Home Christian News Faith-Based Organizations Express Outrage Over Plan to Cut Refugee Admissions to Historic...

Faith-Based Organizations Express Outrage Over Plan to Cut Refugee Admissions to Historic Low — Again

refugee resettlement
Syrians who were displaced by the Turkish military operation in northeastern Syria, wait to receive tents and aid supplies at the Bardarash refugee camp, north of Mosul, Iraq, Thursday, Oct. 17, 2019. Hundreds of refugees have crossed into Iraq in the past week, mostly through unofficial border points. On Wednesday, a first group of 890 people were bused to the Bardarash camp, in northern Iraq's semi-autonomous Kurdish region, which up until two years ago housed displaced people from the Iraqi city of Mosul. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

(RNS) — The Trump administration has announced the maximum number of refugees it plans to admit into the United States in the coming year, and once again, it is a historic low: 15,000.

In recent weeks, several faith-based organizations involved in refugee resettlement had asked the administration to raise that number to its past average: 95,000.

Those groups expressed outrage Thursday (Oct. 1) over a number that came nowhere close.

“At a time of unprecedented global need, today’s decision to further cut the refugee admissions ceiling is a complete abdication of our humanitarian and moral duty,” said Krish O’Mara Vignarajah, president and CEO of Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service.

RELATED: Lutherans ask Trump administration to admit more refugees as deadline looms

The Trump administration sent notice of the new refugee ceiling to Congress late Wednesday night — just 34 minutes before the statutory deadline, according to The Associated Press.

The administration is required by law to consult with Congress before setting the presidential determination for the fiscal year, which begins in October.

The Rev. John L. McCullough, president and CEO of Church World Service, called the Trump administration’s cuts and delays to the U.S. refugee resettlement programmoral failures and a disgrace to the American legacy of welcome.”

“Our values as a nation and as people of faith demand that we take action when people’s lives are in danger. But for the past three years, President Trump and his administration have strayed so far from these basic principles in the name of their cruel, racist and partisan goals that the life-saving refugee resettlement program is a shadow of what it once was,” McCullough said.

“I urge all Americans to insist that Congress hold the White House accountable to operating the refugee program as required by U.S. law.”

This year’s proposed refugee ceiling is a drop from 18,000 in the fiscal year that just ended in September. The U.S. actually resettled 11,814 refugees in that time, according to LIRS, and AP reported refugee resettlement was halted in March amid the novel coronavirus pandemic.

President Donald Trump had set that number at 45,000 in his first year in office, then 30,000 and 18,000 — each a historic low in the U.S. refugee resettlement program, which has been around since the 1980s.