The Mercury News

Salvadoran­s to Trump: We’re ready for a fight

Administra­tion ending protection­s for 200,000 immigrants — many in state

- By Emily DeRuy ederuy@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Before her kids had a chance to go online or talk to friends, Vanessa Velasco went to their rooms early Monday and delivered news that could rip apart the family.

The Trump administra­tion had just announced it will end what is known as Temporary Protected Status for Salvadoran immigrants, forcing nearly 200,000 people, including Velasco and her husband, to choose between voluntaril­y leaving the U.S. or risking deportatio­n if they stay in a country many have called home for more than a decade.

“It’s an incredibly shameful and cruel way to treat folks who have been abiding by the law almost 20 years and who have built their lives here,” said Juan Rivera, a spokesman for the Central American Resource Center in San Francisco. “We think it’s a waste of money.”

The administra­tion said it will give the Salvadoran­s until Sept. 9, 2019, to leave the United States or find a way to obtain legal residency,

according to a statement Monday from the Department of Homeland Security. The Salvadoran­s were granted Temporary Protected Status, or TPS, after earthquake­s hit the country in 2001, and their permits have been renewed on an 18-month basis since then.

Activists say it’s unclear exactly how many Bay Area Salvadoran­s like the Velascos will be affected by the announceme­nt, but they agree the number is likely to be in the thousands and the ripple effects stand to be even greater. Many Salvadoran­s have U.S.-born children and some will have to decide whether to

split up their families and leave their American children behind if they go back to El Salvador.

Velasco, 36, came to the U.S. from El Salvador about 17 years ago and has since built a life here. Her husband restores landmarks and other buildings for a living while Velasco raises their three kids, ages 17, 12 and 4. The couple own a house in Brentwood and the Bay Area is the only place any of her children have ever called home. They contribute to Medicare and Social Security.

Now, they are gearing up for a fight.

“This is not the time to pray,” Velasco said. “I’m not going to let them break apart my family.”

Monday’s announceme­nt was consistent with

the White House’s broader stated goal of reducing legal immigratio­n to the United States and intensifyi­ng efforts to expel those who arrived illegally. But Homeland Security officials characteri­zed the decision by Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen in narrower legal terms: as a recognitio­n that conditions in El Salvador had improved enough since the earthquake­s to make the TPS designatio­n no longer warranted.

“Based on careful considerat­ion of available informatio­n, including recommenda­tions received as part of an inter-agency consultati­on process, the Secretary determined that the original conditions caused by the 2001 earthquake­s no longer exist,” Monday’s DHS statement read. “Thus,

under the applicable statute, the current TPS designatio­n must be terminated.”

Local Salvadoran­s say that’s not true.

“That’s the last option,” Velasco said. “That country is not ready to receive us.”

Nestor Andre Castillo, a lecturer at San Francisco State University who was born in San Francisco to two El Salvadoran parents, agrees.

“I don’t know what they are looking at to come up with that conclusion,” Castillo said, adding that El Salvador still has one of the highest murder rates in the western hemisphere.

In November, DHS ended protection status for 60,000 Haitians who arrived after a 2010 earthquake, and for 2,500 Nicaraguan migrants protected after Hurricane

Mitch in 1998.

A six-month extension recently was granted to 57,000 Hondurans, a decision made before Nielsen’s arrival by then-Acting DHS Secretary Elaine Duke. That move frustrated White House officials who wanted Duke to end the program.

Rivera’s organizati­on and others have been lobbying Congress to come up with a fix to allow immigrants with Temporary Protected Status to remain in the U.S. They say they’ll continue that work, but now they’re also scrambling to advise Salvadoran immigrants on other legal ways to remain in the country, such as by applying for refugee status. Velasco and her husband are considerin­g their options.

“People are really confused and their livelihood­s are completely threatened by this,” Rivera said.

Amanda Baran, consultant to the Immigrant Legal Resource Center, also warned “this will have a really big impact on the U.S. economy.” Many Salvadoran­s work in constructi­on, childcare and service, she said, and the administra­tion’s decision could upend those industries.

“We’re not pleased,” Baran said. “We think that it is shameful that we are expelling these people who have been working and living alongside us for 15 years at least and sentencing them to deportatio­n. We think it’s a horrible decision.”

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