As Ukrainian refugees flee their homes, people in Thunder Bay, Ont., prepare to welcome them - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 24, 2024, 11:25 AM | Calgary | -14.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Thunder Bay

As Ukrainian refugees flee their homes, people in Thunder Bay, Ont., prepare to welcome them

As the number of refugees fleeing the Russian invasion of Ukraine tops two million, preparations are underway in Thunder Bay, Ont., for their arrival, with support from both city officials and community organizations.

More than 12,000 people in Thunder Bay identified as being of Ukrainian heritage in 2016 census

Refugees queue for trains to Poland following the Russian invasion of Ukraine, at the train station in Lviv, Ukraine, March 7, 2022. Officials and organizations in Thunder Bay, Ont., are keen to help refugees fleeing the invasion settle. (Marko Djurica / Reuters )

As the number of refugees fleeing the Russian invasion of Ukraine tops two million, preparations are underway in Thunder Bay, Ont., for their arrival, with support from both city officials and community organizations.

The United Nations has called this the fastest-growing refugee crisis in Europe since the Second World War and Canada is prepared to welcome an "unlimited number" of Ukrainians fleeing warwhilewaiving most typical visa requirements for them.

In Thunder Bay, city councillorshave approved a resolution from Mayor Bill Mauro asking the federal government to identify Thunder Bay as "an ideal location for settlement of Ukrainian refugees who have been displaced form their home country."

About 12,000 people in Thunder Bayidentify as being of Ukrainian heritage, according to the latestcensus data, and the Ukrainian communityhas a strong cultural presence in the city.

"In the first 24 hours, we've had up in the range of 20 host families registering their interest [for hosting refugees], and I suspect that that number has grown since then,"said Walter Warywoda, theThunder Bay branch president of the League of Ukrainian Canadians.

"It's beenvery good and I do expect that to grow."

Walter Warywoda is president of the Thunder Bay chapter of the League of Ukrainian Canadians. (Amy Hadley/CBC)

Warywoda said, so far, details are scarce about what changes would be made to the immigration rules to allow Ukrainian refugees to smoothly come to Canada but they will be critical to bring refugees to Thunder Bay.

"Implement those rules efficiently and nimbly to get people into Thunder Bay," he said. "That's what I envision happening, and I think we have an advantage being small in Thunder Bay."

Warywodasaid bigger cities like Toronto and Montreal can't always work as swiftly as the smaller communitieslike Thunder Bay.

The Thunder Bay Multicultural Association, as selected by the federal government, is one of the six Resettlement Assistance Program agencies in Ontario.

The program, which is managed through Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, provides ongoing assistance to refugees prior to their arrival in Canada.

'Community rises to the occasion'

Thunder Bay Multicultural Association executive director Cathy Woodbecksaid the organization hashad a lot of interest from people in the city who want to help refugees in any way they can.

"We're getting a lot of calls from folks that are interested in helping, and that's a wonderful thing," Woodbeck said. "This community rises to the occasion for helping in situations like this, so we are getting a lot of calls about available accommodations. Is there a place that people are collecting money? What can they do to help?"

  • WATCH| Mayor of Lviv, Ukraine pleads for help amid Russian invasion

Mayor of Ukrainian city pleads for international help

3 years ago
Duration 3:53
The mayor of Lviv, Ukraine, Andriy Sadovyi, is calling for the international community to provide military equipment as his city turns into a key hub for hundreds of thousands of people fleeing the war.

Woodbeck said the centrealso heard from some Ukraine residents who are outside of their country and don't want to return now that an invasion is underway.

She said some were working in places like Peru, but quite literally don't have a home to return to.

Woodbeck said they have dealt with refugee crises at the Multicultural Association before, and they have a protocol ready to go to deal with new arrivals.

She said they now have to wait and see how and when any refugees will be arriving.

"If it's a government assisted refugee situation or a sponsorship type of situation, it's different," Woodbecksaid. "We know how many are coming, when they're coming,what medical needs or housing needs or other family needs they might have before they arrive."

Woodbeck said, for now, they are doing their best to be ready, even if they don't know how or if people are going to come.

"But the process over time has shown that with this much destruction, there will most likely be some people arriving," she said.