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Policy Responses

Find out how international and European authorities are responding to the Ukrainian crisis.

Policy initiatives developed to support the people of Ukraine

European Commission

  • The European Commission proposed a new instrument called “CARE”, which is aiming to support and finance Cohesion Action for Refugees in Europe. Programmes and activities of the EU Member States to support refugees from Ukraine can be financed for up to 100 percent via the EU budget. Private actors can make us of it indirectly, when partnering with national authorities and contributing to national policies to support refugees from Ukraine.
  • The European Commission proposed to activate the Temporary Protection Directive to offer quick and effective assistance to people fleeing the war in Ukraine. Under this proposal, those fleeing the war will be granted temporary protection in the EU, meaning that they will be given a residence permit, and they will have access to education and to the labour market.
 

European Labour Authority

The European Labour Authority, the EU agency created to help Member States and the European Commission to ensure that EU rules on labour mobility and social security coordination are enforced in a fair, simple and effective way, has a dedicated webpage providing information on support available for people fleeing from Ukraine.
 

European countries 

  • Poland has set up nine reception centres along the border which provide food, medical assistance and information. It has also launched a helpline and an online platform to coordinate the offers of help from citizens, businesses and NGOs. On top of that, to help transport refugees into Poland, the state railway operator PKP launched additional connections and announced that citizens of Ukraine can travel for free over the next month.
  • The Czech Republic has activated its Migration Wave Preparedness Plan. This will help refugees apply for a special type of visa through a simplified procedure in order to remain, if needed.
 

  • In Romania, Ukrainian citizens who want to work in Romania do not need proof of employment for up to nine months in a calendar year. According to Romania’s National Employment Agency (ANOFM), after acquiring a form of international protection, Ukrainian nationals can register with employment agencies, thus benefiting, free of charge, from the measures to stimulate employment: jobseekers getting in touch with employers; information and professional counseling that provides a range of services free of charge to jobseekers, with the aim of providing information on the labour market and the employment trends; vocational training; evaluation and recognition of professional skills from a non-formal and informal system, etc.
  • The United Kingdom is extending visas for Ukrainian temporary workers in some sectors who can now stay until at least 31 December 2022, primarily because people cannot return to Ukraine. The relaxation of the visa rules for Ukrainians includes giving British nationals and any person settled in the UK the ability to bring over their immediate Ukrainian family members. Approximately 45% of applications for UK temporary work visas last year were made by Ukrainian nationals, who accounted for 19,858 of the total 44,114 applications made last year.
  • Portugal’s government launched an online jobs platform to channel company job vacancies towards them. In just one day, the ‘Portugal for Ukraine’ website collected more than 2,000 job offers from all over the country, concentrated primarily in the areas of technology, transport, the social sector, tourism and construction.
  • The Spanish government announced that it will allow Ukrainians who have arrived in recent months to reside and work in the country. The more than 100,000 Ukrainians who legally reside in Spain will not have to renew their permits to avoid unexpected irregularities. The Council of Ministers approved the institutional declaration, in which it is ensured that it will “guarantee” that Ukrainians who are in Spain “can stay and work”, as well as “access health care and education” and the “social assistance that corresponds to them”.
  • Ireland lifted all visa requirements for Ukrainians wishing to enter the country as an emergency measure. Ukrainians arriving in Ireland without a visa have 90 days to regularise their position.

 

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