Skip to content
No results
  • News
  • Events
  • Projects
  • Business
  • Partner cities
    • Chattanooga, United States of America
    • Montabaur, Federal Republic of Germany
    • Gennevilliers, French Republic
    • Comune di Silvi, Italian Republic
    • Bystřice nad Pernštejnem, Czech Republic
    • Gmina Boguchwała, Republic of Poland
    • Gmina Kożuchów, Republic of Poland
  • Friendly municipalities
    • Cities of Marlow and Rugby, United Kingdom
    • Valmiera, Republic of Latvia
    • Kashihara, Japan
  • Industrial Park
  • Steel Dream
  • Interview
  • Friends
  • Publications
  • Master plan
  • Trostyanets city hromada
  • Editorial Policy
  • Trostyanets City Council
Trostyanets

Development of Global Partnerships

Login
Partners
  • News
  • Events
  • Projects
  • Business
  • Partner cities
    • Chattanooga, United States of America
    • Montabaur, Federal Republic of Germany
    • Gennevilliers, French Republic
    • Comune di Silvi, Italian Republic
    • Bystřice nad Pernštejnem, Czech Republic
    • Gmina Boguchwała, Republic of Poland
    • Gmina Kożuchów, Republic of Poland
  • Friendly municipalities
    • Cities of Marlow and Rugby, United Kingdom
    • Valmiera, Republic of Latvia
    • Kashihara, Japan
  • Industrial Park
  • Steel Dream
  • Interview
  • Friends
  • Publications
  • Master plan
Trostyanets

Development of Global Partnerships

Deborah Levine: Chattanooga is now “official” with Ukrainian sister city amid war

  • Avatar photoSvitlana Popovych
  • 19.03.2026
  • Chattanooga, United States of AmericaNews
City of Chattanooga / Chattanooga Mayor Tim Kelly holds up the official Sister City International agreement with Trostyanets, Ukraine, along with local Sister City president Karen Claypool and Alina, a Ukrainian exchange student.

    March 19, 2026 by Deborah Levine

    Much excitement at City Hall on March 6 when Mayor Tim Kelly announced that Chattanooga and the Ukrainian city of Trostyanets have solidified their friendship with an official sister cities agreement. It was amazing to be present at the Zoom signing ceremony of the documents connecting Chattanooga and Trostyanets as official sister cities.

    Kelly later posted on social media: “We first began our partnership in 2023 with a cooperative agreement that created a volunteer-led working group to help collaborate with the war-torn city.

    “Through this friendship, we were able to welcome Trostyanets’ Mayor Yuriy Bova to Chattanooga in 2024.” That’s when I had the opportunity to meet Mayor Bova in person.

    (READ MORE: Deborah Levine: Chattanoogans, join me in sending a ‘Light in the Dark’ to Ukraine)

    Speaking with Mayor Bova and his interpreter was a real pleasure. Yuriy and I became friends and after he returned home to Trostyanets, we did a podcast together. In January, it was heartwarming to get an email from Yuriy asking to Zoom together again so that he could catch me up on the latest happenings in Trostyanets. And we did!

    Staff photo by Matt Hamilton / Trostyanets Mayor Yuri Bova speaks during a interview in Mayor Tim Kelly’s office at City Hall on Tuesday, October 1, 2024.

    I smile and do a little dance whenever I see the photo that Mayor Kelly posted of himself signing the declaration while surrounded by Chattanooga Sister Cities president, Karen Claypool, and an exchange student from Trostyanets named Alina.

    I’m delighted to share Claypool’s words: “The Sister City Association of Chattanooga (SCA) is thrilled to have yet another sister city, this one in Ukraine. Trostyanets is near the Russian border and has sustained significant damage from the war, and part of our sister city friendship may well include helping them rebuild. In September 2024, Mayor Bova and his delegation came to Chattanooga. The SCA met with them on several occasions. There was good energy and we’ve made efforts to make our relationship official through Sister Cities International.”

    With the relationship becoming official, Yuriy emailed me: “For the Trostyanets community, partnership with Chattanooga is not just a gesture of solidarity. It is practical cooperation that should bring real results for both cities. We live and work under constant threat, so we have unique experience. We know how local government works during war, how infrastructure is rebuilt after destruction, and how a community stays strong and continues to develop even in a border region. We are ready to share this experience openly.

    “At the same time, it is important for us to learn from Chattanooga — a city with a strong economy, modern management approaches, and successful practices in urban development. The combination of these two realities — our resilience and your experience in sustainable development — creates the real value of this partnership. We see this cooperation not only as an exchange of ideas, but also as an exchange of practical solutions, contacts, and projects — between municipalities, schools, civil society organizations, and businesses. These direct connections between people make the partnership alive and long-lasting.

    “For Trostyanets, this partnership is about support and trust. For Chattanooga, it is an opportunity to see what resilience looks like in real life. Together, it is a story of mutual benefit, not one-sided help.”

    The daily news regarding Russia’s war against Ukraine is harsh. But there is optimism, as expressed by Claypool: “We are excited about the future and sharing our culture with the citizens of Trostyanets and developing friendships. This will be different from some of our other sister city relationships because it will no doubt be a long time before we are able to visit our Ukrainian friends there. We hope, however, to get grants to allow them to come visit us or for us to meet them in a third country.”

    Let’s all hope…and help!

    Contact Deborah Levine, an author, trainer/coach and editor of the American Diversity Report, at [email protected].

    Tags
    # Chattanooga
    Share on Facebook Share on X (Twitter) Share on Telegram
    Avatar photo
    Svitlana Popovych

    Since 2024, she has been working as a Specialist in International Cooperation at the Trostyanets City Council, coordinating the community’s cooperation with international partners, diplomatic institutions, and foundations. She is responsible for official international communication, delegation support, project coordination, and preparation of documentation in English.
    She was born in Kyiv. She received her higher legal education at Borys Grinchenko Kyiv Metropolitan University with a degree in Law, and also studied at Yaroslav Mudryi National Law University, where she obtained the qualification of a legal specialist.
    She has participated in the development of new international partnerships for the community, the organization of international meetings, and the promotion of a positive international image of the community. Before working in local self-government, she worked in corporate sales, tender activities, marketing, and project management.
    In her professional activity, she combines strategic thinking, strong communication skills, a diplomatic approach, and the ability to work effectively in a multitasking environment.

    Articles: 25
    Top stories

    Where opportunities lives

    Oleksandr Khoruzhenko Avatar
    Oleksandr Khoruzhenko
    30.10.2025
    Publications

    “Steel Dream”: Unique Project for Rebuilding Trostyanets

    Yuriy Bova Avatar
    Yuriy Bova
    02.08.2025
    Projects
    main partners

    Blagomay Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH Metinvest Mondelēz International Polish Center for International Aid Swiss Confederation The Association Internationale de Coopération Médicale (AICM) U-LEAD with Europe UNDP USAID HOVERLA

    More stories
    July 3, 2026

    /

    News
    Hospitals received medical humanitarian aid from The Association Internationale de Coopération Médicale
    June 28, 2026

    /

    News
    Results of work at URC-2026 in Gdansk. Part 2
    June 28, 2026

    /

    News
    Results of work at URC-2026 in Gdansk. Part 1
    June 25, 2026

    /

    News
    Ai Engineering signed a new agreement with Ukrainian company “Metinvest” and the Municipality of Trostyanets
    June 24, 2026

    /

    Publications
    SHIFT-R paves the way for new international collaborations at “Society Expo” in Skellefteå (Sweden)

    What Trostyanets Mayor Yuriy Bova has to say about Chattanooga

    Ukrainian Mayor Yuriy Bova Visits East Brainerd Elementary School

    our partners

    • Video
    • Documents

    • Trostyanets city hromada
    • Editorial Policy
    • Trostyanets City Council

    Municipal web-portal "Global Trostyanets" of Trostyanets city hromada was founded in May 2026 as a quick response and gratitude to all our international partners who helped our hromada survive after the occupation in 2022 and develop today. To some extent, this is a unique web resource, which has no analogues in Ukraine.

    Trostyanets is becoming an example of high-quality reconstruction and resilience. Financial support from the state and international partners has given us the chance to restore the housing stock, equip premises for the accommodation of displaced persons, create modern medical institutions, launch the educational process, revive and develop the municipal sphere.

    Today we have already demonstrated that restoration is not only about rebuilding buildings. It is the path to a qualitatively new level of life for municipality! We have become an example for the country and a convincing signal for foreign donors: aid brings tangible changes.

    Contact information

    • Opening hours: 9AM - 5PM
    • Website: Trostyanets City Council, Ukraine
    • Address: 42600, Trostyanets city, Myru str., 6
    • Email: mail@trostyanets-miskrada.gov.ua
    • Telephone: +380 545 85 13 80

    Copyright © 2026 - Global Trostyanets