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During the record refugee wave of 2015, the Swedish Migration Board wrote an agreement on an asylum resident in Pite Havsbad. The idea was to create an "integration center" offering education, restaurants and activities that can accommodate up to 2,000 asylum seekers.
Three years later, SVT News noted that the rent of a house had cost up to a quarter of a billion and that on average, only 660 asylum seekers lived there.
The agreement with Pite Havsbad differs in many respects from other housing with regard to asylum, for example: Instead of a short-term contract, a four-year agreement. Instead of replacing only the places used – basic rent unchanged regardless of the number of residents.
Willis Åberg, Director General of the Office for Migration, concretizes the ambitions of an integration center.
"In my world, there was not so much, we focused on accommodation.
"You have to get into the picture that was in the fall of 2015, and then it was a good deal because we have quite a few good accommodations," he told SVT News.
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