Good morning, Mr. Chair.
I would like to thank the committee for the opportunity to be here today to speak to some of the work happening to support the resettlement of Syrian refugees in Waterloo region.
My name is Tara Bedard. I am the manager of the Waterloo region immigration partnership. I'm on staff with the Region of Waterloo, which is the host of our partnership.
Our immigration partnership has been deeply involved in supporting the Syrian resettlement initiative in our community, and in my role I have been providing foundational support to the municipal and community partners across our community who have been supporting Waterloo region's refugee resettlement preparedness plan.
Waterloo region has a long history of welcoming immigrants, and we are a resettlement community for government-assisted refugees. The residents of our region are also very generous in the private sponsorship of refugees.
Our immigration partnership has been operational since 2010. Previous to that there was collaboration around an immigrant employment network. This significant history of collaboration amongst partners in our community has provided a very strong foundation for the resettlement work happening in our community right now.
Our refugee resettlement preparations began in September when international attention was drawn to the crisis in Syria with the photo of the boy who washed up on the beach in Turkey. Interest in our community and private sponsorship was growing. We began to bring together settlement-funded organizations, more and more people who were getting involved in private sponsorship, and community groups that were getting more involved informally in the resettlement support of refugees, so that everybody would know who was involved in the playing field in our community.
In November, after the recommitment to the 25,000 Syrians was made, we began by hosting a service preparedness planning session for services across the whole of our region. We had a huge turnout from agencies across sectors who had been involved in the past in our partnership and many who had not, looking to know how their organizations and services would be impacted by the arrival of a significant number of refugees into our community and to begin planning how, together as a community, we would be responding to support the resettlement.
At the same time, emergency management offices across the province had been activated through intense discussions with our settlement partners and the emergency management coordinators in our region. We arrived at a plan which brought together emergency management activity with the settlement and other activity being coordinated through our local immigration partnership structure into our current Syrian refugee preparedness plan. This merged an existing emergency response structure that had previously been in use in our region with a community initiative that was forming at the behest of settlement services and other community partners working on preparing for the resettlement. This has turned into a highly effective model for collaborative leadership between municipal and community partners in the Waterloo region.
In November we struck a series of nine working groups, including community emergency management, international skills and employment, education, children's services, health and mental health care, housing, community integration and language supports, volunteers and donations, and transportation. These groups were supported by a communications working group and a safety and security working group. We later added a private sponsorship working group, given the perception of difficulties in reaching out to make sure that the private sponsorship groups were also benefiting from all of the service preparations that were happening in our community.
These working groups were coordinated through a steering committee that was co-chaired by municipal and community partners, the medical officer of health from the Region of Waterloo, together with the executive director of our resettlement agency, Reception House.
Also, at our steering committee, the representatives across each of our working groups shared their developments and challenges and brought forward cross-referrals for issues that should be tackled by other groups. This has resulted in a lot of fast action.
Our steering committee also was a channel for reporting up to a municipal control group in our region, where all of our area mayors, our regional chair, the CAOs from all of our communities, our regional police chief, and the regional fire coordinator are participating to receive updates on the status of the resettlement in our community, the developments on the ground with services, the successes we have seen, and also the challenges we have been experiencing in our community.
This coordinated engagement of multi-tiered municipal leaders has resulted in coordinated communication to provincial and federal counterparts on behalf of our community, raising concerns and promoting solutions to the challenges that our community has been facing, challenges we believe we have in common with many communities across the country.
This has been a new level of municipal engagement in Waterloo region when it comes to refugee resettlement. It has been extremely successful until now and very welcomed by the community partners who are involved in our community. It has been really great to see that as a community, across our region, we're all pulling in one direction to support the resettlement initiative.
Consistent and comprehensive communication support has been key amongst our partners, we've been told, to fostering and appropriately channelling community engagement and ensuring that all refugees in our community, regardless of how they have received assistance, either through government or private sponsorship, are benefiting from all of the work happening in our community.
Our communications work has been adaptive and responsive to a constantly changing information environment and to the constantly changing information needs of agencies in our community so that they feel that they have the information they need in order to be properly supporting the resettlement. We have launched a website. We were using 211 information lines, a lot of social media messaging, and we started at the beginning of December a series of weekly briefings about arrival status, population information as it was becoming available for people who had arrived, and also service developments across our working group areas. That went out across our community to all of our service partners and all of our municipal partners, and also to our MPs and our MPPs, so that everybody had the same information about how things were developing in our community.
This resulted in very effective communication of information and an ability to identify needs very quickly and to identify solutions as they were needed in our community.
We've taken a very—