safety of our athletes and the integrity of our racing.”

In order to receive the accreditation, Ellis Park underwent an on-site inspection conducted numerous racing officials. Along with inspections, interviews were conducted with track executives, racetrack personnel, jockeys, horsemen, veterinarians, stewards and regulators

“Achieving the Alliance Code of Standards and full accredited status requires much diligence and cooperation from all stakeholders,” said Steve Koch, executive director of the NTRA Safety & Integrity Alliance.

Ellis Park is one of 24 racing facilities fully accredited by the Alliance that together host 96% of Grade 1 stakes and generate more than 75% of North American pari-mutuel handle.

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REFUGEE INDUSTRY HEADS TO CAPITOL HILL

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by Joe Guzzardi, August 12, 2018

The refugee resettlement industry is in full panic mode. Some may question whether “industry” is the correct word. But the multi-million dollar budgets voluntary agencies (volags) have at their disposal and the lofty salaries the directors earn reveal that resettlement is a big and lucrative business, largely American taxpayer-funded.

Aided by a favorable Supreme Court decision, President Trump wants ever-fewer refugees. To the contractors’ dismay, last year President Trump threw out 5,000 as his recommended cap. As of July 1, 2018, the State Department has admitted 16,229 refugees, a pace well below this year’s 45,000 ceiling.

With the October 1 deadline looming for the president to make his annual determination on the FY 2019 refugee ceiling, the stakes are high for the nine federal contractors. Lower refugee totals put at risk volags’ substantial cash flow that includes $1,950 for each refugee and each child with the contractor pocketing $750 in federal and state grant money, as well as other perks. To protect their monetary interests, the volags gathered on Capitol Hill this month to lobby for higher refugee totals.

Six of the nine volags are religious-based groups. By lobbying on Capitol Hill, they ignore the church-state separation principle. When Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, and other Founding Fathers wrote about religious liberty’s importance, they also condemned church interference in federal policy. Moreover, the IRS specifically prohibits churches and other nonprofits from engaging in a political activity like lobbying. The IRS code that pertains to 501(c)(3) volags states that they must completely refrain from political campaigning.

Yet in his August 3 op-ed published in the widely read and influential news magazine, The Hill, Rev. John McCullough, Church World Service CEO and president wrote a scathing commentary that attacked President Trump’s long-standing wish for fewer refugees, a sentiment many Americans share.

David Robinson, the State Department’s former Refugee Bureau acting director, shared his from-the-front perspective. Robinson wrote that “the federal government provides about 90 percent of its collective budget” and its lobbying umbrella “wields enormous influence over the Administration’s refugee admissions policy. It lobbies the Hill effectively to increase the number of refugees admitted for permanent resettlement each year…. If there is a conflict of interest, it is never mentioned… .The solution its members offer to every refugee crisis is simplistic and the same: increase the number of admissions to the United States without regard to budgets… ” Note the repeated references to lobbying even though the law prohibits it.

Like other federal immigration legislation, the 1980 Refugee Act and its consequences went unchallenged until the current administration. Proving the folly of never bucking the status quo, Refugee Resettlement Watch’s Ann Corcoran wrote that nearly four decades after the last American left Vietnam, the U.S. still accepts Southeast Asian refugees. More than 1.5 million have entered and contributed to nonrefugee chain migrants.

Congress should turn its attention to the hard math behind refugee resettlement: refugees immediately access food stamps, public housing, cash assistance, healthcare and childcare. The Department of Health and Human Services doles out approximately $1.5 billion in grants to state and local agencies, schools, and nonprofits for refugee-oriented legal advocacy, language education, mental-health services and domestic-violence prevention.

Continuing refugee business, as usual, is a mistake; resettlement contractors profit, while the American communities where refugees are relocated struggle through difficult transition periods. The multi-millions in dollars the U.S. spends domestically on refugee programs would go 12 times as far if distributed in refugees’ home regions to provide for their shelter and care until they can safely return home. No nation including the U.S. can indefinitely accept the world’s displaced populations.

FOOTNOTE: Joe Guzzardi is a Progressives for Immigration Reform analyst who has written about immigration for more than 30 years. Contact him at jguzzardi@pfirdc.org.

The City-County Observer posted this article without bias, opinion or editing.