The New Neighbors Coalition is seeking volunteers and donations to help support new families in Jamestown.
The coalition, based out of St. Luke’s Episcopal Church, is working with Buffalo-based Journey’s End Refugee Resettlement agency, which is now operating a satellite office in donated space at St. Luke’s.
Reverend Luke Fodor said the coalition is working with two groups of people, “Both asylum seeking folks and refugees. There’s a distinction between the two groupings of people. Those who are asylum seeking have entered the country and asked for asylum based upon some exigency in their home countries. Legally crossed and presented themselves to the border guards and then been released under their own recognizance. That’s the legal process in the United States. And then they are then allowed to go where they want.”
Fodor said the asylum seeking families are from Colombia with the refugee families that came from Congo being in Jamestown for about a month.
He said asylum seekers in the United States cannot get a work permit for at least a year, “….or a limited resource of public assistance and that even is a difficult process to navigate. And then the refugees are able to come into the country because of the process they were brought into. They’re able to get public assistance and then also to get right into the workforce as long as they have the language skills and right placement.”
Fodor said while at least one refugee from the Congo has found employment, the asylum seekers from Colombia are dependent on help from the community to meet needs like food access, rent payments, and more.
Jamestown Public Market Director Linnea Haskin said the people from Colombia are offering food on Sundays at St. Luke’s Church from 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m., “But then they also hope to open a stand at the Farmer’s Market where they will be offering empanadas, arepas, and all of their delicious salsas. And so, for a donation of a minimum of $10, but whatever you can offer, you then get a delicious meal. And that money goes through the fund at St. Luke’s that we then utilize to purchase things that the family needs.”
Financial donations can be made to the New Neighbors Coalition fund set up at the Chautauqua Region Community Foundation by visiting https://www.crcfonline.org/. St. Luke’s Episcopal Church is also accepting donations through a paypal donation page at: http://bit.ly/3IH1Lxj
For more information, follow https://www.facebook.com/NewNeighborsCoalition/
]]>
St. Luke’s Episcopal Church and the Jamestown YWCA are screening the documentary, “The Who We Are Project,” as part of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day on Monday.
The movie will be shown at 7:00 p.m., Monday, January 16 at the Reg Lenna Center for the Arts.
It features trial lawyer Jeffrey Robinson chronicling racism in America through presentations he has held over the past 10 years across the country.
The film interweaves historical and present-day archival footage, Robinson’s personal story, and observational and interview footage capturing Robinson’s meetings with Black change-makers and eyewitnesses to history.
General admission tickets are $3.90, which includes one ticket and a $.40 donation. Admission at the Ally level is $39.00 which includes four tickets and a $25 donation. And Patron admission is $390.00 which includes eight tickets and a $362.00 donation.
All proceeds support the New Neighbors Coalition of Jamestown Fund held at the Chautauqua Region Community Foundation, which is used to assist in refugee resettlement in Jamestown.
Also on Monday, January 16, Emmanuel Baptist Church also will be holding a celebration in honor of Dr. King. That service will take place at 4:00 p.m. at the church located on 23rd Street in Jamestown.
]]>
Efforts to make Jamestown a refugee resettlement city are moving ahead.
St. Luke’s Episcopal Church Reverend Luke Fodor said discussions on bringing refugees to the area started around 13 months ago with final preparations now happening in order to be ready to accept families in the next couple months.
He said Journeys End Refugee Services in Buffalo has hired Beth Litton to staff the Jamestown site. Litton previously worked in refugee resettlement in Nashville. St. Luke’s Church will provide an in-kind office and meeting space for Journey’s End to do their work.
Fodor said the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Jamestown has also agreed to serve as a drop off point for new or gently used household items to outfit apartments for new arrivals. Those items can be brought to 1255 Prendergast Avenue. For additional information, contact Home Again Committee chair Janet Forbes via email at jlforbes@hotmail.com
Fodor said commitees have been established to assist with the work to bring refugees to Jamestown and that these committees need volunteers.
The committees include the Executive Committee, Housing, Health & Human Services; Education, Employment, Home Again, and Transportation.
He said those interested in these efforts should attend the New Neighbors Coordinating Committee at 3:30 p.m. today in St. Luke’s Episcopal Church’s Undercroft.
For more information, contact Reverand Fodor at 716-483-6405.
]]>
St. Luke’s Episcopal Church is working on donation and sponsorship programs in relation to its efforts to bring refugees to Jamestown.
Father Luke Fodor said Journey’s End will be opening a satellite office in Jamestown as both groups work on the “New Neighbors” program, “They’re applying for grant dollars to do that under a grant that’s really tied to the Ukrainian effort. And so as they expand a little bit into our region, they’re going to be using the volunteers that we’ve coalesced to help assist in many of these things.
Fodor said while they’re not expecting the arrival of refugees, or “new neighbors,” just yet in Jamestown, there are two programs ready to be implemented including the Community Sponsorship program, “Local partnership groups will raise about $3,000 to assist with some rental assistance (for refugees) for these first couple months while they’re getting themselves situated into the workforce and having the immediate needs they need met. And so we’ll have four to six people from various civic or church-based groups to be there as kind of a one-to-one support team.”
Fodor said an initial training for the Community Sponsorship Program will be held from 9:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m., Saturday, September 10 at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church. He said a Cultural Competency Training is also required and will be offered virtually in late September or early October. Other future trainings will be available for those unable to make the one on Saturday.
Fodor said another program that anyone can help with is the donation of used or slightly used household items, “You have to remember that our new neighbors, unlike some other neighbors who might pull up in a truck and unload, fill up their apartments; these new neighbors are coming with really just the clothes on their backs. They’ve been in a dire situation, whether from war torn Ukraine or other war torn parts of our globe. And they’re coming with just the little that they have.”
Fodor said a centralized site for donations is still being worked on. He said financial donations can also now be sent to the Chautauqua Region Community Foundation with “New Neighbors” noted in the donation.
]]>
Refugee seminar at the Robert H. Jackson Center held on March 31, 2022
Over 80 people attended a program on refugees at the Robert H. Jackson Center Thursday night.
The event was hosted by St. Luke’s Episcopal Church, the New Neighbor Coordinating Committee, and featured members of refugee resettlement organization, Journey’s End. It was the first public discussion on issues around resettling people forced to leave their home country.
Journey’s End CEO Karen Andolina Scott said Thursday was the first formal meeting between her organization and the New Neighbor Coordinating Committee. She said they’re still in the information gathering stage of the process of looking into making Jamestown a refugee resettlement community, “But we loved everything that we had to hear today. It seems like the community is really excited about this and also taking it very seriously, which we appreciate. We did acknowledge some of the challenges in the refugee resettlement program which is always really helpful as well that people aren’t expecting something that the program isn’t.”
Scott said conversations still need to happen with Journey’s End national office and with New York State, “And then really thinking about the practicalities of, are there apartments ready and available for us that we could use? Is the school district ready? Are there community partners here that would be willing to share in this work? And then, what do we think the client will look like who will be really successful here? Is it the single clients? Is it large families? Is it someone with a particular medical need that maybe Jamestown has great facilities in helping to service.”
Scott said it was wonderful to see so many people come out for the event who are passionate about moving the process forward.
The full presentation will be re-broadcast on 107.9 WRFA at 2:00 p.m., Friday, April 1 and at 11:00 a.m., Sunday, April 3.
]]>
An event titled “Refugees, Who Needs Them?” will be held at the Robert H. Jackson Center Thursday, March 31.
The New Neighbor Coordinating Committee, which came out of the refugee resettlement discussion held in December, announced the event which will discuss the financial, legal, and humanitarian issues involving the resettlement of people forced to leave their home country.
The program will feature Journey’s End Executive Director Karen Scott and other community members. Journey’s End is a Christian community-based organization in Buffalo, New York whose mission is to welcome refugees without regard to ethnic origin or creed and to assist them to become healthy, independent, contributing members of the community.
The panel begins at 5:00 p.m. and is open to the public.
]]>WRFA’s Julia Ciesla-Hanley spoke with St. Luke’s Episcopal Church Rev. Luke Fodor and Jamestown Community Learning Council’s Beth Litton on how plans to make Jamestown a refugee resettlement community are progressing.
WRFA’s Julia Ciesla-Hanley spoke with Jamestown Mayor Eddie Sundquist about the vetoes he issued for the 2022 City Budget as well as the Refugee Resettlement discussion that was held last week, and more.

Eddie Sundquist
Around 50 people attended a discussion on the possibility of making Jamestown a refugee resettlement city.
Mayor Eddie Sundquist led the conversation at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church with people who represented groups who could provide potential services and support to a refugee population.
Sundquist said his office has received a lot of inquiries about how Jamestown could support the increasing numbers of refugees coming to New York State, which led to him speaking with resettlement agencies and the state to see if a pilot program would be feasible in Jamestown.
He said agencies are looking at areas that can offer affordable housing, employment, education, access to healthcare, and also deal with language barriers. Sundquist said the City’s role in last night’s discussion wasn’t so much to put together a refugee program but to gauge community interest in doing so, “We want to make sure, as the city, that bucket – our community – can handle that, is ready for it, can provide support for those refugees before we help turn the faucet on, start the water, and really bring people to this area.”
Sundquist said notes on the discussion will be compiled and sent out to attendees with hopes to set another meeting in the coming weeks.
]]>