I asked my Ukrainian Telegram chat (more than 1500 participants now) what they would tell Austria’s refugee coordinator, as I have been invited to meet him today. Their responses are of course miles better and more structured than my scribbled list of bullet points. 🧵
School is a big topic now: what Austria offers (mixed age class of 🇺🇦 kids learning German together) isn’t sufficient academically but is time consuming so kids have a hard time doing Ukraine online school too. Money for school supplies. Money for lunch and afternoon supervision.
Housing (lack thereof or rather restricted access?) remains a huge problem, many look for new housing now, stress over what happens with public transport after Sept 30. Without being able to work those on Grundversorgung cannot afford tickets.
Lack of access to the labor market and the restrictions of Grundversorgung make it impossible to get ahead financially. What is paid out is barely enough (not enough) to survive. Ukrainians want to work. I hear it over and over. But then many would become immediately homeless…
Specifically about the federal BBU dorm on Geiselbergstrasse, which is by design supposed to be temporary. In practice people stay longer. The newly homeless category will grow this fall as Austrian hosts say time is up and refugees have no means of renting private accommodation.
Lack of psychological support resources in Ukrainian & Russian languages. 100% agree with this. I know a psychologist who tried for months to help and get a job, gave up, went back to Kyiv. A damn shame. I see and hear the stress everywhere. It’s getting worse.
Many people rightly suggest a bridge period of 3-6 months to stay on benefits (Grundversorgung) while working a job so as to save up some money and not live in fear of being fired and then also immediately off minimal benefits. We have an employment crisis! We have workers!
From a mom of several kids in Carinthia. They made train/bus travel paid already for Ukrainians and this is biting families hard. They have not yet received Familienbeihilfe and Klimabonus will only be in 2023. Impossible frankly to survive without private aid.
Re the cost of public transport. Notice a trend here folks? I said it in the spring and I’ll say it again: money money money. Keeping refugees in poverty and out of work is a policy choice which results in many more headaches along the way.
Did I mention how much I love the Ukrainian people despite my phone buzzing day and night? This warmth. We could use so much more if it here.
School. A mixed age class of only Ukrainian kids only doing basic German is not a replacement for normal Ukrainian school or integration in an Austrian classroom. It is a non-solution.
When half of the school day actually costs money in Austria which refugees cannot afford. This is being subsidized in Wien I think, but not everywhere:
Very good summary here. Notice it starts with thank you. But these are excellent concrete suggestions:
Here is the math plain and simple of how Austria makes it a disincentive to work as a refugee:
I am getting the feeling the bottleneck in Wien is created on purpose to discourage refugees from coming here. The rest of Austria isn’t picking up the slack either. Result? Housing crisis.
When you are existing but not living. This single mom moved with her young child from Wien to Upper Austria now I’m sure regrets that decision: less money and resources to live on. Fewer job chances. Fewer kindergarten spots.
I am extremely tired of seven days a week “explaining” Austria, a country which is also not my homeland, to Ukrainians. The gist of it is: no one cares what your circumstances are and don’t expect any exceptions or special treatment. It’s a hard pill to swallow.
This has led to 48 hours of debates. I will blog about it soon. In the meantime, more end of school year drama (not giving Ukrainian kids passing grades), and a phone call tonight which knocked the wind out of me.
As many of you know, Mama Olya had a stroke in early April and has been in hospital in Vienna ever since. I have been visiting nearly daily. This takes a huge emotional toll. Respect to all those who work in medicine; I could never ever do it.
Ukrainian moms are desperately asking me if Austria ever plans to move them from Grundversorgung to Mindestsicherung. I tell them honestly, I don’t think so. They tell me it is impossible to survive. With a small kid can’t work. I say I know and I am sorry. Another country?
I cannot lie and tell them I expect any changes on the political level because I don’t. Federal and 9 states are already doing only the absolute bare minimum. I hear no discussions in media about improving Grundversorgung conditions or moving them out of it.
If any journalists would like to do a deep dive on the payments and handcuffs I know volunteers who know the numbers inside and out. It is complicated and very opaque, and differs by Bundesland. I tell the Ukrainians the following.
Just realized the last time I took a long distance bus I was a teenager. I feel wholly unprepared. I do not see the promised WC nor free wifi (eeek). Everyone seems to have done this before. The bus is completely full: women, kids, pensioners. Two drivers. €190 round trip 🧵
I found the toilet AND actually more importantly, the plug for the charger. Hallelujah! Did you all know Hofer is Aldi in Hungary? We just passed a huge distribution center. I am amazed by how quiet and considerate ALL the passengers are. Even the kids. It’s unbelievable.
I naively didn’t quite understand the bus actually makes all the stops. Budapest.
The infamous dorm in Vienna’s 11th district is closing for good. All residents must move out by this Friday night. A team of volunteers is organizing cars & people to help with the move: many residents are elderly and/or handicapped. They need volunteers & wheels. Pls DM.
I am so dumb. I naively assumed when @Stadt_Wien said all dorm residents would be assigned new housing in Wien by April 15, that would happen. Now I am hearing some residents will be sent TO THE ARRIVAL CENTER. Nightmare. Some may refuse to leave…could potentially get ugly.
This is an absolute shitshow. I should have known. It did not have to be like this if anyone cared. These are vulnerable Ukrainians who have been under extreme stress for months.
I asked the Ukrainians in my group about their success or lack thereof in finding legal paid work, and this was one of the replies. These energy bills are insane. They need guidance as renters…ugh.
A poll so far shows a mixed bag: some cannot work (caring for kids or handicapped relatives), some don’t look as working would render them homeless (social housing) and they cannot afford a deposit/rent, others no luck so far, still looking. Some want to finish A2 German first.
Some are working and no longer receiving benefits. One man in his 60s texts from the arrival center — he already has a job offer but no blue card bc no address bc no housing assignment yet. The labor market is not making the most of this opportunity. Bureaucracy is once again… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…