New York, District 26

New York, District 26

Summary of Proposed Changes to Student and Exchange Visitor Admissions Process by DHS

Summary of Proposed Changes to Student and Exchange Visitor Admissions Process by DHS

This document provides a summary of the Department of Homeland Security’s September 25, 2020, Proposed Rule, “Establishing a Fixed Time Period of Admission and an Extension of Stay Procedure for Nonimmigrant Academic Students, Exchange Visitors, and Representatives of Foreign Information Media.” The summary explains the changes DHS is proposing… Read More

Rwandan Refugee Expands Immigrant-Focused Newspaper into Buffalo-Based Non-Profit

Rwandan Refugee Expands Immigrant-Focused Newspaper into Buffalo-Based Non-Profit

Shortly after Rwandan refugee Rubens Mukunzi began publishing a newspaper about immigrant and refugee life, he got a visit from the Buffalo Public Schools Superintendent Kriner Cash. “He was very excited to have the newspaper, Karibu News, as a voice for refugees and immigrants in Buffalo Public Schools,”… Read More

UB Now: UB to host fifth annual Refugee Health Summit

UB Now: UB to host fifth annual Refugee Health Summit

UB will host its fifth annual WNY Refugee Health Summit from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. April 20 at the Educational Opportunity Center, 555 Ellicott St., Buffalo. The summit unites 150 clinicians, resettlement caseworkers, community health workers, researchers, students, municipal leaders and refugees to understand the many factors affecting health… Read More

Indian Native Finds Success in America, Gives Back to Adoptive Home of Corpus Christi

Indian Native Finds Success in America, Gives Back to Adoptive Home of Corpus Christi

Indian native Kamlesh Bhikha grew up in an entrepreneurial family. His grandfather was a sugarcane and cotton farmer and his father manufactured diamonds, selling the gems he’d fashioned from rough stones. Bhikha also aspired to be his own boss. “The harder you work, the more you reap,’” he says. “And… Read More

Are Immigrants More Likely to Move Within the United States for a Job?

Are Immigrants More Likely to Move Within the United States for a Job?

When IBM launched its first e-business educational program in the United States in 2003, the company hired Saad Yousuf, an immigrant from Pakistan. Yousuf had a master’s degree in computer science and experience in corporate training—valuable, in-demand skills—but there was something else: Yousuf was willing to move to Kenosha, Wisconsin… Read More

Bangladeshi Uses an Overseas Education to Fight for Worker Rights in U.S.

Bangladeshi Uses an Overseas Education to Fight for Worker Rights in U.S.

Farook Hossain has a master’s degree in political science and was working as a medical clinic director in Bangladesh when he won a green card through the diversity lottery. He gave it all up to move to America, in 2001, and was soon working for $5 an hour at a… Read More

International Students Who Graduated in 2016 Contributed $19.6 billion to the American Economy Over the Course of Their Studies, New Study Shows

International Students Who Graduated in 2016 Contributed $19.6 billion to the American Economy Over the Course of Their Studies, New Study Shows

New York, NY – As Americans celebrate the graduating class of 2017, New American Economy has issued a study on the economic value of international students in the country’s $542 billion higher education industry. The research brief shows that international students who received their… Read More

After Rising From Tragedy, an Ethiopian Entrepreneur Feeds the Economy — and Her Community

After Rising From Tragedy, an Ethiopian Entrepreneur Feeds the Economy — and Her Community

In 1995, Menbere “Menbe” Aklilu came to the United States with her 11-year-old son, moved to Oakland, California, and became a hostess at the Richmond Italian restaurant Salute e Vita. It may not sound like an auspicious beginning. But by age 10 in Gojjam, Ethiopia, Aklilu had witnessed her… Read More

In America, Rwandan Refugee Gains a Voice and Creates Jobs

In America, Rwandan Refugee Gains a Voice and Creates Jobs

From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Rubens Mukunzi runs a Buffalo-based newspaper, where he writes, edits, and meets with advertisers. After a one-hour break for dinner, the Rwandan refugee starts his shift at a cleaning company, where he works until midnight. The hours are long, but Mukunzi… Read More

War Refugee Trains Americans to Fill Buffalo’s Skills Gaps

War Refugee Trains Americans to Fill Buffalo’s Skills Gaps

Bassam Deeb arrived in the United States as a teenage refugee. It was 1976, and his family had fled Lebanon, a country mired in a civil war that would last until 1990 and cost the country an estimated 120,000 lives. Deeb, 15 at the time, spoke no English and… Read More

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