Miami Herald

Florida Venezuelan­s celebrate TPS extension but urge Biden to expand the program

- BY SYRA ORTIZ-BLANES sortizblan­es@miamiheral­d.com Syra Ortiz Blanes: @syraob

Florida-based Venezuelan organizati­ons rejoiced Tuesday after the Biden administra­tion extended crucial immigratio­n relief for Venezuelan­s but urged officials to make more people eligible and come up with longterm immigratio­n solutions.

Venezuela will have Temporary Protected Status designatio­n — which lets people from countries in turmoil live and work temporaril­y in the United States — for another 18 months, the Department of Homeland Security announced Monday. About 343,000 Venezuelan­s people are eligible, the agency said.

However, the extension does not apply to anyone who arrived after March 8, 2021. Several advocacy groups, Venezuela’s Washington, D.C., embassy and U.S. and Florida lawmakers have repeatedly asked the administra­tion to allow later arrivals to qualify for TPS.

Between March 2021 and May 2022, U.S. Customs and Border Protection had nearly 145,000 encounters with Venezuelan nationals at the U.S.-Mexico border, according to federal government statistics. And U.S. lawmakers have previously estimated that as many as 250,000 Venezuelan­s came to the United States during 2021 and the first six months of this year.

“We are very grateful, we are very happy for the ... Venezuelan­s that are benefiting with that decision of extension,” said Venezuelan American Caucus Executive Director Adelys Ferro, “But we keep working for the redesignat­ion and we will not stop.”

PERMANENT PATHWAYS

At a Tuesday media conference, Venezuelan groups from across the state thanked the Biden administra­tion for the 18-month extension, which expires in March 2024. But they also advocated for a permanent immigratio­n fix, including citizenshi­p, for current TPS holders, and for the expansion of TPS benefits to Venezuelan­s who came after March 2021.

María Antonieta Díaz, president of the Venezuelan American Alliance, said she was grateful for the extension. But she also noted that many people had been waiting for over a year for their TPS applicatio­ns to be approved and urged Homeland Security to process them as quickly as possible. She also described the TPS extension as a “long-awaited relief,” but said that it was a “temporary respite” to a crisis in their homeland with no end in sight.

“The turbulent political situation and economic devastatio­n in Venezuela caused by the [Nicolás] Maduro regime is not a temporary situation and it will not improve in the next 18 months, unfortunat­ely,” she said.

Cecilia González, a TPS recipient who fled Venezuela escaping political persecutio­n, said she worked nearly three years in Central Florida’s hotel industry and two jobs to finance her education. Like Díaz, she asked for a path to permanent residence for TPS

holders.

“We will be able to enable families like mine and many others to achieve so much more in this country,” she said at the media event.

‘ESSENTIALL­Y IN LIMBO’

For most Venezuelan­s who arrived after March 2021, their immigratio­n options primarily remain limited to seeking asylum, said lawyers who spoke to the Miami Herald.

“They are essentiall­y in limbo. They are part of an inefficien­t and complicate­d asylum process,” said Maureen Porras, director of Church World Service Immigratio­n Legal Services and a candidate for Doral’s city council.

Porras has clients who have waited for more than a year for their immigratio­n court hearing after having arrived in the U.S., and others who have to wear ankle monitoring bracelets

as part of an alternativ­e-todetentio­n program.

She also said that jurisdicti­onal issues between the immigratio­n court and the asylum office — such as immigratio­n authoritie­s not properly or promptly filing necessary documents — can keep immigrants from moving forward in the asylum process.

“They find themselves without work permission, without filing an asylum applicatio­n, or with filing an asylum applicatio­n that gets rejected,” she said.

John de la Vega, a Miamibased immigratio­n lawyer who works with many Venezuelan­s, said that some people who come to the

U.S. with tourist visas might be able to apply for work visas or family petitions.

Miami-based Catholic Legal Services has noted an uptick in the number of Venezuelan­s, along with Nicaraguan­s and Cubans, coming for walk-in appointmen­ts to their offices in the last year, its executive director, Randy McGrorty, told the Herald. He added that the reason the government has a retroactiv­e deadline for Temporary Protected Status is to not encourage future irregular migration in dangerous conditions.

But McGrorty also noted that the federal government had redesignat­ed Haiti for Temporary Protected Status twice in the past 12 years: First, in January 2011, after having designated the Caribbean country for the program after the devastatin­g 2010 earthquake,

and then again last May. In August Haiti was redesignat­ed once more, after the assassinat­ion of President Jovenel Moïse.

“In the past, when situations are not just ongoing but have worsened or perhaps a new factor has been added in, DHS has redesignat­ed the country based on this new criteria and given new dates,” said McGrorty.

As of May, about 245,000 Venezuelan­s had applied to the program, said Brian Fincheltub, consulate affairs director at the Venezuelan embassy in a press release. About 35% of them have been approved for the protection­s so far. Only about 90 applicatio­ns had been denied, a rejection rate that he described to the Miami Herald as “very positive news.”

 ?? ARIANA CUBILLOS AP | Aug. 12, 2017 ?? Anti-government demonstrat­ors wave a Venezuelan flag during a protest against President Nicolás Maduro in Caracas. U.S. lawmakers have estimated that as many as 250,000 Venezuelan­s came to the United States during 2021 and the first six months of this year.
ARIANA CUBILLOS AP | Aug. 12, 2017 Anti-government demonstrat­ors wave a Venezuelan flag during a protest against President Nicolás Maduro in Caracas. U.S. lawmakers have estimated that as many as 250,000 Venezuelan­s came to the United States during 2021 and the first six months of this year.

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