Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Salvadoran immigrants wait, worry

Thousands could lose U.S. protected status on Monday

- By Joseph Tanfani joseph.tanfani@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — At 9 years old, after her family left El Salvador, Karla Alvarado crossed the Rio Grande into Texas in an inner tube with two changes of clothes.

That was 20 years ago. Alvarado has lived in the U.S. ever since, for most of that time under a legal, but temporary immigratio­n status.

Today, she has a college degree, a husband, a job as a registered nurse — and an intense fear that she’s about to be told she has to return to a country she hasn’t seen since childhood.

Since 2001, Alvarado, and about 262,000 other Salvadoran­s — including nearly 30,000 in Los Angeles — have been allowed to live and work in the U.S. under a program known as Temporary Protected Status.

The Trump administra­tion appears headed toward decreeing an end to it Monday.

“It’s definitely heartwrenc­hing, I’m having anxiety like I’ve never had before,” said Alvarado, 29, of Norristown in suburban Philadelph­ia. “I’ve been here since I was nine, I don’t know anything else. I am American, and this is my home.”

The program is supposed to provide a temporary haven for victims of natural disasters — not permanent permission to stay in the U.S. — administra­tion officials have stressed.

“The political decision is clear,” said Jill Marie Bussey, director of advocacy for the Catholic Legal Immigratio­n Network, one of many groups advocating for the Salvadoran­s.

“They’ve explained to us that this administra­tion wants to put the “T” — temporary — back in TPS.”

But El Salvador presents a particular­ly difficult decision. Salvadoran­s are by far the largest group with protected status.

They have held it since two earthquake­s struck the Central American country in early 2001, killing more than 1,100 people and leaving 1 million others homeless.

As the Monday deadline for a decision approaches, U.S. mayors, the Chamber of Commerce and El Salvador’s President Salvador Sanchez Ceren have all lobbied the new Homeland Security secretary, Kirstjen Nielsen, trying to convince her to once again extend the protection­s — or at least to put off the end as long as possible.

Tyler Houlton, a Homeland Secretary spokesman, said the phone call with Ceren was “cordial and productive,” but did not say which way Nielsen was leaning.

“The secretary has received advice from DHS staff, other federal agencies, and interested stakeholde­rs and intends to make a decision prior to Monday’s deadline,” he said.

Since the original designatio­n, the U.S. has extended the protection­s 11 times. The last time, in 2016, the Obama administra­tion found that El Salvador was still struggling to recover from the earthquake­s, and that the “fiscal unemployme­nt and security situations in El Salvador remain poor.”

The administra­tion’s decision likely will have its greatest impact in Southern California, home to the country’s largest population of Salvadoran immigrants.

An estimated 49,000 protected Salvadoran­s live in California, the largest population of any state, according to a study by the Center for Migration Studies. Another study found that 8,700 households of TPS holders in California have mortgages.

Advocates argue that it would be a catastroph­e to send long-term residents and their children back to El Salvador, a country struggling with a weak economy and wracked by gang violence. El Salvador is one of the most violent countries in the world, measured by its murder rate.

Nielsen herself, along with Attorney General Jeff Sessions, has spoken in dramatic terms about the threat posed by MS-13, the violent gang with a base in El Salvador.

“These savage criminals are in our communitie­s, and they are a deadly consequenc­e of our unsecured borders and our failed immigratio­n policies,” she said last month.

“The fact is, that the conditions that started the TPS in the first place haven’t changed at all,” San Salvador Mayor Nayib Bukele, a candidate for president, said in a telephone interview.

The country is far more violent than it was in 2001 and struggles to provide jobs for its own young people now, let alone any of the U.S. citizens who might have to return to El Salvador with their parents, Bukele said.

Salvadoran officials also worry that ending the protected status would be a major blow to their country’s economy. People living in the U.S. sent more than $4.5 billion back to El Salvador in 2016, the largest amount in the country’s history.

Elena Aguilar, who came to the U.S. illegally in 1996 with two children, says she sends money back to her mother in El Salvador every month. Since getting protected status, she has bought five rental houses and opened a clothing store.

“I have a future here, I work here,” said Aguilar, 43, of York, Pa. “This is very unfair, after we’re working for many years, and trying to do the best we can, and now they just want to kick us out, without anything.”

Homeland Security officials have said they are sympatheti­c to long-term residents like Aguilar, but insist that it’s bad policy to keep issuing temporary extensions. They have called on Congress to craft a permanent solution.

Advocates say that they don’t expect any action, however, from a Congress already consumed with negotiatio­ns over other immigratio­n issues, including the fate of nearly 700,000 young people at risk of deportatio­n as a result of President Donald Trump’s decision to end of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program.

 ?? CAROLYN COLE/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? El Salvador’s gang violence made it the murder capital of the world in 2015. The economy has struggled since 2001.
CAROLYN COLE/LOS ANGELES TIMES El Salvador’s gang violence made it the murder capital of the world in 2015. The economy has struggled since 2001.

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