Categories: World

Nearly 200,000 Ukrainians In US Face Legal Limbo Amid Trump-Era Immigration Delays

US delays in renewing humanitarian status have left nearly 200,000 Ukrainians, like Kateryna Golizdra, without work, healthcare, or family support. Many face stress, debt, or self-deportation, amid fears of arrest and ongoing bureaucratic limbo.

Add NewsX As A Trusted Source
Add as a preferred
source on Google
Published by NewsX Web Desk
Last updated: November 23, 2025 20:08:09 IST

Kateryna Golizdra has endured six months of uncertainty after her legal status under a U.S. humanitarian program for Ukrainians expired in May. The program, initiated by the Biden administration, allowed around 260,000 Ukrainians who fled the war to live and work in the United States. With her status lapsed, Golizdra lost her work permit, forcing her to leave a managerial position at the Ritz-Carlton in Fort Lauderdale that paid over $50,000 annually. She also lost access to health insurance critical for managing a liver condition and can no longer support her displaced mother in Germany, highlighting the profound personal and financial impacts of bureaucratic delays.

Internal U.S. government data reviewed by Reuters shows that Trump administration delays in processing the humanitarian program have put nearly 200,000 Ukrainians at risk of losing their legal status as of March 31. These delays, which have not been publicly reported before, underscore the challenges facing Ukrainians seeking safety and stability in the United States.

For individuals like Golizdra, the uncertainty extends beyond paperwork it affects their livelihoods, healthcare, and ability to support family members abroad, leaving them in a precarious limbo as they await decisions on their futures.

The humanitarian program, introduced in April 2022, allowed nearly 260,000 Ukrainians into the U.S. for an initial two-year period. That’s a small share of the 5.9 million Ukrainian refugees worldwide, 5.3 million of whom are in Europe, according to United Nations refugee figures.

Golizdra said she has no idea when – or if – her permission to stay in the United States might be renewed, threatening her short-lived sense of security in America.

While she waits for an update on her application, she could potentially be arrested by federal immigration authorities, three former immigration officials said.

Constant Stress

The last six months have felt like she is on a “hamster wheel,” Golizdra said.

“It’s a constant stress, anxiety,” she said. “If I will need to leave the States, then I will have to build something again.”

Reuters spoke with two dozen Ukrainians who lost their work permits – and their jobs – due to delays in processing renewals, including tech workers, a preschool teacher, a financial planner, an interior designer and a college student. They described digging into their savings, seeking out community support and taking on debt to support themselves while they wait for a decision on their status.

Some of the people interviewed by Reuters said they were worried they could be arrested by U.S. immigration authorities. Others said they were staying indoors, or had left the U.S. for Canada, Europe and South America.

Returning to Ukraine is not an option. Golizdra’s home in Bucha, a Kyiv suburb, was set ablaze in March 2022 when Russian troops stormed the city. After Ukrainian forces retook the town, they found hundreds of bodies, including of civilians who were victims of extrajudicial killings.

TRUMP’S SHIFTING UKRAINE POLICY

The Trump administration paused processing applications and renewals of the Ukrainian humanitarian program in January, citing security reasons.

After a contentious Oval Office meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, Trump said in March that he was weighing whether to revoke the Ukrainians‘ legal status entirely – a plan first reported by Reuters.

Trump ultimately did not end the program and in May, a federal judge ordered officials to resume processing renewals.

But U.S. immigration officials have processed only 1,900 renewal applications for Ukrainians and other nationalities since then, a fraction of those with expiring status, according to U.S. government data released last week as part of a lawsuit.

Meanwhile, a spending package Trump signed into law in July added a $1,000 fee to such humanitarian applications – on top of a fee of $1,325 per individual.

The White House referred questions about the Ukrainian humanitarian program to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, which did not respond to requests for comment.

U.S. Representative Mike Quigley, a Democrat in the Chicago area, said his office has received requests for assistance from more than 200 Ukrainians in limbo.

“There’s a fear that if they haven’t completed their application, if they haven’t gone through the whole process, they’re vulnerable for deportation,” Quigley said.

Anne Smith, the executive director and regulatory counsel of the Ukraine Immigration Task Force, a legal coalition formed to aid those who fled the war to the U.S., said her attorney network was receiving multiple calls per week from Ukrainians saying they have family members detained by immigration authorities. She said Ukrainians have been arrested at construction sites, while doing food delivery or working as Uber or truck drivers, as well as in broader sweeps in Chicago and greater Cleveland.

Brian Snyder, a product marketing manager in Raleigh, North Carolina , who has sponsored three Ukrainian families , said people who followed the rules are being treated unfairly.

One Ukrainian woman recently asked if he would serve as her emergency contact if she was picked up by immigration officers, he said. He knew of another family where a teenage son’s parole was renewed while the parents and two younger children were left waiting, he said.

“All of this dysfunction and uncertainty is just introducing a tremendous amount of stress in these families’ lives,” he said.

Some Ukrainians ‘self deport’

Six of 24 Ukrainians interviewed by Reuters have left the U.S. rather than risk ending up in immigration jail or being sent to Latin America or Africa, as the Trump administration has done with other hard-to-deport immigrants.

Yevhenii Padafa, a 31-year-old software engineer who moved to Brooklyn in September 2023, applied to renew his status in March. His application sat pending until it expired in September.

Worried that he could be barred from the U.S. in the future if he remained without legal status, he tried to “self deport” using a government app known as CBP One.

The Trump administration in May promised a free outbound plane ticket and $1,000 “exit bonus” for those using the app.

Padafa decided to go to Argentina, which has a lower cost of living than other countries and offers a humanitarian program for Ukrainians. But the app would not book him a ticket there. A U.S. border official told him the flight would need to be booked to Ukraine, he said.

He was counting on the free flight and $1,000 bonus. Arriving in Buenos Aires in mid-November with little money, he planned to sell a laptop to cover initial rent for an apartment.

“If I return to Ukraine, I’ll just go to the frontline,” he said. “I’d rather be homeless somewhere than go to Ukraine.”

(With Reuters Inputs)

ALSO READ: Who Is Nicholas Singh? Indian-Origin Man From Canada’s Most Wanted List Caught With Firearm

Published by NewsX Web Desk
Last updated: November 23, 2025 20:08:09 IST

Recent Posts

Indian Rupee At ₹90 Per Dollar: Petrol, Groceries, Gadgets And Overseas Travel Costs Surge

The Indian rupee hits ₹90 per US dollar, driving up fuel, groceries, imported goods, and…

December 5, 2025

India’s Second-Largest Cricket Stadium: 90-Acre ICC, BCCI-Approved Mega Venue Rising Outside Gujarat, Maharashtra…

India’s second-largest cricket stadium is coming up on a massive 90-acre campus outside Gujarat and…

December 5, 2025

Dhurandhar Movie Review: Actor Ranveer Singh Starrer Is Expected To Cross Rs 20 Crore On The Opening Day; See The Initial Responses

Dhurandhar Movie Review: Ranveer Singh’s Dhurandhar, directed by Aditya Dhar, hit theatres on Friday and immediately…

December 5, 2025