Refugee assistance groups hope to persuade Congress to include more money for refugee admissions in an emergency spending bill for tsunami relief and the war in Iraq. The House Appropriations Committee was considering the spending bill on Tuesday afternoon.
In 2004, the State Department spent $781 million for refugee and migration assistance. Congress provided the department $764 million for fiscal year 2005, a cut of about 2.2 percent.
However, the cost per refugee has increased from $2,200 in 2001 to about $3,500 last year, according to the department. The increased costs resulted from more thorough background checks, rising fuel prices and, in some cases, moving refugees to more secure locations.
Bush has asked for $53 million for refugee assistance for Chad and the Sudan, but that money can't be used for resettling refugees to the United States.
The State Department has told refugee advocacy groups it will need at least $40 million more this year to bring in 60,000 refugees, said Sarah Petrin, senior government liaison for the U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants, an advocacy group.
Bush set 70,000 as the maximum number of refugee admissions this year.
Bush has proposed $893 million for 2006, which shows the president wants to deal with the money shortage, said Gideon Aronoff, vice president of government relations and policy at the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society.
Some of the money goes to the refugee assistance groups that help provide food, latrines, security and counseling to refugees at camps.
``We are facing a really troubling possibility that after turning the corner last year with 52,000-plus refugee admissions, we're actually going to go backward this year,'' Aronoff said. ``This is going to happen despite the fact that the State Department asserts it can find more than 60,000 refugees for admission this year. It is purely a matter of funding.''
The United States admitted 69,304 refugees in 2001 but suspended admissions briefly after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11. Admissions dropped to 27,029 in 2002 as the federal government intensified screening of refugees. Admissions crept up to 53,000 in the 2004 fiscal year, which ended Sept. 30.
``We continue to work as hard as possible to find the funding,'' said Robert Hilton, a State Department spokesman.
Meanwhile, the U.S. government hopes to expand its resettlement program by hiring a 45-member ``refugee corps'' based in Washington. Members would travel for about half the year to conduct interviews at refugee camps, said Bill Strassberger, Citizenship and Immigration Services spokesman. Currently, officials rotate employees in such jobs.