Walkinshaw, Vindman Lead Colleagues Demanding Answers on Delays for Ukrainians Seeking Parole and Work AuthorizationLawmakers warn USCIS delays are leaving Ukrainian families in “legal and economic limbo”
Washington, D.C. ,
March 24, 2026
Tags:
Immigration
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Congressman James R. Walkinshaw (VA-11), alongside Congressman Eugene Vindman (VA-07), led a letter to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) Director Joseph B. Edlow demanding answers about delays affecting Ukrainian humanitarian parole and re-parole applications, as well as related employment authorization requests. The letter, also signed by Reps. Ami Bera (CA-06), James P. McGovern (MA-02), Ilhan Omar (MN-05), Delia Ramirez (IL-03), Kim Schrier (WA-08), Josh Riley (NY-19), and Suhas Subramanyam (VA-10) raises alarm over prolonged backlogs that are leaving thousands of Ukrainian nationals in uncertainty despite following all legal requirements. “Thousands of Ukrainians who came to the United States lawfully under the Uniting for Ukraine program are being left in prolonged uncertainty because of unacceptable processing delays,” said Rep. Walkinshaw. “These families followed the rules. They filed on time. They did everything asked of them. They should not lose the ability to work or maintain lawful presence because of the Trump administration’s failure.” “Ukrainian families who came to the United States through the Uniting for Ukraine program followed the rules and met every requirement, and they deserve timely responses from our government,” said Vindman. “Instead, many are now facing processing delays that put their ability to work and maintain lawful status at risk. These backlogs are not just administrative failures — they are disrupting the lives of thousands who have already endured immense hardship and are trying to build a safe, stable life here.” In the letter, the lawmakers wrote, “We write to express serious concern regarding ongoing delays in the processing of Ukrainian humanitarian parole and re-parole applications, as well as related employment authorization requests, which continue to place thousands of Ukrainian nationals in prolonged uncertainty.” They also warned that many applicants remain stuck in backlogs, resulting in “lapses in work authorization and the loss of lawful presence through no fault of their own.” Although USCIS resumed processing these applications following a June 2025 federal court order lifting the administrative freeze on parole renewals, the lawmakers noted that many cases still appear effectively stalled. The lawmakers are requesting answers from USCIS on several urgent issues, including the steps the agency is taking to reduce the backlog, the causes of current delays and lower approval rates, whether enhanced security reviews or manual processing are contributing to the problem, what is being done to prevent lapses in work authorization, and whether streamlined or blanket relief is under consideration while delays persist. Read the full letter below or here. Dear Director Edlow, ### |