Vadym Holiuk has never looked so hard for work.
He landed a position as an electrical engineer for Ukrainian Railways right out of college. But after the Russian invasion forced him to flee to Minnesota, Holiuk's sponsor in Brooklyn Park helped him write a resume on a donated laptop and apply for 150 jobs in engineering and related fields.
Holiuk, 33, landed a handful of interviews. He recently took a computer test at the post office to operate a mail-sorting machine, but while he is nearly fluent in English, he struggled to understand some of the technical words. Holiuk has yet to land an offer three months after arriving here.
"It's discouraging because I know he's getting turned down for jobs he's really qualified to do," said his sponsor, Mark Norlander.
At least 280,000 Ukrainians and Afghans have resettled in the United States over the last 16 months. Among the many scrambling to find work are professionals with advanced skills — engineers, doctors, military officers, teachers, scientists — who are trying to find jobs in the fields they excelled in back home instead of taking on the usual refugee employment in factories, warehouses and retailers. Yet they can face obstacles ranging from American institutions not accepting their degrees to having little guidance in white-collar employment searches.
This summer, the nonprofit Prosperity Ready conducted entry-level job training for Afghan evacuees in manufacturing and hospitality. Founder and CEO Lisa Perez recalled being "floored." The talent, she said, "is just unbelievable and the work ethic, the degrees, the experience." Her organization also conducts a course to help degreed immigrants find jobs; the next starts Jan. 17. Half of the upcoming group hails from Afghanistan.
"We're hundreds of thousands of workers short in our state right now, and so to have people who are so talented sidelined — it's not OK," said Perez. "There's applicable skills. It's just, is there enough support from employers and from community-based organizations to help them make that transition?"
She said the job market here is different from what they're used to.