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'I cried with my daughter': Ukrainians given four days to leave Dublin hotel and find new school

Two sisters with five, eight, and sixteen year old children are being moved across Dublin after living in a hotel for the last year.

UKRAINIAN FAMILIES WHO have been living in a Dublin hotel for the last year are “heartbroken” at the prospect of having to leave in just three days.

A group of ten families got letters from the Department of Children and Equality informing them that it is “no longer possible” for them to remain in a hotel in the south east inner city. 

They are being moved to accommodation in Saggart in three day’s time. The Journal understands that other Ukrainians resident at the hotel are not being relocated, as though the amounts of beds being offered is set to decrease, some refugees will continue to be housed there. 

Some of those who have to move have spoken of their disappointment to be leaving the locality and at having to pull several children out of nearby schools.

As a result, three Ukrainian children who have attended a local primary for the last year and one secondary school student are now facing moving schools, a year after they left behind their lives in Ukraine to seek protection in Ireland. 

Marina and Tatyana are sisters, and they are the mothers of the children who are being moved. 

Tatyana’s daughter is eight years old. She cried when her mum told her that she would have to move again. 

“I cried with my daughter. I don’t care where I go, I care about her. It is a great shock and upset for her. She is worried about new friends, a new home again.

“She is worried about leaving behind the people she has gotten to know. She was worried when we had to leave Kyiv too,” Tatyana said. 

Her sister Marina is worried about moving her five-year-old son, and sixteen-year-old daughter. 

“This is a great shock and stress for them.

“I don’t understand who makes these decisions. No representative came and spoke with us. Yesterday we just got the letter with our checkout date in three day’s time. No one contacted us about the children. It is like some version of the lottery who stays and who goes, it is totally random,” Marina said. 

The sisters spoke to the hotel manager about their situation, and they said that he was also shocked and wrote a letter to officials to ask why they were being moved when they had children. 

“The principal of the primary school wrote a letter too. We don’t know if the schools are already too full in this new place we are going. The journey time to their current schools will be an hour and forty minutes for us, it will not be possible. 

“Friends of ours were given a month’s notice when they had to move. How can we find a school in four days?” Marina said. 

The sisters spoke to The Journal after learning that their home city was attacked in one of the biggest Russian missile offensives in weeks last night. Thousands are without power, and six deaths have been reported in Kyiv. 

“Today was one of the heaviest mass rocket attacks on Ukrainian territory. Our president said so. My husband and our neighbours spent almost four hours in the basement. I also know that in several districts of Kyiv the heating plants were damaged and there was an emergency blackout.

“Thank god our house and my sister’s house are safe, but when the city is shelled it is very scary and dangerous. We don’t have specially equipped places, and no one knows where the shell will hit. People go down into basements, take chairs and blankets with them and spend a lot of time there until the air raid is over. 

“We are so grateful to Ireland for having us here, we cannot go home. We are all taking English classes and my sister and I are seriously looking for jobs. We just don’t want our children to have to move schools, we don’t think it makes sense,” Marina said. 

The letter sent by the Department to the families states that all accommodation provided to them under the EU Temporary Protection Directive is short term, and that they may have to make further moves in the future. 

“You should be aware that in some instances accommodation provided may be shared with other Beneficiaries of Temporary Protection. It is also important to note that parents with children under 18 will be responsible, at all times, for their children in such settings,” the letter stated. 

The Department told the families that should they refuse the offer made to relocate them, further offers will not be made. 

“You will not be permitted to remain in your current accommodation,” the letter read, adding “You will not be permitted access to CityWest Transit Hub”. 

The families were told that if they have children enrolled in local schools, “you can contact [TUSLA] to arrange for re-enrolment in schools servicing the local area where your new accommodation is located”. 

Locals offer support

A group of local women who have been supporting the Ukrainian families since they arrived at the hotel are speaking out against them being moved across the city, and in particular against the four children having to move schools. 

Annette Clancy, a lecturer at UCD, said that this group of Ukrainian women and children have become “integrated” in the local community. 

“These are our friends,” she said. 

“This happened yesterday on International Women’s Day. It is heartbreaking for these families, who have faced so much pain, and dislocation already, to have to tell their children that they are going to have to move to new schools, after they have spent the last year making friends here and learning English. 

“One of the mothers in question got news that her home street in Ukraine has been bombed today. These people have had to adjust to so much change already, and they have put down roots here, it is wrong to move them now,” Clancy added. 

When Clancy and other locals including Gina Moxley found out that Ukrainian families were living in a hotel nearby, they threw a welcome party on a local street, and local businesses donated welcome gifts for goodie bags that were handed out including vouchers for haircuts, cinema tickets, and toys. 

“Since last March we have all become friends, many of my neighbours here have had the women and their children in for dinner, and the Ukrainians have cooked for them too. 

“There has been a lot of talk in the media about Ukrainian families and other refugees being housed in working class areas. This is a middle class area and we are asking for them to stay here as they have become a part of the community, but they are being made to leave abruptly,” Clancy said. 

In a statement made to The Journal, The Department for Children and Equality said: 

“The contractor in question has reduced the number of rooms available to the Ukraine Crisis Temporary Accommodation Team and intensive efforts are now being undertaken to source alternative emergency accommodation. 

“Short term emergency accommodation provided by the State is temporary in nature. Beneficiaries of Temporary Protection are told on arrival that at times they may be transferred to new accommodation, potentially with short notice. The Department understands the situation is difficult for those being asked to leave.” 

Government urged to provide school transport

A spokesperson for the Department added that this decision has been made within the context of a “severe accommodation shortage”, adding that they are endeavouring to “minimise the disruption to residents as much as possible”. 

Independent TD Joan Collins said that she has made urgent representations to Minister Roderic O’Gorman calling for his department to find a way to allow the families to remain in their locality. 

“We knew that this was coming because hotels are offering less rooms to the Government for temporary accommodation as the next tourism season approaches, and that is understandable from their point of view. 

“However, the Government has also known this for quite some time, and action now needs to be taken to ensure that these children do not leave their schools after a year,” Collins said.

The TD stated that though everything should be done to find a way for the families to stay in the area, if this is not possible, the department should “provide a school bus or some form of transport to the children from the new accommodation to their current schools”. 

Local Sinn Fein Councillor Maire Devine, who is also a registered mental health nurse, said that there is a real risk that uprooting the children now will cause them “more psychological trauma”. 

“These children have been through so much already. They have found some security now in getting to know the area they live in and the staff and other pupils in their schools. 

“To make them start that process all over again would be wrong. The Government has known for a long time, through a decade of the housing crisis, that relying on hotels to accommodate refugees and people facing homelessness isn’t reliable. 

“We need to go into vacant buildings and renovate them so we can offer people accommodation that is more secure and permanent. Hotels are businesses and they are under pressure to cater to tourists as well. 

“We don’t know how many other Ukrainian families have been sent these letters by the Department, or if there is a framework there to prioritise children who are enrolled in schools when officials are looking at who to move first in cases where less rooms are available after contracts have been renegotiated. This process needs to be more transparent,” Devine said. 

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31 Comments
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    Mute werejammin
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    Aug 20th 2013, 8:50 PM

    You could try longer Dail sessions/less holidays for a start alex.

    146
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    Mute eric grixy
    Favourite eric grixy
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    Aug 20th 2013, 9:07 PM

    so here is a guy who has freely admitted that there is E.U law being passed without scrutiny ; that just about makes the E.U. totally illegal in Ireland !

    74
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    Mute Toby Parker
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    Aug 20th 2013, 9:41 PM

    I think the penny is finally dropping with the Irish People that our Govt and the EU don’t have our best interests at heart.

    60
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    Mute Richard Barrett
    Favourite Richard Barrett
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    Aug 20th 2013, 11:13 PM

    why do you say that Toby? because unfortunately ff and fg are still
    topping polls.

    12
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    Mute Toby Parker
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    Aug 20th 2013, 11:19 PM

    Because Richard, the polls are indicating that the recommendation made by the Govt is being questioned by the Irish People.

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    Mute Richard Barrett
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    Aug 20th 2013, 11:27 PM

    Huh? Toby the most recent one I saw, fg were actually gaining points, There seems to have been a rise in ‘don’t knows’, but honestly that only ultimately contributes to fg’s gain.

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    Mute Sonny Dublin
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    Aug 21st 2013, 1:01 AM

    hence my belief a need for DDI

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    Mute Little Jim
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    Aug 21st 2013, 11:22 AM

    Almost 40% said they wouldn’t vote for any party or independent. Those percentages are taken from the remaining 60%, that’s good news.
    There’s a change coming.

    1
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    Mute COOM
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    Aug 20th 2013, 9:18 PM

    These political tugs must for once recognise that Ireland is a sovereign nation and never will it be governed by Europe. I can see why they like the idea of outsourcing all government decisions to the EU, as it removes responsibility some what. Now debating is off the table, what next ? your right to speak.

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    Mute Neil Murphy
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    Aug 20th 2013, 9:38 PM

    The EU is just a monstrous undemocratic bureaucracy now pumping out legislation by the barrel-load.. all the while incapable of fixing itself. It fails to recognise that it is flawed fundamentally by half-assing federalisation (with the Euro especially).

    It’s about time Ireland stopped drinking the “More EU” kool-aid and considered that perhaps the project has gone far enough (even too far) in some respects. That if we leave it to the Eurocrats in Brussels, they will not stop until the EU has all the federal powers of the US and the Fed, something we should not aspire to.

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    Mute Ryan'O
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    Aug 20th 2013, 10:02 PM

    +billion of bit coins for that comment. Hats off to you sir, very well said.

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    Mute eric grixy
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    Aug 21st 2013, 12:23 AM

    Hear here !

    4
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    Mute Conor Gallagher
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    Aug 20th 2013, 9:00 PM

    Why not use the Senate all the time?

    40
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    Mute Kevin Higgins
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    Aug 20th 2013, 9:07 PM

    I’m sure reforms can improve its use. Pity we don’t have a preferendum.

    28
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    Mute Brendan
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    Aug 20th 2013, 9:25 PM

    Alex White is such a lemming. He’s too boring to think about. I give up.

    37
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    Mute eric grixy
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    Aug 20th 2013, 9:05 PM

    Wow we have a guy in Government who doesn’t understand the difference between the words “everything and “anything”…

    37
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    Mute Kirby Matt
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    Aug 20th 2013, 9:01 PM

    You could all get off ya holes and bring this country out of the hell hole FF got it into.

    22
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    Mute Ryan'O
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    Aug 20th 2013, 9:03 PM

    Too bloody busy digging a bigger hole! A tunnel if you will, light at the end not included.

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    Mute howya
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    Aug 20th 2013, 10:27 PM

    Neither the Dail nor the Seanad actually debate anything. The government of the day uses the guillotine to push through their legislation – and we call this a democracy.

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    Mute FlopFlipU
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    Aug 20th 2013, 10:25 PM

    You would warn. A Child not to sign anything without understanding its relevance

    Send the directives back and tell them when you get a chance you will look at them ,that’s what you tell us when when you are engaging

    17
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    Mute Eamon Corcoran
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    Aug 20th 2013, 9:57 PM

    The Fine Gael/Labour Programme for Government, 2011-2016 (from which the following extract is taken) may help – if anyone bothers to read it:

    “Transposing EU Legislative Measures

    The situation can no longer be tolerated where Irish Ministers enact EU legislation by statutory instrument. The checks and balances of parliamentary democracy are by-passed. The parliamentary treatment accorded home-produced draft legislation must be extended to draft legislation initiated within the EU institutions.
    The Regulatory Impact Assessments prepared for Ministers on all EU Directives and significant Regulations will be forwarded automatically to the relevant sectoral Oireachtas Committees. These Committees should advise the Minister and the Joint Committee on European Affairs as to whether the transposition should take place by Statutory Instrument or by primary legislation. Where primary legislation is recommended the full Oireachtas plenary process should be followed.”

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    Mute eric grixy
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    Aug 20th 2013, 10:04 PM

    So they have proposed a policy that defies their job description ; That means no citizen is required to pay tax ! Tax Strike !

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    Mute Kerry Blake
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    Aug 20th 2013, 10:37 PM

    Maybe if the Dail didn’t spend so long on holidays more could be debated Mr. White…..

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    Mute Sonny Dublin
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    Aug 21st 2013, 12:38 AM

    some awful EU Directives have been accepted the EU Treaty Rights for starters…..mostly in immigration, people in sham marriages with EU nationals were required to live in the EU nationals country (ie latvia, poland etc) before they could live in Ireland thus very few sham marriages existed however the EU removed that as a directive ands its open season

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    Mute Sam Burke
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    Aug 21st 2013, 2:10 AM

    I disagree.

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    Mute Eamonn Colfer
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    Aug 21st 2013, 12:34 PM

    How democratic! Underlines the need – despite its major shortcomings – to retain and reform the Seanad to tackle this issue. A reformed Seanad should not have the whip system. That way it can revise and scrutinise legislation without political heavies leaning on them.

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