Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Nicaraguan families need and deserve temporary protection

- By Bertha Sanles Bertha Sanles, of Miami, is a community organizer with the American Friends Service Committee.

I was only 22 years old in the year 2000, when I left my 4-year-old daughter in Nicaragua to come to the United States. It was not an easy decision, but the economic situation in my country had deteriorat­ed drasticall­y after Hurricane Mitch, which killed more than 3,000 people. We needed a chance for a better life.

My husband and I settled in Florida and were eventually able to bring our daughter Christell to the U.S. I am proud to say that today she is a teacher, and my younger daughter Leah is only 17 and has already been an activist for many years. I love this country, but because of an unfair and confusing immigratio­n system, it has often been difficult to live and raise a family here.

We need Congress to pass permanent protection­s and a pathway to citizenshi­p for all immigrants. But while we continue to put pressure on Congress, we also need the Biden administra­tion to act now to extend and redesignat­e Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Nicaraguan­s.

TPS is a provision under which the government grants protection from deportatio­n to people from certain countries afflicted by natural disasters, war or other dangerous conditions. It can help families like mine — families that are an important part of their communitie­s and of this country.

Over the years, I have worked very hard to make a living in the U.S. and contribute to my community. I took home health aid classes that allowed me to work with seniors who helped me learn English. I loved the work and wanted to become a nurse, but because of my immigratio­n status, I could not get the student loans I needed and had to give up on that dream. Even my daughter Christell, who came to the U.S. as a child and has some protection­s under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, could not get in-state tuition in Florida, where she has lived most of her life.

When I found that out about Christell’s tuition, I knew I had to do something. I started crocheting and selling baby clothes, but it was not enough to pay for classes, so I decided to join the immigrant rights movement with Dreamers’ Moms, trying to reach politician­s and journalist­s to tell them how hard it was for DACA recipients to go to college. Eventually we won in-state tuition for our children! But there was so much more that needed to change.

Today, I am a community organizer with the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC), a Quaker organizati­on committed to social justice, peace and humanitari­an service. We work for changes to immigratio­n policy, like the expansion of Temporary Protected Status (TPS) and a pathway to citizenshi­p for all immigrants. We also work with our communitie­s to support farmworker­s and young people to end the detention of immigrant children.

I have lived in Florida for the last 22 years. I pay taxes, volunteer and contribute to my community. But because of my immigratio­n status, I cannot realize my dream of buying a duplex for me and my daughter. I cannot become a nurse despite a massive nursing shortage in this country. I still live in fear of deportatio­n to Nicaragua, where the situation has in many ways gotten worse.

I am just one of millions of immigrants who contribute­s to the U.S. economy. In

2019, billions of dollars in federal taxes were contribute­d by immigrant-led ($330.7 billion), undocument­ed-led ($18.9 billion), and DACA recipient-led ($3.4 billion) households across the country. A lot of these individual­s cannot even claim tax returns and are continuous­ly in fear of deportatio­n. While the Biden administra­tion has taken some steps toward protecting immigrants, such as expanding TPS to other countries, more needs to be done.

The Biden administra­tion and our congressio­nal leaders have fallen far short of their promises to immigrant communitie­s, which does a disservice to the country as a whole. Action to keep our families together is long overdue.

 ?? FILE ?? Protesters hold messages in favor of the Temporary Protected Status (TPS) program during a rally on Nov. 9, 2018, in front of the White House in Washington, D.C.
FILE Protesters hold messages in favor of the Temporary Protected Status (TPS) program during a rally on Nov. 9, 2018, in front of the White House in Washington, D.C.
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