Refugees bolster Louisville’s population growth

Louisville’s population hasn’t slipped too far into rapid decline, due in part to the steady flow of immigrants and refugees to the area. 

The Kentucky Office for Refugees is based in Louisville and is a department of Catholic Charities of Louisville, which is federally designated to coordinate various refugee resettlement services.  

According to fiscal 2024 data from the Office of Refugee Resettlement, part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, there were 10,955 Louisville entrants. The majority of them arrived from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Syria and Somalia. The number also includes benefits-eligible populations, like many Cubans and Haitians coming from other states, asylees and trafficking survivors, who are considered walk-ins and are in a different category. Most people resettling in Louisville or being reunited with family are doing so by force. They’ve fled a country to seek safety from conflict, violence or persecution and unlike some immigrants, cannot return home. Louisville Business First

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