Las Vegas Review-Journal

TPS holders advocate for permanent residency

Bus tour stops in Vegas as part of 32-state tour

- By Alex Chhith Contact Alex Chhith at achhith@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0290. Follow @alexchhith on Twitter.

We, the TPS holder and all the immigrants, are usually people who hold two jobs, pay taxes and we work hard with our own sweat.

Miguel Barahona is one of more than 400,000 immigrants in the U.S. whose legal status is in jeopardy.

The Las Vegas resident has been living in the United States under temporary protected status for 25 years. However, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals recently reversed a 2018 injunction that prevented the Department of Homeland Security from terminatin­g the temporary protected status, or TPS, program for those from El Salvador, Haiti, Nicaragua and Sudan.

The reversal allows the Trump administra­tion to end protection­s for people like Barahona, who is from El Salvador.

“We, the TPS holder and all the immigrants, are usually people who hold two jobs, pay taxes and we work hard with our own sweat,” Barahona said through a translator at a demonstrat­ion Monday outside the Lloyd George U.S. Courthouse in downtown Las Vegas to a gathering of about 50 people. “I want to send a message to anyone who is watching on Facebook Live or any media that is here: We the immigrants need your

Miguel Barahona Speaker at “Road to Justice” bus tour

help; we need help from everybody in power right now.”

Barahona also asked legislator­s to pass the American Dream and Promise Act of 2019, which would cancel removal proceeding­s on immigrants who qualify for TPS and would grant permanent residency to those who pass background checks. The bill was passed by the House of Representa­tives but not voted on in the Senate.

“I just want to call out everyone to

vote on this legislatio­n that is the only thing that is going to give us a permanent residency,” Barahona said. “We’re going to give it all we got.”

In an interview, Barahona said he will be traveling to Houston to fight for others affected by the ruling as part of the National TPS Alliance’s “On the Road to Justice” bus tour.

The tour officially started Sept.

21 in Los Angeles and will make its way through 32 states until it gets to

Washington D.C., in November, according to organizer Erik Villalobos.

There are 20 people on the school bus to ensure social distancing, Villalobos said.

Marilyn Miranda, 10, is one of the youngest people on the tour and said she was fighting to keep her mother, who is a TPS holder, in the country.

Marilyn, of Washington, D.C., told the crowd Monday that she wouldn’t know what to do if her mother was forced to leave the country.

“I would go into the foster system, I think,” she said. “I just want to tell everyone over 18 to vote because of all the families being separated.”

 ?? K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal @Kmcannonph­oto ?? Claudia Lainez of Oakland speaks at a news conference at Lloyd George U.S. Courthouse on Monday as part of the “On the Road to Justice” bus tour led by TPS holders.
K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal @Kmcannonph­oto Claudia Lainez of Oakland speaks at a news conference at Lloyd George U.S. Courthouse on Monday as part of the “On the Road to Justice” bus tour led by TPS holders.

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