Fund for Ukrainian refugee hosting scheme extended
A £656,000 budget for the Homes for Ukraine programme has been approved by City of York Council for the coming financial year.
By November 2024, 410 Ukrainians had arrived in the city, and 85 were still living with hosts.
The funding was needed as there was an "ongoing need for support as new guests have continued to arrive in York," council officers said.
The launch of the scheme in March 2022 followed Russia's invasion of Ukraine the previous month.
Homes for Ukraine, otherwise known as the Ukrainian Sponsorship Scheme, allows UK households to sponsor arrivals if they agree to house them for at least six months.
In York, the majority of Ukrainians who arrived as part of the scheme are now living in privately rented homes, while 3% are in social housing and 8% have returned to Ukraine, council figures show.
The £656,000 fund will be used to pay for three workers and a manager to help people housed in the city, according to the Local Democracy Reporting Service.
It will also fund trauma support for children, English lessons and employment assistance.
York's City of Sanctuary migrant and refugee body has overseen the application process while also supporting arrivals and hosts.
Councils including York receive £5,900 per arrival if they came to the UK after January 2023 to help them rebuild their lives and resettle into local communities.
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New York Post
27 minutes ago
- New York Post
Why Putin thinks he can win in Ukraine despite huge Russian death toll
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Pervasive drone surveillance means any movement is spotted miles before it reaches the front line, and a mass of First Person View drones hits any assault group long before it gets within sight of Ukrainian forces. Instead, attacks are a matter of trying to infiltrate the lightly held Ukrainian lines. Russian forces advance stealthily or rapidly on foot, trying to get through the barrage of FPV drones. Advertisement 'Russian attacks are sometimes in 4-6-man groups, but in many cases have decreased to numerous 2-3-man sections trying to penetrate in between Ukrainian positions,' Kaufman notes. 'Russian infantry seeks to advance as far as possible past Ukraine's initial line and entrench there. Although many may be lost, some get through and entrench, awaiting reinforcements. Much the same can be said of motorcycle and buggy assaults. . . . Most fail, but not all, leading to small tactical advances.' Losses are high and successes rare. 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Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Russia has won war in Ukraine, Hungary's Orban says
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USA Today
2 hours ago
- USA Today
Russian troops advance in Ukraine ahead of Trump-Putin peace summit
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