According to the City of Dallas, 100% of the funding went towards assistance for immigrant families that were left out of federal economic relief programs.
The cash payments that families received ranged from $500 to $1,500 depending on the family size, the City of Dallas said.
The recipients came from countries around the world, including Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Colombia, Bolivia, Chile, Venezuela, Peru, Brazil, Chad, Sudan, Cameroon, Nigeria, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Kenya, Ethiopia, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Myanmar, Iran, Lebanon, Afghanistan, and Syria.
Last year, the City of Dallas Office of Welcoming Communities and Immigrant Affairs applied for the Open Societies Fund grant opportunity to provide financial assistance to individuals who were left out of the federal economic relief programs.
City of Dallas Provides Assistance to More Than 800 Families Through Emma Lazarus Fund msn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from msn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Spanish speakers are getting lost in translation at Dallas City Hall, and that’s unacceptable
The city must provide certified interpreters to forum speakers.
Dallas City Hall, pictured in February 2012. (Lara Solt/The Dallas Morning News)(Lara Solt / Staff Photographer)
In the hours after robbers fatally shot Susana García’s teenage son outside her apartment door in Bachman Lake, the distraught mother grappled with her devastation and with the language barrier with police. Her 16-year-old twin daughters translated her Spanish that night three years ago.
Though Dallas police arrested the robbers, García said her neighbors urged her to move. They told her the killers could come back to hurt her family, but García wasn’t scared. They had already thrust a dagger through her heart when they killed 18-year-old Oziel.