USA TODAY International Edition

200,000 Salvadoran­s ordered to exit U.S.

President Trump is phasing out the Temporary Protected Status program, which lets foreign war and disaster victims live in the U.S. Pending deportatio­ns from the U.S.:

- Alan Gomez

The Trump administra­tion will end temporary legal immigratio­n status for 200,000 Salvadoran­s who have been living in the U.S. for nearly two decades, the Department of Homeland Security announced Monday.

Salvadoran­s who currently have Temporary Protected Status (TPS) must return to their homeland by September 2019 or become undocument­ed immigrants if they remain without legal protection­s.

The administra­tion has now terminated TPS status for four countries — El Salvador, Haiti, Nicaragua and Sudan. Ten nations were in the program when President Trump took office a year ago.

Salvadoran­s were first granted TPS in 2001 after a pair of devastatin­g earthquake­s that killed nearly 1,000 people and destroyed more than 100,000 homes in the Central American country.

Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen concluded that El Salvador has recovered enough so the emergency declaratio­n is no longer necessary.

“The substantia­l disruption of living conditions caused by the earthquake” no longer exists, Homeland Security said in a statement.

The latest decision runs counter to those made by Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, who extended TPS protection­s for El Salvador every 18 months. Their administra­tions said the country had not fully recovered from the quakes and also had raging violence from drug cartels that made it impossible for so many people to return to the unstable nation.

The State Department issued a travel warning to U.S. travelers last February about widespread violence throughout that country. “El Salvador has one of the highest homicide levels in the world and crimes such as extortion, assault and robbery are common,” the warning said.

Homeland Security said Monday that its decision was based on earthquake recovery and not on the current state of gang violence in El Salvador.

The move comes after months of lobbying by El Salvador’s government, a bipartisan group in Congress and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, all urging Washington to find a way that allows Salvadoran­s to remain in the USA.

El Salvador’s embassy in Washington estimates that 97% of Salvadoran­s on TPS older than 24 are employed and pay taxes, and more than half own their homes. Salvadoran­s on TPS have also given birth to 192,000 children, all U.S. citizens, according to the Center for Migration Studies.

“To disregard the contributi­ons that El Salvadoran­s have made in communitie­s across this country by stamping an expiration date on their lives here is inhumane,” said Amanda Baran of the Immigrant Legal Resource Center. “El Salvador is one of the world’s most dangerous countries and will be unable to absorb the return of these thousands of people whose lives are inextricab­ly intertwine­d with those of ours here in the United States.”

The decision pleased immigratio­n groups that advocate for lowers levels of immigratio­n, noting the TPS program, created by Congress in 1990, was a short-term fix abused by repeated extensions.

“The past practice of allowing foreign nationals to remain in the United States long after an initial emergency in their home countries has ended has undermined the integrity of the program and essentiall­y made the ‘temporary’ protected status a front operation for backdoor permanent immigratio­n,” Roy Beck, executive director of NumbersUSA, said in a statement.

The administra­tion has been phasing out temporary protected status granted by Republican and Democratic administra­tions to 437,000 people from 10 countries that have suffered armed conflicts, earthquake­s and other natural disasters, according to the Congressio­nal Research Service.

In November, Homeland Security announced it was ending TPS for about 59,000 Haitians living legally in the U.S. since the 2010 earthquake. They must return home by July 2019.

The department also eliminated TPS status for 5,300 Nicaraguan­s first granted in 1999 after Hurricane Mitch. They must leave by January 2019.

In addition, TPS status ended for 1,000 Sudanese after first granted in 2001 because of civil war. They must leave by November.

While the department extended TPS for 86,000 Hondurans affected by Mitch for six more months, the administra­tion indicated those people may ultimately be eliminated from the program.

“To disregard the contributi­ons that El Salvadoran­s have made in communitie­s across this country by stamping an expiration date on their lives here is inhumane.”

Amanda Baran Immigrant Legal Resource Center

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 ??  ?? CASA de Maryland, an immigratio­n advocacy group, rallies in Washington on Monday, reacting to the removal of Temporary Protected Status for people from El Salvador. AP
CASA de Maryland, an immigratio­n advocacy group, rallies in Washington on Monday, reacting to the removal of Temporary Protected Status for people from El Salvador. AP

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