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- Refugee Assistance
Refugee Financial Assistance
How the Program Works
Refugee Cash Assistance (RCA) is provided only to newly arriving refugees, new asylees, certified victims of human trafficking, and other persons eligible for refugee services within the first 12 months of arrival or certification.
The RCA program provides money from the government to help refugees for up to 12 months. If you are receiving money from a local refugee settlement agency’s Matching Grant Program, you cannot receive RCA until the Matching Grant assistance ends. If you are on Matching Grant and apply for RCA or any other federal Financial assistance, your Matching Grant will end. You cannot have both Financial assistance programs at the same time.
How to Qualify
To receive help through the Refugee Resettlement Program, you must hold one of the immigration statuses that identify you as a refugee, asylee, or eligible person for refugee services. For RCA and Refugee Medical Assistance you must also be within the first 12 months from arrival or certification.
You must show proof of immigration status in the form of papers given by United States Citizenship and Immigration (USCIS), usually the DHS Form I-94.
- A person from any country who has been paroled as a refugee or asylee under Section 212(d)(5) of the Immigration and Naturalization Act (INA).
- A person from any country who has been admitted as a refugee under Section 207 of the INA.
- A person from any country who has been granted asylum under Section 208 of the INA.
- A person from any country who has a DHS Form I-151 or I-551 showing that he or she is a permanent resident non-citizen. The person must also prove that they previously held one of the statuses listed above.
- Children of a refugee family who are born in the U.S. (or in a refugee camp). These children have the same alien registration number as their mother with a suffix of 01, 02, etc. The suffix shows in what order they were born in the U.S.
- Certain Amerasian Immigrants. These persons have either DHS Form I-94 (with class code AM1, AM2, or AM3) or DHS Form I-551 (a "Green Card") with codes AM6, AM7, and AM8.
- A Cuban or Haitian Entrant – This would be any person who was ever granted parole status as a Cuban/Haitian Entrant (Status Pending) or granted any other special status that was allowed under the immigration laws for people from Cuba or Haiti, regardless of the person’s status at the time that they receive government services. It also includes any other national of Cuba or Haiti who was paroled into the United States and has not been given any other status under the INA, is not going through exclusion or deportation proceedings under the INA, OR Has filed an application for asylum with United States Citizenship and Immigration (USCIS) AND has not been given a final deportation order that cannot be appealed.
- Certified victims of human trafficking.
- Certain Afghan and Iraq immigrants entering under Special Immigrant Visa status.
- A citizen or national of Afghanistan who was admitted to the United States with SI/SQ Parole (per section 602(B)(1) AAPA and section 1059(a) NDAA 2006), Special Immigrant (SI) Conditional Permanent Residence (CPR), or Humanitarian Parole status (per the Afghanistan Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2022); and their spouses and children.
The following non-American citizens cannot receive refugee assistance:
Non-American citizens not having one of the above immigration statuses; Humanitarian parolees, unless specifically designated; Public Interest parolees; applicants for asylum, unless provided by Federal law; Conditional entrants admitted under Section 203(a)(7) of the INA.
Income
You must meet a certain level of poverty to qualify to get help from RCA. The household’s total income per month cannot be more than 185% of the Standard Needs Budget (SNB), based on the household's size. Click here to see if your income is low enough to qualify. Gross income is your household’s total income each month before taxes or any deductions have been made. Net income means gross income after allowable deductions have been subtracted.
Deductions
If the earned income of the household passes the gross income test for the household size, the first $100 of the earned income for each person employed is not counted. Some households may be eligible for additional deduction of 50% of the remaining earned income for each person employed if the household has received benefits from the same Financial program in one of the last four months and/or if the income is below the net income limit for the household size.
Resource Limit
If you own any valuable items, these are counted as resources. The resource limit is $2,000 per household. Motorized vehicles are exempt.
Participation
You must:
- Work with your employment counselor to negotiate an employment plan based on your skills, abilities, and needs to increase your household’s income.
- Take part in activities at the highest level possible for your current situation and abilities.
- The number of participation hours and the type of activity may vary.
- Each participation plan is fitted to individual, so that the best use is made of the money and resources available to help each family reach the program’s goals.
Employment Plan Activities
- Participation means involvement in agreed-upon activities that lead to you being able to make more money through:
- Work at a job and/or
- Learning the English language and/or
- Activities to increase one’s ability to be hired and/or
- Being approved to receive long term disability payments (SSI/SSDI/VA) and/or
- Services to help refugees become used to the new culture and able to get by socially.
- English language training is an activity that takes place at the same time as other employment activities.
Places to Go for Help and Information
Catholic Community Services (CCS)
224 North 2200 West
Salt Lake City, UT, 84116
(801) 977-9119
Aden Batar, DirectorInternational Rescue Committee (IRC)
221 South 400 West
Salt Lake City, UT, 84110
(801) 328-1091
Natalie El-Deiry, DirectorUtah Refugee and Immigrant Center @ Asian Association of Utah
155 South 300 West
Salt Lake City, UT, 84101
(801) 467-6060
Shu Cheng, DirectorOFFICE OF REFUGEE RESETTLEMENT
Office of Refugee Resettlement
Mary E. Switzer Building
330 C St SW, Room 5123
Washington, DC 20201
https://www.acf.hhs.gov/orrREFUGEE SERVICES OFFICE
Utah Department of Workforce Services
150 North 1950 West Salt Lake City, UT 84116
Telephone: (801) 618-5096
email: refugeecenter@utah.gov