Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Judge upholds parole program for Cubans, Venezuelan­s, Haitians and Nicaraguan­s, turns back challenge from Republican states

- By Syra Ortiz Blanes Miami Herald

A Biden administra­tion humanitari­an parole program that has let hundreds of thousands of Cubans, Venezuelan­s, Nicaraguan­s and Haitians come to the U.S. can continue, after a federal judge on Friday turned back a legal challenge from several Republican-led states, including Florida and Texas.

“The Court finds that Plaintiffs have failed to establish that they have standing on any of their claims,” said the final judgment by Judge Drew B. Tipton, who issued the decision from a courthouse in the Texan city of Victoria.

The Biden administra­tion launched the parole process for Cuba, Haiti and Nicaragua in January 2023, after first launching the program in October 2022 for Venezuela. It allows people from the four countries to come to the U.S. for two years, as long as they have financial sponsors and pass background and health checks.

But the fate of the program had been uncertain since Texas, Florida and over a dozen other Republican-led states sued the administra­tion less than a month after it was announced. They argued that the program was illegal because it was an overstep of federal government authority and burdened the states with millions of dollars in costs.

On Friday, Tipton — who was appointed to the federal bench by President Donald Trump and has previously ruled against the Biden administra­tion — dismissed the case and denied any relief to the states in a 27-page opinion.

The ruling is a huge win for Biden’s White House, which has used executive authority to grant humanitari­an parole to several countries, including to Ukrainians after Russia invaded their country. Tipton’s decision is also a relief for parole program recipients and their sponsors, many of whom are family members.

Since the end of January, over 357,000 people from the four countries have arrived in the United States. That includes over 144,000 Haitians, 58,000 Nicaraguan­s, over 74,000 Cubans, and more than 86,000 Venezuelan­s, according to federal government data. The Department of Homeland Security launched the program as part of its package of policies to reduce irregular immigratio­n and increase legal pathways for people from the four countries.

“It’s an incredible victory to ensure that the parole programs that have reunited so many families and provided protection for so many can continue,” said Karen Tumlin, founder and director of the Justice Action Center, which represente­d seven U.S. citizen sponsors of parole program beneficiar­ies in the lawsuit.

“This is a great day for them because they wanted to have the freedom to welcome, the freedom to exercise their own religion, to reunite families. I hope that the hundreds of thousands of other people who are waiting in line for this program find confidence in this decision,” she told the Miami Herald.

Valerie Laveus, a middle school teacher in Broward

County, Florida, brought her brother and 15-yearold nephew from Portau-prince through the parole program in August. She is among the several sponsors Tumlin’s group represente­d.

Her family had been living in uncertaint­y since the case went to trial in August. The fear that the program could go away had only deepened as the crisis in Haiti worsened in recent days. On Friday, Laveus said she was overjoyed.

“I want to thank God for this. It was definitely scary, to think that the program was going to be completely obliterate­d. Not just for my brother, but for everybody that has been given the opportunit­y to come here,” she said. “We don’t have to live in fear that they are going to be sent away… They can do what they came to do, which is live with peace and learn as much as they can and live with freedom.”

Back in Haiti, Laveus’ relatives couldn’t work or go to school because of the continuing gang violence. Her brother had long been approved for a green card, but it was a years-long wait for a visa to become available. It was becoming harder for U.s.based family members keep sending money while hoping it would last them long enough to eat and survive.

Then the parole program offered another way out.

“When my brother came he was half of a man. Now he’s joyful, and looking forward to life. My family came with a lot of adversity . ... That adversity has shifted. This is a new life, a new experience,” she said.

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