Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Deadline passes for Central American immigrants

The deadline to reapply for Temporary Protected Status is Tuesday and thousands of immigrants who qualify have not sent in their papers yet. They would then be subject to being deported. I hope their papers are in the mail.

by Matt O'Brien, Contra Costa Times

SAN PABLO, Calif. - Thousands of Salvadoran, Nicaraguan and Honduran immigrants could have their permission to live and work in the United States revoked next year after missing a Tuesday immigration deadline.

The deadline was to reapply for Temporary Protected Status, a special path to U.S. residency provided to certain Central Americans following a devastating 1998 hurricane and two back-to-back earthquakes in El Salvador in 2001.

"If they don't refile, they're not going to be able to keep on legally working," said Sharon Rummery, spokeswoman for U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services.

At the end of Friday, about 180,000 of the eligible 229,000 Salvadoran immigrants had applied nationwide, Rummery said. Almost 53,000 of 70,000 eligible Nicaraguans had applied and about 2,300 of 3,500 eligible Hondurans. Those who did not apply in time will likely lose their legal residency in March, making them deportable.

Applications were required to be postmarked by Tuesday, so many are likely to still be on the way.

In San Pablo, home to a sizable Salvadoran community, immigration consultant Ramon Cardona said he was flooded with last-minute requests for help with immigration documents.

"I had two sisters who brought their younger brother, dragged him here, to do it," said Cardona, himself an immigrant from El Salvador.

"He was just kind of adamant against paying the $420 fee. That's what's really hurting a lot of people. The fees really went up."

It is free to reapply for temporary protected status but costs $380 to renew a work permit and $80 for a fingerprint fee.

Congress enacted the special benefit in 1990 as a way of allowing temporary residence to those suffering from national disasters or civil unrest. Presently, it applies to six countries, three of them in Central America. Hurricane Mitch ravaged Honduras and Nicaragua in October 1998, and deadly earthquakes struck El Salvador in January and February 2001.

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