A compelation photo of the TPS holders.
A compelation photo of the TPS holders.
People with TPS humanitarian status call on Biden to take action.
Katie Hoeppner,
she/her/hers,
Freelance Writer,
老澳门开奖结果
Emi MacLean,
Senior Staff Attorney, 老澳门开奖结果 of Northern California Criminal Justice Program
Share This Page
October 13, 2022
People with TPS humanitarian status call on Biden to take action.

Since the early 1990s, our nation has welcomed and assisted people whose countries have been devastated by war and natural disaster through the Temporary Protected Status (TPS) program. Today, many TPS holders have established roots in the U.S., raising families and contributing to their communities.

In recent years, the Trump administration tried to terminate TPS for six countries and undermine the program altogether, fueling anti-immigrant sentiment and threatening hundreds of thousands of families. But TPS holders and won relief from the courts in 2018 in Ramos v. Nielsen. Unfortunately, that protection could soon expire.

Now, four years later, over 300,000 people are again at risk of deportation and family separation from the Trump terminations. Their fate now rests with the Biden administration. Unless the administration acts now to reach a just settlement in the pending Ramos litigation or to redesignate TPS for these countries, the Trump terminations could go into effect for El Salvador, Honduras, Nepal, and Nicaragua after December 31.

We spoke about the urgency of this moment with TPS holders and their children, who are leading the fight for a just settlement to their case as well as long-term relief.


Cristina Morales

Crista Morales and Cristina Ramos.

Crista Ramos and Cristina Morales

Credit: James Matthew Daniel

Cristina fled El Salvador in 1993 and traveled to the US when she was just 12 years old. Her mother had escaped domestic violence and fled before her. Cristina, who suffered the same abuse, followed 鈥 alone. Cristina has had TPS since 2001, which has allowed her to work in a job she loves, in early childhood education, and to raise and support her family without fear.

鈥淸TPS] gives me a chance to work. To walk on the street free with our family and not be in fear that we鈥檙e going to get arrested by immigration.鈥

Cristina鈥檚 younger child was recently diagnosed with cancer and Cristina鈥檚 health insurance ensures her son and her family have the health care that they need. Cristina also is financially and emotionally supporting her older daughter as she embarks on her undergraduate education.

All that could change if Cristina loses TPS. Cristina, her two children, and her husband are haunted by the possibility that their family could be ripped apart if she loses her immigration status in the U.S.

鈥淚 have nothing [in El Salvador]. I don鈥檛 own anything over there. My whole family is over here.鈥

Cristina and her family are committed to defending TPS for themselves and other families through their lawsuit, and maintain hope that they will be able to stay together in the country they all call home.

鈥淵ou know, many times people ask me, 鈥榳hat about if you lose?鈥 And I tell everybody 鈥業 can鈥檛 think like that because I believe in justice 鈥 I believe in this country. I believe justice will be served to us.鈥欌


Crista Ramos

Crista Ramos

Crista Ramos

Credit: James Matthew Daniel

Crista, Cristina鈥檚 eldest child, is 18 years old, a first-year college student, and a vocal immigrants rights activist. Crista joined the Ramos v. Mayorkas litigation as the lead plaintiff when she was 14, after learning her mother was at risk of losing her status and being deported to El Salvador.

鈥淚 got involved because I want to help maintain my family together. I don鈥檛 want to just stand by. I want to be involved in the fight.鈥

If Crista鈥檚 mom were deported, she and her brother would have to decide whether to stay in the U.S. without their mother, or move to El Salvador, far from the rest of their family and friends.

鈥淗ome for me is the United States 鈥 here in my house, with my family. It鈥檚 a safe place where I can be myself and be with my family.鈥

Through litigation and advocacy, Crista fights not just for her own family, but for the hundreds of thousands of other families at risk of separation.


Keshav Bhattarai

Keshav Bhattarai

Keshav Bhattarai

Credit: Constanza Hevia

Keshav Raj Bhattarai and his wife came to the United States in May of 2015 around the time a 7.8-magnitude earthquake tore through Nepal, killing thousands and leaving much of their home city of Kathmandu in rubble.

They had not intended to stay in the U.S., and only came to celebrate their son鈥檚 graduation from a medical fellowship program in Pittsburgh. But in June of 2015, the Obama administration designated Nepal for Temporary Protected Status, based on the devastation from the earthquake. Keshav and his family were relieved to be able to apply for and receive TPS while their country was struggling to rebuild.

But in 2018, President Trump removed protections for Nepal while the country was still recovering from the massive damage caused by the earthquake, in addition to other problems.

鈥淲e were receiving TPS continuously and when we got the information that the Trump government had suddenly terminated TPS, we were very discouraged.鈥

Keshav is a lead plaintiff in a to the Ramos litigation 鈥 Bhattarai v. Mayorkas 鈥 which challenges the Trump administration鈥檚 terminations of TPS for Nepal and Honduras. While his immediate fight is to keep TPS, Keshav also hopes to win more permanent protections and stay in the U.S. long term with his wife and son.

鈥淲e are in a very critical situation, full of chaos, but we still are hopeful that the government, which works for people, will certainly make a decision in our favor. Though we are hopeful, we have fears of deportation; there is a constant fear that we might get deported.鈥

Learn more about Keshav's story below:

Keshav Bhattarai
This embed will serve content from {{ domain }}. See our privacy statement

Sorayda Moti帽o

Sorayda Rodriguez

Sorayda Rodriguez

Credit: Will Martinez

Sorayda Rodriguez Moti帽o grew up in rural Honduras, where she remembers being surrounded by violence from a young age. Some of her neighbors were massacred during a period of severe regional instability, and she recalls living in fear for her life.

鈥淭hose are events that you just can鈥檛 forget,鈥 she recounted, describing neighbors being killed and, as a child, having to hide under a table to avoid being shot. 鈥淲hen you wake up, and you hear bullets coming through the walls and you鈥檙e so little, you don鈥檛 know what to do. All you can do is hide under the table and hope for the best that one of those bullets is not going to hit you.鈥

Sorayda fled to the United States to escape the instability in Honduras when she was a child. Around the time of her arrival in the U.S., Hurricane Mitch devastated Honduras, killing thousands and displacing many more, and leading the U.S. government to designate the country for TPS.

Now, Sorayda has lived in the U.S. for 24 years 鈥 more than half her life. She is married to another TPS holder and they live in Harrisonburg, Virginia with their two U.S.-citizen children, ages 12 and 19. She is grateful to have a stable job in hospitality and to be able to raise her children in a safe community.

But Soryada worries continually that she and her husband could lose their TPS, and either be separated from their children or be forced to take them to an unfamiliar place, far from their home. Her children have never been to Honduras.

鈥淢y kids, this is the only place that they know. This is where they were born. So for them 鈥 Honduras is a foreign country they're not going to know much about.鈥

Sorayda is a plaintiff in Bhattarai v. Mayorkas, where she is challenging Trump鈥檚 termination of TPS for Honduras. She and her family also continue to fight for more permanent protections.

鈥淔or my kids to know that a permanent residency or citizenship for their parents [is possible] means their future 鈥 to live with their parents here 鈥 is secure. It means they don鈥檛 have to worry about losing their parents.鈥

Learn more about Sorayda's story below:

Sorayda Rodriguez
This embed will serve content from {{ domain }}. See our privacy statement

Imara Ampie

Imara Ampie

Imara Ampie

Credit: Constanza Hevia

Imara Ampie and her husband are TPS holders from Nicaragua. They own a home in Northern California and have lived in the United States for more than 20 years. Imara is a plaintiff in Ramos v. Mayorkas, where she is challenging Trump鈥檚 termination of TPS for Nicaragua.

Imara鈥檚 husband has worked in building maintenance for the same school for the past 15 years. Imara cares for her two U.S. citizen children, aged 12 and 19.

Neither Imara nor her husband have returned to Nicaragua since they left more than 20 years ago, and her children have not set foot in Nicaragua.

When the Trump administration announced that it would terminate TPS for Nicaragua, she had to discuss this with her children. Her children are autistic and have special needs, and have been deeply affected by any discussion of losing their parents or the only home they have ever known.

鈥淲hen the Trump Administration canceled [] TPS, I was worried for the emotional wellbeing and the educational support that my kids require for their special needs 鈥 We really feel we are in an immigration limbo. It is an inhumane chaos.鈥

The Trump administration鈥檚 decision to terminate TPS has caused Imara to feel sick; she has lost sleep and has found herself short of breath and anxious.

鈥淲e kindly need President Biden鈥檚 help so that all the families may stay in this country, because we need to keep contributing. We need to carry on with the work to reach our goals, our objectives for the future, and the wellbeing of our kids.鈥

Learn more about Imara's story below:

Imara Ampie
This embed will serve content from {{ domain }}. See our privacy statement
       

Learn More 老澳门开奖结果 the Issues on This Page