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The aforementioned IRCO values have helped guide the organization and address the needs of over 30 ethnic refugee and immigrant groups from Asia, Africa, the former Soviet Union, the Middle East, Eastern Europe, and the Caribbean. IRCO's equally multicultural and multilingual staff members —who speak at least 39 languages—help meet the varied needs of immigrants and refugees.

 

Africa House Services   ( 1 Articles )

Following in the model of IRCO’s very successful Asian Family Center, the Africa House Refugee Center delivers many IRCO services to African refugees in a setting in which most of the staff are themselves from Africa and can speak the languages of the clients.

Employment Services   ( 3 Articles )

Intensive job search assistance and support services for refugees, asylees and immigrants include job training and certification courses; job development and placement; job coaching and retention services.  Youth employment includes job placement services and academic support services geared to identifying and preparing for college and careers.

Family Services   ( 4 Articles )

Culturally-specific anti-poverty services such as rental and utility assistance help families in crisis or need.  Also, a variety of health education and advocacy programs aim to encourage healthy lifestyles and disease prevention.

Senior Services   ( 4 Articles )

IRCO operates the Mid-County Senior Center and provides case management for frail and elderly disabled persons to keep them independent and at home as long as possible.

Training Services   ( 2 Articles )

IRCO offers a variety of employment skill training classes for refugees including direct caregiver training, child care provider training, hotel housekeeping and janitorial training, customer service training and food processing training, as well as pre-industrial training.  Citizenship classes, naturalization interview coaching and interpretation services for refugee seniors are also provided.

Youth Services   ( 10 Articles )

IRCO runs SUN (Schools Uniting Neighborhoods) Community School programs in three schools; culturally and linguistically specific academic support programs; a mentoring program in the David Douglas School District, and Upward Bound program and gang intervention and prevention programs.


Newsflash

Leslie Yoder greets regular visitor Shawana Young, a Senior and People with Disabilities Program Home Care Worker. After reading about Multnomah County senior services now offered through the Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization (IRCO) in the August Mid-county Memo, Yoder made a call that changed her life for the better. Yoder completes paperwork with Young’s help. [...]

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A very complex mix What Amanda Lim brings as IRCO’s new board president By Ronault L.S. Catalani The Asian Reporter There’s an old Sulawesi saying about power: “Trust most those who have truly sorrowed.” As old school as it sounds, it’s still the wisest way to delegate power — ask any political science scholar. Indeed, this Old World prescription retains [...]

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Approximately 60 refugees from countries including Nepal, Ethiopia, Myanmar (formerly Burma), Barundi and Cuba recently attended a workshop at the Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization on public safety, basic laws and emergency services. In the countries where many of the attendees formerly lived, people in uniform were not seen as friends or advocates. In fact, many [...]

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Portland took in close to 2,000 refugees yearly, until the U.S. State Department implemented lengthier background checks following the attacks. Now, about 1,200 refugees arrive in Portland each year. It may be less than the pre-9/11 peak, but that number still keeps Outer Northeast Portland’s Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization’s (IRCO) employees, most of them former [...]

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Immigrant children, many from conflict-torn nations, see Santa for the first time By Nikole Hannah-Jones The Oregonian The children didn’t laugh or race about as they entered the winter wonderland with the sparkling white Christmas trees, dancing gingerbread men and enormous lollipops. They didn’t examine the mounds of brightly wrapped packages stuffed under the trees. Instead, the babes folded [...]

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When Sokpak Bhell first arrived in the United States from Cambodia in the early ’80s, like many refugees she was relieved to be in this country, but adjusting wasn’t as easy as she expected. In Cambodia, where she moved from one refugee camp to another, older people who had visited the United States told her that [...]

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The Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization will be starting new programs immediately in youth mentoring, health research and conflict resolution for newly arrived Africans, made possible by funding from new federal grants. Representing $1.4 million in funding over a three-year period, the projects have been funded by the U.S. Department of Education, the National Institutes [...]

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At Immigrant community conference “The best revenge on a system that does not value you is to get an education. What a win-win!” Those words were spoken by Claudette La Vert, a special education teacher in the Reynolds School District, at the African Youth Leadership Conference Sept. 29 at the Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization. Nearly 100 [...]

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The Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization, elected new officers and appointed three new members to its board of directors. Assuming the helm as the board chair is Amanda Lim. Lim is Fiscal Analyst for the Oregon Department of Human Services Office of Family Health. Kristin Lensen, of Kristin Lensen Consulting, was named Vice President. Monica [...]

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The general understanding of most people is that the Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization specializes in services targeted at people from other countries, and rightly so. However, as the organization has grown and expanded its services, it has offered more and more services to the local mainstream population. One example is IRCO’s services to seniors. In [...]

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