From The Texas Newsroom:
A few days ago, Raoul Ahmat, 26, stopped by Walmart in Northeast Dallas to buy food, soap and other provisions. But when he tried to pay with his debit card, it was declined. The card had no money left on it.
Ahmat, who’s originally from Central African Republic, is among the 100,000 individuals in Texas who receive assistance through the federal government’s Refugee Resettlement Program. Catholic Charities Fort Worth has managed the distribution of federal funds for refugee aid organizations across the state since Texas withdrew from the program in 2016. The nonprofit coordinates with 29 other organizations that help refugees with cash assistance, job training and English classes.
However, since late January, Catholic Charities Fort Worth says it has not been able to access more than $36 million in federal grants needed to provide these services.
On Monday, it sued the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., demanding they “un-freeze” the grant money.
In a joint statement, Michael Iglio, CEO of Catholic Charities Fort Worth, and Jeff Demers, state refugee coordinator of the Texas Office of Refugees, said these Refugee Resettlement Program funds are crucial for refugees and certain immigrants such as those who’ve come from Cuba, Afghanistan and Ukraine.
“This obstruction has severely impacted the delivery of critical services, including employment assistance, legal aid, educational programs, and healthcare services designed to help individuals and families integrate and thrive in Texas communities,” Iglio and Demers wrote.
“Despite four attempts in January to secure payment — followed by ten additional requests over the next four weeks — HHS has unlawfully continued withholding the financial support allocated under existing grant agreements.”