ESL classes will be crucial for new influx of refugees: Regina Open Door Society - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 05:58 PM | Calgary | -8.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Saskatchewan

ESL classes will be crucial for new influx of refugees: Regina Open Door Society

The Regina Open Door Society says it can handle a mass influx of refugees if it receives more funding, recruits volunteers and hires more staff.

Provincial government expects more than 700 refugees in Regina before 2016

Regina Open Door Society instructor Eldon Irvine. (CBC)

A Regina refugee service saysa sudden influx of refugees will require more funding and staff, such as English instructors, but that it can handle settling nearly 800 refugees in the city

That warning comes as Premier Brad Wall is calling on Ottawa to suspend its plan to bring 25,000 Syrian refugees to Canada.

Depending on how that issue is resolved, some770 refugees couldarrive in the city by the end of the year.

Typically, the Open Door Society in Regina settles about 250 refugees per year. It said the wait list for English classes is already 100 names long and some people can wait up toseven months.

Two Syrian refugees take English as a Second Language (ESL) classes from Regina Open Door Society.
That was the case for both Mohammed Al Moliya and Mohammed Al Assaf. The Syrian men arrived in Canada unable to speak any English then waited nearly seven months to start language classes.

"I'm looking for a job because Idon't like to be sitting at home, but the problem is mylanguage," Mohammed Al Assaf told CBC News through a translator.

How much of a strain the refugees will put on the system will depend on their level of literacy. For Open Door instructor Eldon Irvine, language is one of the most important things you can have.

"It is a shield against people that would take advantage of you," Irvinesaid. "Landlords, for example, who are not meeting their responsibilities. Against bullies on the schoolyard."

Options to ease the demand includes volunteer-led classes.

"To access services, to protect yourself, to have a future, to have a better life, you need language," Irvinesaid.

In the meantime, the Open Door Society has put out a call for translators and health-care workers who speak Arabic.

The Open Door Society is asking the federal government for about $200,000 in additional funding to hire staff and accommodate the refugeesuntil April, at which timethe agencywill renegotiate its total budget.

Corrections

  • The Regina Open Door Society says it can handle the projected influx of refugees. An earlier version of this story said the refugee service warned a sudden influx may be too much to handle, especially when it comes to English classes.
    Nov 17, 2015 10:09 AM CT