Mainebiz

August 8, 2022

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V O L . X X V I I I N O. X V I I A U G U S T 8 , 2 0 2 2 26 MB: You immigrated to the U.S. from Zambia two decades ago. How has the treatment of immigrants in Maine changed since then? MC: My husband won the diversity lottery for green cards, and we came — I believe on October 5, 2000 — to Portland. ere was a gentleman who we had met in Zambia on a couple of occasions who picked us up way late at night, close to midnight, from the airport. My daughter at the time was 3 years old, so the guy says, 'I'm single, and you guys have a toddler, so I'm basically giving you my house, which now becomes like your house with everything in it.' I tell this story all the time, because back then it was painful. And in one night, we had a home, we had everything, and food, and he just moved out. And he introduced us to someone originally from the Congo … [and] within three days, my husband had a full-time job with benefits. We came with summer clothes, so he took us to get weatherized. Someone else came to help us with Social Security, somebody else came and took us to enroll in childcare. And it was just community members. And the next time we heard somebody had arrived, we helped with the collaboration. MB: How does your organization fit into the network? MC: We didn't have organizations like I'm running with almost 90 partner organizations [in 2000]. ey were just communities helping each other. Fast forward, we advocated for the creation of orga- nizations to create employment for people to do this work. But we have to help the system be able to look at some of that work and create systems and policies to address integration, to address resettle- ment. So it's definitely day and night from what we had in 2000 and what we have now. MB: How has Portland's housing shortage affected the ability to resettle immigrants? MC: Migration of people is not new in our history of the United States, or even in general. People are always moving, and we can read and look back in history. What is always different is how the people at the time responded to that. So as we have seen, people move to Maine — a state that's very white, a state that's very cold. A state that doesn't favor these populations based on where they've come from, based on how they have grown up, their environment, the weather, the food, everything. But we still see arrivals, people coming. But why they have been coming is because they have a community. We came because we knew some- one from our country. ey come because there are people who are from their country, who speak their language, or are from their culture. Now with gentrification, all these developments going up … we've seen how Maine has become unaffordable. But even with that, we still see people still coming. So it calls for an administration at the municipal level, or at the state level, to respond to that. You can't have the same number of affordable housing for a population that has quadrupled. at's impossible, you know? So we have to start think- ing of town planning, state planning, as it relates to where people can settle, but also whether they can afford it. eir quality of life gets compromised if we're stuck with the same systems, the same num- ber of affordable housing [units]. B r i d g e t R e e d M o r aw s k i , a f r e e l a n c e w r i t e r, c a n b e r e a c h e d a t e d i t o r i a l @ m a i n e b i z . b i z Above-market interest rates and low fees A dedicated customer service team Full suite of online cash management products Extended FDIC deposit insurance programs available Free remote deposit capture and scanner for qualifying customers Get a free banking review for your business today: 207.640.2227 northeastbank.com Lucie Hannigan Senior VP, Director of Business Banking Tailored Banking Solutions for Maine Small Businesses Your success is our success. » C O N T I N U E D F RO M P R E V I O U S PA G E Migration of people is not new in our history of the United States, or even in general. People are always moving, and we can read and look back in history. What is always different is how the people at the time responded to that.

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