-
NH House advances bills that would gut refugee program, restrict rentals for undocumented immigrantsNew Hampshire's refugee resettlement program is fully funded with federal money. HB1706 would keep the state’s health and human services department from disbursing that money to different resettlement organizations.
-
A new directive earlier this month allows for many refugees to be detained without a warrant.
-
New Hampshire's refugee resettlement agencies are working to help their clients navigate additional restrictions from the Trump administration that make resettlement harder for people from 39 countries.
-
Today, nearly 5% of New Hampshire’s population is Hispanic. But when Ana Hebra Flaster’s family came to Nashua from Cuba in 1967, they knew only a few Spanish-speaking people in their neighborhood.
-
The group offers support on everything from breastfeeding, to job hunting, to summer school classes and more.
-
Most Ukrainians who received the email weren’t expecting any changes to their immigration status.
-
Ascentria Care Alliance recently laid off 19 people in New Hampshire and Massachusetts who helped refugees find jobs, housing and learn English.
-
Consejo Ejecutivo de NH aprueba fondo federal para agencias de reasentamiento de refugiados del estado.
-
Some schools have told staff to contact the superintendent if ICE or other law enforcement officials arrive with a judicial warrant. Legal experts say it's important to understand the difference between that kind of warrant and other documents that don't require the same compliance.
-
NH refugees reeling from Trump order: 'It's impossible for them to find that hope they used to have'Some families' flights were canceled after President Donald Trump signed an executive order suspending the U.S. Refugees Admissions Program.