**I once went to Mass at a Ukraine Catholic Church but I am not positive it is a Church that is part of the Archdiocese of which I live of Minneapolis/St. Paul (please see link
archspm.org/html/prshnam.html ). As from the little you can tell from the picture from the link below, it is an exquisite building.
stconstantine.com/ Here is there link. It shows Mass and Confessions schedule. So, I honestly wonder if it is an Orthodox Church or Roman Catholic. I believe I did obtain a Prayer Book from there which appeared Catholic.**
**Ukrainian Catholics in the USA would NOT be part of any Latin Diocese.
Nor would Melkites, Maronites, Ruthenian Byzantine Catholics, Romanians, Syro-Malabar, Chaldean, or Syriac Catholics.**
Only on paper, Father Bishop, only on paper. A great many areas have a smattering of eastern catholics who, lacking recourse to a parish of same rite, let alone church, find the only recourse to be through the ordinary of the place, a definition which, outside the traditional areas, generally means the Latin Ordinary.
Even when there is a nominal Eastern Catholic Bishop of the same church (as is the case for Ruthenians, Ukrainians, Melkites, Maronites, Chaldeans, and Romanians), when there is no presence in the community save the Latin presence, they fall to the pastoral care (but not canonical enrollment within the diocese, Church and Rite) of the local Roman Ordinary.
Now, for example, take the Ruthenian Parish in Anchorage, St. Nicholas. When relief was needed for mandated vacation and retreat, the Archeparchy was unable to provide; the Latin Ordinary provided, and a priest was trained to be biritual.
20+ years later, that same priest is now incardinated in the Eparchy of Van Nuys… since he’s the Pastor.
And he serves a mission in Wasilla, and parishioners drive from Talkeetna (70m north of the mission) and Girdwood (60mi from the parish), covering some 160+ miles along the road. The parish, however, is defined as serving the state of Alaska… (that was the original charge to the founding priests by Bishop Elko.)
But in Fairbanks, there is no EC parish presence, and for all intents, any EC’s in Fairbanks (350 miles from Anchorage) are entirely at the mercy of the Latin Bishop of Fairbanks for receipt of the Sacraments. They are canonically still under the appropriate bishops, but lacking access, they still file their requests through the latin ordinary, since to him they have access, and in his parishes they practice the faith.
A number of them in Fairbanks are subject to yet another “overlapping jurisdiction”, entirely roman: the Military Ordinariate. Of the 5 EC’s I’ve met in Fairbanks, 4 were military, and one was a convert who wished to remain Russian Rite, and was a college student. I’ve met these people through SCA and KofC events. The Military Personell are under the pastoral care of the Latin Hierarch for the US Military Ordinariate, no matter their church of Canonical Enrollment. Their pastors are latin, an the bishops to whom their pastors answer are latin, even tho’ they themselves are not, and so their access to the sacraments is through the graces of their latin hierarch, despit that not being their “proper” hierarch.
(Truth be told, some of them practice in the ROC or AOC…)