‘SCARED TO DEATH’: MIAMI HAITIANS FEAR FAMILY SEPARATIONS IF PROTECTED STATUS EXPIRES – MIAMI HERALD

July 24, 2018

Members of the community gathered Tuesday in Miami’s Little Haiti neighborhood and argued that their home country, which in recent weeks has been plagued by political instability and civic unrest, is in no position to receive tens of thousands of returning citizens and their U.S.-born children. And after building up lives of their own in South Florida, the families don’t want to leave.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security grants protected status to foreign nationals, allowing them to live and work legally in the U.S., if it is determined that they cannot safely return to their home countries due to military conflict, natural disaster or other issues. Haitians were granted TPS following the 2010 earthquake in the country.

The Family Action Network Movement, or FANM, a local group that organized the event, estimates that along with the 58,000 Haitians living under TPS in the U.S., there are 27,000 U.S.-born children dependent on them.

Of those TPS recipients, more than 32,000 live in Florida alone, according to the Center for Migration Studies, a liberal think tank. Of the estimated 57,000 Hondurans living with TPS, just under 8,000 live in Florida, the think tank found.

Foreign nationals from 10 countries currently benefit from the temporary status. TPS for immigrants from Haiti, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Syria, Nepal and South Sudan is slated to expire at different times next year.

Last year, DHS announced it would not extend TPS for Haitian recipients, meaning the protected status would expire July 22, 2019. If TPS expires, advocates say, parents will be forced to live illegally in the U.S. or face deportation and separation from their kids.

Marleine Bastien, the founder and executive director of FANM, said many Haitian TPS recipients have lived in the U.S. between seven and 28 years.

“In 363 days, 58,000 Haitian families will be facing deportation to Haiti,” she said. “How do you ask a family to pack 30 years of their lives in a suitcase?”

Bastien said the Trump administration has a “moral obligation to make a decision now.”

Farrah Larrieux, a 39-year-old TPS recipient who owns a communications company, said the failure to make TPS permanent for Haitians is rooted in racial profiling, adding that the Trump administration is choosing to ignore the plight of Haitians and other minorities.

“This is stressful,” she said. “We won’t know what we are going to do.”

Marcia Danielle Jean Phillippe, a 49-year-old TPS recipient who works as a home aide and nurse, cried when she spoke about what the future may hold for her 4-year-old daughter, who was born in the U.S.

“I got to stay here to fight for my daughter,” she said. “Haitian people, we are good fighters.”

Adonia Simpson, the director of the Family Defense Program at Americans for Immigrant Justice, stressed that it was necessary for TPS recipients to visit with an immigration lawyer to discuss their options and any alternatives to deportation that may be available to them.

She said some “immigrants may have family-based relief based on a U.S. citizen family member that could petition for them. Also … there may be some folks that are eligible to seek cancellation of removal before the immigration courts.”

Simpson added that the issue was fraught with complications, and so it is “important that people get the right information now before it’s too late.”

Read it via the Miami Herald here.