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Organizations in Vermont plan to increase the number of refugees they take in this year to roughly 600 people. But the state’s housing crisis could get in the way.
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Leaders of refugee resettlement agencies are asking the state to help fund temporary and long-term housing for refugees.
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Vermont's floods washed away gardens providing food security, community for these Burlington farmersFarmers growing culturally significant foods with the New Farms for New Americans program lost their crops to the past week's severe flooding.
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Host Mikaela Lefrak speaks with an immigration attorney in Vermont and the head of a refugee center in Montreal about U.S.-Canada border relations and asylum seekers.
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If you had to leave your home, you'd bring essential items for survival. But if you could take one sentimental object, what would it be? We asked refugees from Ukraine, Afghanistan, Honduras and more.
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The Vermont Agency of Agriculture is receiving a $500,000 federal grant so the state can buy locally-grown food from underserved farmers, then distribute it to Vermonters facing food insecurity.
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The new artwork recreates similar murals the Afghans painted back in Afghanistan, before they were forced to flee when the Taliban returned to power.
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Violence and natural disasters are fueling the surge in the number of people displaced, the U.N. says in a new report.
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Though their future legal status in the country is still unclear, Afghans and Ukrainians living in New Hampshire can now apply to remain for at least 18 months.
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We speak to advocates working on behalf of refugees and asylum seekers in Vermont.