Ways to better support people fleeing the war in Ukraine locally
European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights
Fundamental rights are the life blood of the EU. Ultimately we exist to help everyone in the EU to live in dignity.
Longer-term plans, better information and administrative flexibility would support local authorities providing people who fled the war in Ukraine improved access to housing, education, jobs and healthcare in the EU, finds an EU Agency of Fundamental Rights (FRA) report. It examines how authorities responded to the first-ever activation of the EU’s Temporary Protection Directive. It identifies good practices and suggests how authorities can tackle the many shared challenges they face.
Some 3.9 million people registered for support in EU countries within one year of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Many have begun to build a new life in their host country and enrich Europe’s societies in new ways.
Local authorities acted quickly. They took the lead in ensuring access to the rights guaranteed to the people fleeing Ukraine under the EU’s first-ever activation of the Temporary Protection Directive. But despite offering tremendous support, they often struggled to ensure that people could benefit from these rights.
The ‘Fleeing Ukraine: Implementing temporary protection at local levels’ report.?It also suggests areas for improvement for national and local authorities:
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The report covers 26 cities and regional authorities in Austria, Belgium, Czechia, Estonia, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Sweden. It looks at practices between November 2022 and March 2023.
It complements results from FRA’s survey on people displaced from Ukraine.