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Tag: aurora nonprofits

  • Local nonprofits defend work helping immigrants with housing in Aurora

    Local nonprofits defend work helping immigrants with housing in Aurora

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    AURORA, Colo. — Local nonprofits that helped immigrants find housing are pushing back against accusations they conspired with Denver and state officials to deliberately send immigrants to Aurora.

    The leaders of ViVe Wellness and Papagayo told Denver7 they are used to receiving hateful messages and threats because of the work they do helping immigrants. But those messages have picked up in the last few weeks as Aurora has become the focus of national attention amid the presidential race.

    On Monday, the Aurora City Council approved a measure that will allow the city to investigate who provided grants that were used by nonprofits to help relocate immigrants coming from the southern border.

    For the past couple of years, ViVe Wellness and Papagayo have been helping immigrants find housing around the Denver metro. The two received contracts from the City of Denver to carry out this work. However, the nonprofits said the immigrants led their own housing search.

    According to leaders of the two nonprofits, the immigrants looked for affordable housing wherever they could find it, including in Aurora. Many chose to be near other immigrants due to relationships that were formed in Denver shelters.

    “These are Colorado families and children that have chosen to live here and chosen to live where they are,” said Yoli Casas, executive director of ViVe Wellness. “Our goal and our job is to, just, like we have done with many people from Colorado who need it is to support them.”

    Casas and Marielena Suarez, chief executive director of Papagayo, told Denver7 they did not conspire with Gov. Jared Polis and Denver Mayor Mike Johnston to move immigrants into Aurora. They also said they were never told, directed or pressured to move immigrants to Aurora.

    “No, not at all,” said Suarez.

    Casas and Suarez said Aurora city officials who want to investigate them will make things worse for immigrants who’ve already been through so much.

    “Now we have a request by a city to demand something that is going to create even more fear and is going to invade people’s privacy. That’s not okay, and that’s not who we are as Coloradans,” said Suarez. “Just remember who we are as a state, as a community, and do not be part of the game because it’s just a game, to be honest.”

    Both Casas and Suarez have been attacked online following a conservative think tank’s article about Aurora last month. One of the authors of the article also singled them out in a post on X, formerly Twitter.

    Several people commented on the post, accusing the nonprofits of money laundering.

    “We don’t have time to be looking at those things,” said Casas. “There is a lot of work to do, which we need to do. We are surrounded by wonderful people, lots of citizens that want to help, entities that want to help. And there’s just no time to be looking at those things really, to be honest.”

    Suarez also pointed out that nonprofits work based on reimbursement.

    “We do not have the money ahead. We have to provide the payment, then we get reimbursed,” said Suarez.

    Suarez and Casas said they have tried to ignore everything being said about them, focusing instead on the work they’ve been doing. They said they hope things will die down after the presidential election.

    “The fear culture has been used for decades around this time of the year when we are about to make a big decision as a nation. It is important to go back in time and to pay attention to the patterns,” said Suarez.

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  • Aurora nonprofit helping immigrants hopes negative views of city will end

    Aurora nonprofit helping immigrants hopes negative views of city will end

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    AURORA, Colo. — A group helping support new immigrants arriving to Colorado said Thursday the recent negative spotlight in Aurora is taking away the focus from their efforts to help newcomers from all around the world.

    The Aurora Economic Opportunity Center (AEOC), which has been around for nine years, continues providing support to new-to-country folks, despite some of the challenges that inflated news stories about gang activity in Aurora have caused.

    Politics

    Trump referenced Aurora gang activity during the debate. Aurora responded.

    “We’re more diverse than probably anywhere else in the whole country,” said Mateos Alvarez, the Executive Director for AEOC.

    That’s one of the many reasons Alvarez said he believes makes Aurora unique.

    “There’s over 120 different languages, customs that exist in a small area, and therefore it is a gateway, or an entryway, for people from all over the world who come to the United States, (who) come here to Aurora and feel connected,” added Alvarez.

    He said the negativity surrounding the city has diverted the attention from their mission of helping immigrants with work authorization and jobs.

    “For us, we’re hopeful that the rhetoric will change and it’ll be more about like, ‘How do you provide opportunities for folks to be self sufficient, successful,’ and where they can contribute back into the community,” he said.

    Aurora

    Trump claimed Aurora is seeing high levels of crime. Data shows otherwise

    Denver7 spoke with Luis Meza, a recently-arrived immigrant from Colombia who said his main focus has been getting a job.

    “We want work. We don’t want handouts, we want a job opportunity,” Meza said, in Spanish. “You have to have faith things will get better.”

    Alvarez said they have assisted hundreds of new immigrants with work authorization and jobs, as well as helping those who are interested in starting their own businesses.

    “I’ve never run into a human being who doesn’t want prosperity, who wants to be independent and who wants that opportunity to be successful,” he added.

    Former President Donald Trump, who has falsely claimed Aurora is being “taken over” by gangs and who promised “large deportations” of immigrants from the city if he is re-elected later this year, said Wednesday he will visit Aurora “in the next two weeks.”

    Aurora city leaders told Denver7 Thursday they hope the former president’s visit will help change the narrative that Aurora is a dangerous place to live.

    One of those leaders, Mayor Mike Coffman told Denver7 he hopes a potential Trump visit would help change the false narrative that Venezuelan gangs had taken over the city.

    Watch Denver7’s full interview with Coffman in the video player below.

    Full interview: Aurora Mayor Coffman on potential Trump visit

    Coloradans making a difference | Denver7 featured videos


    Denver7 is committed to making a difference in our community by standing up for what’s right, listening, lending a helping hand and following through on promises. See that work in action, in the videos above.

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    Kristian Lopez

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