In Afghanistan, Shakila Hotak would not have been allowed to drive by the Taliban. But Hotak isn’t in Kabul anymore. She now lives in Houston, where she resettled as a refugee two years ago. She has supported herself with a factory job that pays $11 an hour and used to spend roughly two hours commuting to her job each way.
“I was taking two buses,” she said in Dari. “One bus, they dropped me to the pharmacy, and after that, I took another bus … to my place of work.”
Now that she has a driver’s license and her own car, her commute is around 35 minutes. And she has the freedom and time to do other things, like form friendships and take herself to the doctor. Learning how to drive and getting a license is a must for refugees and immigrants, many of whom come from countries where public transportation is more widely available. That’s why YMCA International Services in Houston has helped these drivers learn the rules of the road — for free and in their native language.
During a class in late January, Innocent Tuyiringire led orientation for the driver’s ed program explaining the process of obtaining a driver’s license. It’s part of a program that launched in 2021, and it’s helped around 550 people, according to YMCA.
Joanne Pantaleon, who supervised the program, said her clients were hired for new jobs and kept their jobs after getting their license through this program, which was especially popular with women. But weeks after President Donald Trump took office, YMCA International Services in Houston suspended the program and furloughed employees because of the Trump administration's pause on refugee resettlement. |