Sunday, March 29, 2026
ADVT 
National

'Surrey Our New Home' Refugee Strategy Released

Darpan News Desk, 25 Jul, 2017 11:50 AM
    Over the past decade Surrey has become the primary destination for refugees arriving in British Columbia. Last year alone, over half of the Syrian refugees that arrived in Metro Vancouver settled in Surrey. Given the unique challenges that refugees face, the Surrey Local Immigration Partnership (LIP) developed a three-year strategy called “Surrey Our New Home”. 
     
    Investing in the potential of refugee youth is the strategy’s top priority – not surprising given the majority of refugees are children and youth. Other priorities are: supporting economic self-sufficiency and inclusion; enhancing service capacity and coordination; and enhancing social inclusion. 
     
    “Surrey is a city that welcomes refugees” says Mayor Linda Hepner. “Caring and compassion is important.  Opportunities to work, to participate and contribute to the community, for the children to succeed at school are equally important.  This is what will restore a sense of dignity and hope. The City of Surrey is proud to play a leadership role with the Surrey Local Immigration Partnership.” 
     
    Over the next three years the Surrey LIP will work on specific actions outlined in the strategy which were based on extensive research and consultations conducted by SFU Surrey. Community leaders, front-line settlement workers and Surrey residents who arrived as refugees helped to shape the strategy. 
     
    “The refugees settling in Surrey are coming from war zones where they have experienced tremendous loss and trauma” says Councillor Villeneuve, Co-Chair of the Surrey LIP.  “We are committed to continuing to work with our community partners so that refugee families settle, integrate, thrive, and truly feel at home in Surrey.”
     
    The refugee strategy complements the LIP’s immigrant strategy, released in 2016.  One of the activities undertaken by the LIP was to  help meaningful employment among new immigrants by initiating business sector dialogues. Organized in partnership with the Surrey Board of Trade, four sector-specific roundtables brought together employers and new immigrants to discuss employer skill shortages and immigrant labour challenges in the health care, manufacturing, construction and technology sectors. 
     
    The dialogues revealed that the challenges and solutions for immigrants to secure employment in each sector are different.  The discussions will help to inform future actions to ensure the skills and talents of newcomers are fully utilized to support Surrey’s growing economy.
     
    “The business sector dialogues are part of an ongoing initiative of the Surrey Board of Trade’s Workforce Development Strategy for Surrey’s business community,” says Anita Huberman, CEO of Surrey Board of Trade and Co-Chair of Surrey LIP.  “The Surrey Board of Trade has another strategy identified just for refugees as well.”

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Footage Of Hungry Sea Lion Dragging Girl Off In Richmond Wharf Used As Reminder Of Wildlife Danger

    Footage Of Hungry Sea Lion Dragging Girl Off In Richmond Wharf Used As Reminder Of Wildlife Danger
    RICHMOND, B.C. — Jocelyne Dramisino says she made her little cousin watch a hair-raising online video before taking her to a Vancouver-area wharf on Tuesday where days earlier a sea lion yanked a young girl off the dock and into the water.

    Footage Of Hungry Sea Lion Dragging Girl Off In Richmond Wharf Used As Reminder Of Wildlife Danger

    Komagata Maru’s 103rd Anniversary: Read The Statement By Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

    Komagata Maru’s 103rd Anniversary: Read The Statement By Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
    Prime Minister Of Canada On The Anniversary Of The Komagata Maru Incident

    Komagata Maru’s 103rd Anniversary: Read The Statement By Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

    Hungry Sea Lion Drags Little Girl Into Water At Richmond, B.C., Wharf In A Dramatic Video

    Hungry Sea Lion Drags Little Girl Into Water At Richmond, B.C., Wharf In A Dramatic Video
    VANCOUVER — The man who shot heart stopping video of a sea lion snatching a little girl off a Vancouver-area wharf says at first he froze.

    Hungry Sea Lion Drags Little Girl Into Water At Richmond, B.C., Wharf In A Dramatic Video

    Traffic Moving After Truck Fire Closed Coquihalla Highway For A Full Day

    Traffic Moving After Truck Fire Closed Coquihalla Highway For A Full Day
    Northbound traffic on the Coquihalla Highway, 25 kilometres south of Merritt, was allowed by the accident site at about 6 a.m. and southbound traffic began flowing 90 minutes later.

    Traffic Moving After Truck Fire Closed Coquihalla Highway For A Full Day

    Eight Revenue Agency Workers Fired For Roles In Privacy Breaches: CRA

    Eight Revenue Agency Workers Fired For Roles In Privacy Breaches: CRA
    OTTAWA — The Canada Revenue Agency says eight of its employees were fired in the last fiscal year after violating taxpayers' privacy.

    Eight Revenue Agency Workers Fired For Roles In Privacy Breaches: CRA

    NDP Holds Courtenay-Comox, Focus Shifts To Absentee Ballots In B.C. Recount

    NDP Holds Courtenay-Comox, Focus Shifts To Absentee Ballots In B.C. Recount
    VANCOUVER — ElectionsBC is turning its attention absentee ballots cast in British Columbia's tight election race after recounts in two ridings upheld the original outcome of the May 9 vote.

    NDP Holds Courtenay-Comox, Focus Shifts To Absentee Ballots In B.C. Recount