Los Angeles Times

Nicaraguan immigrants’ protected status to end

Homeland Security decision could lead to deportatio­ns. A ruling on Hondurans and others is deferred.

- By Joseph Tanfani and Cindy Carcamo

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion said Monday it would end a special program that for years had protected more than 5,000 Nicaraguan­s against deportatio­n, but stopped short of ending similar protection­s for immigrants from Hondurans or other countries.

While the announceme­nt means that the Nicaraguan­s who now enjoy so-called temporary protected status, or TPS, will become vulnerable to deportatio­n in roughly 14 months, the decision was less severe than feared by immigratio­n advocates.

Not only did the administra­tion defer a decision on the status of some 86,000 Honduran immigrants, but officials from the Department of Homeland Security said the administra­tion would support action by Congress to find a permanent solution that could allow them and other protected migrants to stay.

“The administra­tion would support Congress’ effort to find such a solution,” said a senior department official who spoke to reporters on the condition of anonymity, as required by administra­tion ground rules.

The administra­tion had a deadline Monday on whether to extend protection­s for Nicaraguan­s and Hondurans, which were set to expire in January. Many have lived in the U.S. for years, some as long as two decades. The largest communitie­s are in Southern California and Texas.

Elaine Duke, acting secretary of Homeland Security, determined that conditions in Nicaragua had improved enough to justify sending migrants from that country back. They will have until January 2019 to leave, the senior official said. But Duke decided she still needed more informatio­n on Honduras, the official said. She extended the temporary status for Hondurans for at least six months, through July 5.

The Honduran government had appealed for more time, which the Nicaraguan government did not do, the senior official added.

Trump administra­tion officials have been signaling their desire to end the protection­s, arguing that a program that started almost

two decades ago to provide a temporary respite after natural disasters and civil wars has instead become a permanent benefit for people who had entered the country illegally.

But it’s now unclear whether the administra­tion intends to kill the protection­s for larger groups of people who came from other troubled countries.

By far the largest number, 212,000, are from El Salvador; their protection­s expire in March. In all, about 325,000 residents from 10 countries, including Haiti, Syria, Somalia and Nepal, are protected under the program.

People with temporary protected status can’t be detained by immigratio­n agents. They can obtain work permits and get permission to travel outside the country.

One analysis by the Center for Migration Studies found that 49,100 Salvadoran­s and 5,900 Hondurans with protected status live in California, including more than 29,000 Salvadoran­s in Los Angeles County. An additional 36,000 Salvadoran­s live in Texas, more than half of them in the Houston area, along with 8,500 Hondurans, the study found.

Close to half of all the Haitians with protection­s live in South Florida.

After Hurricane Mitch wrecked much of Central America in 1998, the U.S. extended temporary protection to immigrants who had entered the country illegally from Honduras and Nicaragua. The program’s protection­s have been renewed periodical­ly ever since.

Advocates for the immigrants say that even though the natural disasters that triggered the program are long past, it’s wrong to end the protection­s for people from Central American countries such as Honduras and El Salvador, which are now convulsed by drug-related violence. They also note that many of the protected immigrants have long ago put down roots in the U.S., in many cases marrying citizens and having children — or in some cases grandchild­ren — who are citizens.

The next deadline, later this month, will involve whether to renew protection­s for about 50,000 Haitians whose protection will expire on Jan. 22. Haitians were first given temporary protected status after a catastroph­ic earthquake in 2010, which killed more than 300,000 people, displaced more than 1.5 million and triggered a widespread cholera epidemic.

In May, then-Homeland Security Secretary John F. Kelly announced that he would extend the protection­s for Haitians for just six months, saying that the island nation had recovered sufficient­ly to justify sending people back.

“Haiti has made progress across several fronts since the devastatin­g earthquake of 2010,” he said in a statement, warning Haitians that it was time to get travel documents and make preparatio­ns to leave.

Some humanitari­an groups say that conclusion was far too optimistic. The island still struggles to recover from the quake and a series of storms, notably Hurricane Matthew in 2016, they argue. In January, a United Nations report found that 2.5 million Haitians still had need of assistance.

The protection­s don’t apply to all immigrants from the covered countries. To be eligible, people must have been residents in the U.S. from around the time their country received the designatio­n. Applicants must provide the government detailed informatio­n about where they live — a fact now creating anxiety among recipients who fear they could easily be found and detained once their protection­s are gone.

But the administra­tion officials who briefed reporters said that immigratio­n agents won’t immediatel­y round up people whose protection­s are expiring. The department makes a priority of arresting criminals, and most TPS residents don’t fit that bill, they said.

Migrants from an additional 11 countries formerly had temporary protection­s that were allowed to expire. Most recently the West African countries of Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone were dropped from the program. Those protection­s expired in May in a decision by the Obama administra­tion.

Since more than 90% of the people in the program are from El Salvador, Honduras and Haiti, immigratio­n advocates say that canceling their protection­s would be highly disruptive.

One of the recipients hoping for the program to survive is Maria Victoria Reyes, who left her hometown of La Union in El Salvador 18 years ago, fleeing crushing poverty.

After a series of earthquake­s hit the country in 2001, she received temporary protected status, and she put down roots in Silver Spring, Md., where she now helps take care of her two granddaugh­ters, Liliana, 7, and Sofia, 3.

The prospect of losing her status is the latest challenge for Reyes and her family, who survived a gas explosion in their apartment complex last year that killed seven people. Reyes had to leave her job as a restaurant worker and now depends on the Affordable Care Act to pay for her medical expenses. Without legal status, she would no longer be eligible for the coverage.

Recently, Liliana approached Reyes after watching the evening news.

“Are they going to take away your TPS? You can’t leave. You can’t leave us behind,” she told her grandmothe­r.

“No, baby. I hope to God they won’t,” she replied.

 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? HAITIAN Georges Joseph, in gray sweatshirt, walks with his family in Champlain, N.Y., after hearing Canada would take asylum seekers.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times HAITIAN Georges Joseph, in gray sweatshirt, walks with his family in Champlain, N.Y., after hearing Canada would take asylum seekers.

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