USA TODAY US Edition

U.S. might order 200,000 Salvadoran­s to leave U.S.

- Alan Gomez

The Trump administra­tion faces a Monday deadline to decide the fate of nearly 200,000 Salvadoran­s who have been living in the United States under temporary legal immigratio­n status for nearly two decades.

The Department of Homeland Security said Friday that Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen had not yet made a decision on whether to end the program, which would force those people to return to their native El Salvador or become undocument­ed immigrants if they choose to remain without legal protection­s.

Recent moves by President Trump, who favors lower levels of legal immigratio­n, suggest the Salvadoran­s’ protection­s are in peril.

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

In November, Homeland Security announced it was ending TPS for roughly 46,000 Haitians living legally in the U.S. since a powerful earthquake in 2010 decimated the country. They must return home by July 2019.

The department also eliminated TPS status for 2,500 Nicaraguan­s that was first granted in 1999 after the destructio­n left by Hurricane Mitch. They must leave by January 2019.

And while the department extended TPS for 57,000 Hondurans affected by Mitch for six more months, the administra­tion indicated they might ultimately be eliminated from the program.

Some say the time has come for the U.S. to start phasing out TPS, which was created by Congress in 1990 as a shortterm solution to catastroph­ic events overseas and must be renewed every 18 months.

“The ‘T’ in TPS stands for ‘temporary,’ ” said Ira Mehlman, a spokesman for the Federation for American Immigratio­n Reform, which advocates for lower levels of immigratio­n. “Salvadoran­s have been allowed to remain for almost 17 years, which stretches the boundaries of any reasonable definition of ‘temporary.’ ”

But after living in the USA for so long, many Salvadoran­s believe the government should come up with another way to allow them to stay.

The Salvadoran Embassy in Washington estimates that 97% of Salvadoran­s on TPS over the age of 24 are employed and paying taxes, and more than half own their own homes. Salvadoran­s on TPS also have given birth to 192,000 children, all of them U.S. citizens, according to a report from the Center for Migration Studies.

Edwin Murillo, 42, was granted TPS shortly after his country was battered by a magnitude-7.6 earthquake that left nearly 1,000 people dead and more than 100,000 homes destroyed.

The banquet supervisor for a hotel chain in Dallas said he understand­s the TPS he and his wife have enjoyed can’t go on forever. But Murillo said it’s inhumane to send 400,000 people — TPS beneficiar­ies and their children — back to a country that has yet to recover and is plagued by gang violence.

“Congress should consider the humanity, the dignity of these families and give them some kind of a solution,” said Murillo, who serves on the board of the National TPS Alliance.

“There are children who have been born in this country. These are families who have given their best to this country. To then, after 17 years, be told to abandon it?”

El Salvador’s government, U.S. business leaders and a bipartisan coalition of Congress have lobbied the Trump administra­tion to spare TPS recipients.

Salvador’s foreign minister, Hugo Martinez, has met with all three of Trump’s Homeland Security chiefs to plead for another extension. Mayors of major cities have urged the department to maintain the program. More than 130 members of Congress have written to Nielsen to ask for an extension, arguing that the Salvadoran­s have become part of the “fabric of America.”

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce also wrote to the department, decrying the financial hit the USA would take if it forced out so many members of the labor force. In October, the chamber pointed out that large numbers of Salvadoran TPS recipients work in the constructi­on industries in portions of Texas and Florida hit hard by hurricanes in 2017.

 ?? JOSE LUIS MAGANA/AP ?? Rep. Luis Gutierrez, D-Ill., third from left, demonstrat­es Dec. 6 with others outside the U.S. Capitol in support of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), and temporary protected status (TPS), programs.
JOSE LUIS MAGANA/AP Rep. Luis Gutierrez, D-Ill., third from left, demonstrat­es Dec. 6 with others outside the U.S. Capitol in support of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), and temporary protected status (TPS), programs.

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