The Moscow region will help Ukrainian refugees with work, but they will have to look for housing beyond the Urals

03.07.2014 11:49
  (Moscow time)
Views: 1221
 
Society, Policy, Ukraine


Moscow - Kyiv, July 3 (Navigator, Mikhail Stamm) - In all municipalities of the Moscow region, operational headquarters were to begin work that would deal with the problems of refugees arriving from the south-east of Ukraine - the range of their powers is very wide: from material assistance to displaced people to employment, MK reports . The publication tells in detail what refugees need to do to receive help in the Moscow region.

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According to official statistics, 3400 people have already applied for refugee status in the Moscow region - and the number of such people may increase every day. At the same time, there are 4800 vacancies for foreign citizens in the region with the possibility of placement. It was also reported at the meeting that an account has been opened to receive funds (according to officials, there are already 2,5 million rubles lying there) and a 8-hour hotline for refugee problems is operating. Her phone number is 498-602-01-31-XNUMX.

The heads of districts were instructed to create operational headquarters no later than July 2 that will oversee the collection of humanitarian aid for arriving Ukrainians, issues of their accommodation, provide medical care, and allocate places for children in schools. The headquarters will include representatives of the social and security blocs, employment centers.

At the meeting it was explained that if a person does not intend to receive refugee status, he does not need to go to Moscow to Pyatnitskaya Street, 2. You only need to contact the Federal Migration Service on the territory of the municipality, where the rules of residence in the Russian Federation will be explained to the visitor. For example, they will tell you that an able-bodied person will not be able to stay in a temporary center for displaced persons for more than 12 days. During this time, he must resolve the issue of employment and accommodation (for example, go to live with relatives). In turn, the FMS asked regional authorities to simplify the procedure for granting foreign citizens the right to work.

It was also officially announced that deputy Alexander Dvoinykh was appointed responsible for working with refugees in the Moscow region.

“The official number of registered people today is 3400 people. In fact, it is several times larger,” said Dvoinykh MK.

According to him, among the refugees, the regional authorities singled out women with children as a separate category. “They are located in temporary accommodation centers. We will enroll children in schools. But the situation with gardens is complicated. There are still huge queues there in the Moscow region. We definitely won’t register anyone without a queue,” says the deputy.

Alexander Dvoinykh denied rumors that in the Moscow region preference is given to able-bodied citizens when placing them, but at the same time stated that he is “categorically against uncoordinated arrivals.” “It would be much better if Rostov centrally sends us people who can be immediately employed and resettled,” the official explained his position. “If miners are brought to us, we definitely won’t be able to help them with work, despite the fact that there are now 36 thousand vacancies in the Moscow region, but without the possibility of placement.”

Dvoinykh said that among the professions most in demand today in the region are “builders, educators, teachers, and housing and communal services.”

“Today there is an initiative to reduce the procedure for registering refugee status to three days,” the deputy also said. “This means people can get jobs faster.”

According to MK, now jobs for refugees from Ukraine are offered mainly in Novosibirsk and other Trans-Ural regions. Refugees who were placed at a correctional boarding school in Dmitrov, Moscow region, know about this and treat the prospect of moving there quite well. “I consider the Far East to be the most promising right now: Khabarovsk, Vladivostok,” said one of them. “There’s work for everyone there.” The only concern is the tax on hiring foreign workers. Thirty percent, I think. If your average salary is thirty thousand, then I immediately lose ten. And you need to keep an eye on the little one, his wife will be at home. And now we have been paid twelve thousand from the budget for four people.”

The head of the Dmitrov municipality, Valery Zakharov, confirmed to MK that the Russian government is shifting all the costs of refugees to the regions. “At first it was planned that within three months representatives of Ukraine would be supported by the federal and regional budgets. It is now clear that all costs will fall on the municipality. The task is to organize the business so that people can provide for themselves. We employed about 80 people already on Monday. Whenever possible, we enroll children (two infants) in our kindergartens and pioneer camps,” says Zakharov.

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