18/05/04 - STATEMENT FROM CITIES FOR ACTION ON TERMINATION OF TEMPORARY PROTECTED STATUS FOR HONDURANS
For Immediate Release
May 4, 2018
Contact
[email protected]
Cities for Action denounces Trump Administration's decision to terminate TPS for Hondurans, calls on Congress to take action
Cities for Action condemns the Trump Administration’s decision to terminate Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Honduras. This decision will affect 57,000 Honduran TPS recipients who have been granted work authorization and protection from deportation in the United States since 1999. Last week, 26 Cities for Action mayors and county executives issued a letter calling on the Trump Administration to extend Honduras’s TPS designation, citing Honduras’s incomplete recovery from multiple natural disasters, including Hurricane Mitch, which killed over 11,000 people and had a devastating impact on Honduras’s infrastructure. As local leaders, it is our responsibility to protect all our residents, and it is inhumane to send Honduran TPS recipients back to a country that cannot safely reabsorb its nationals. We call on Congress to bring empathy and justice back to U.S. immigration policy and pass legislation offering long-term TPS holders permanent protection in the United States.
2018/04/27 - MAYORS AND COUNTY EXECUTIVES URGE THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION TO EXTEND TEMPORARY PROTECTED STATUS FOR HONDURANS
For Immediate Release: April 27, 2018
Contact: [email protected]
Cities for Action leaders issue letter to the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of State in support of an extension of TPS for Honduras
WASHINGTON – In anticipation of the Department of Homeland Security’s decision on Honduran TPS, 26 mayors and county executives issued a letter today to Secretary of Homeland Security Kirstjen Nielsen and Secretary of State Michael Pompeo urging them to extend Honduras’s TPS designation for a full 18 months. An estimated 57,000 Honduran TPS recipients have resided in the U.S. since 1998 – they own homes, raise U.S. citizen children, contribute to local economies, and have deep roots in communities. The letter urges Administration officials to take into consideration Honduras’s incomplete recovery from natural disasters and inability to safely reabsorb its nationals.
About Cities for Action
The mayors who have signed today's letter to Secretary Nielsen and Secretary Pompeo are part of Cities for Action, a coalition of over 175 mayors and county executives leading on immigration action and immigrant inclusion efforts.
See below for quotes from signatories:
"I urge Secretary Nielsen to extend the safety and security that this protection provides to thousands of families, including 3,000 Honduran New Yorkers. On average, they have been living in this country for nearly 20 years, while contributing to the economic and cultural vitality of our city. Revoking this critical protection would pull parents from their children and force them to return to unsafe conditions. New York City is their home and they should be allowed to stay here.”– Bill de Blasio, Mayor of New York City
“Mayors around the country are advocating for the extension of TPS for Honduras because we recognize the importance of community and family cohesiveness,” said Carlo DeMaria, Mayor of Everett, MA. “We know Honduras has not fully recovered and simply cannot handle the return of so many citizens, and it would be cruel to force a return at this point. These people are valuable members of our communities, and we want them to stay here to continue contributing to our cities in so many ways.”
“Ending Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for people from Honduras will force these individuals to return to the lives they had to leave behind, often to situations that have not recovered from natural disasters," said Martin J. Walsh, Mayor of Boston. "It will take them away from the lives they’ve built over the past two decades in Boston and throughout the United States. Many TPS holders have children and spouses who are U.S. citizens. They are our neighbors and co-workers who pay taxes, contribute to our economy, and are important members of our communities. In Boston, we’ve never forgotten that we are a city of immigrants and that our diversity and opportunity are what make America great."
Below is the full text of the letter from Cities for Action:
The Honorable Kirstjen Nielsen
Secretary of Homeland Security
U.S. Department of Homeland Security
3801 Nebraska Avenue NW
Washington, D.C. 20528
The Honorable Michael Pompeo
Secretary of State
U.S. Department of State
2201 C Street NW
Washington, D.C. 20520
April 27, 2018
Dear Secretary Nielsen and Secretary Pompeo:
We, the undersigned mayors and county executives of the Cities for Action coalition, urge you to extend Honduras’s Temporary Protected Status (TPS) designation for 18 months. Cities for Action is a national, bipartisan coalition of over 175 cities and counties that advocates for policies that protect and support our immigrant residents. Approximately 57,000 Honduran TPS recipients have lived in the United States since at least 1998, many of whom reside in and contribute to the cities and counties we represent. We are gravely concerned that failure to extend Honduran TPS will lead to the separation of families, negatively impacting thousands of children and causing irreparable harm to Hondurans who call our communities home. We encourage you to make the humanitarian and practical-minded decision to extend Honduras’s TPS designation.
Honduras’s TPS applies to a limited group of Hondurans who were living in the United States when Hurricane Mitch devastated the country in 1998. The storm killed more than 5,000 people, wiped out the majority of Honduras’s infrastructure, and destroyed 70% of its crops. Hundreds of landslides and the worst flooding of the twentieth century were followed by outbreaks of cholera and Dengue fever. At the time, Honduran President Carlos Roberto Flores estimated that the hurricane reversed 50 years of progress in the country. The conditions in Honduras have deteriorated further with the rise of mosquito-borne diseases following Tropical Storm Hanna in 2008 and a catastrophic drought that caused food insecurity and economic recession. The Bush and Obama Administrations repeatedly extended Honduras’ TPS designation, recognizing that the devastation and the country’s incomplete recovery efforts hobbled Honduras’s ability to safely reabsorb its nationals.
Honduran TPS holders have established lives and families in our communities despite continued uncertainty over the future of Honduras and their own TPS designation. Honduran TPS recipients, on average, have lived in the U.S. for over 20 years and have an estimated 53,500 U.S.-born children. With a labor force participation rate of nearly 85 percent, most Honduran TPS recipients are employed in the fields of construction, landscaping, hospital care, child care, and food services – building and supporting our cities and our residents. Despite living in limbo with a temporary status that in many cases cannot lead to permanent residency, over 9,000 Honduran TPS recipients have purchased a home with a mortgage. Our cities value the immense contributions of Honduran TPS recipients – as family members, workers, and homeowners – and we urge you to provide a measure of certainty to our fellow residents with an extension of TPS.
As city and county leaders, the safety and well-being of our residents is of utmost importance. We recognize that Honduran TPS holders are well-established residents with deep ties to our communities through their families, jobs, and homes. We advise you to recognize the extraordinary hardship that forcing these individuals to return to Honduras would cause and the social and fiscal impacts of separating families and removing workers in our communities. Therefore, we urge you to extend Honduras’s TPS designation for a full 18 months.
Sincerely,
Martin J. Walsh, Mayor of Boston, MA
Pam Hemminger, Mayor of Chapel Hill, NC
Thomas G. Ambrosino, City Manager of Chelsea, MA
Rahm Emanuel, Mayor of the City of Chicago, IL
Toni Preckwinkle, President of Cook County, IL
Mike Rawlings, Mayor of Dallas, TX
Riley H. Rogers, Mayor of Dolton, IL
John J. Bauters, Mayor of the City of Emeryville, CA
Carlo DeMaria, Mayor of Everett, MA
Karen Freeman-Wilson, Mayor of Gary, IN
Dow Constantine, County Executive of King County, WA
David J. Berger, Mayor of Lima, OH
Robert Garcia, Mayor of Long Beach, CA
Eric Garcetti, Mayor of Los Angeles, CA
Jacob Frey, Mayor of Minneapolis, MN
Isiah Leggett, County Executive of Montgomery County, MD
Jennifer Gregerson, Mayor of Mukilteo, WA
Bill de Blasio, Mayor of the City of New York, NY
Libby Schaaf, Mayor of Oakland, CA
Jim Kenney, Mayor of Philadelphia, PA
Adrian O. Mapp, Mayor of the City of Plainfield, NJ
Liz Lempert, Mayor of Princeton, NJ
Jorge Elorza, Mayor of Providence, RI
Stephanie Venegas, Mayor of Santa Monica, CA
Thomas M. Roach, Mayor of White Plains, NY
Muriel Bowser, Mayor of Washington, D.C.
2018/04/26 - STATEMENT FROM CITIES FOR ACTION ON TERMINATION OF TPS FOR NEPAL
Cities for Action calls on Congress to protect TPS recipients as Trump Administration announces the phase-out of TPS for Nepal
Cities for Action condemns the Trump Administration’s decision to terminate Temporary Protected Status for Nepal. Nearly 9,000 Nepali TPS holders throughout the United States have sought refuge in our country and contribute to the economic diversity and cultural vibrancy of our cities, yet the Trump Administration has jeopardized their future. The White House is blatantly ignoring the purpose of TPS and abdicating its moral responsibility to protect Nepalis in the United States from the continuing impact of the devastating 2015 earthquakes in Nepal. Now that the President has abandoned Nepali TPS recipients, Congress must act swiftly to protect this community.
2018/01/30- NYC AND CHICAGO AUTHOR JOINT OP-ED URGING TRUMP ADMINISTRATION TO EXTEND TPS FOR SYRIANS
For Immediate Release: January 30, 2018
Contact: [email protected]
NYC and Chicago leaders to Trump Administration: Extend Syrian TPS to prevent thousands from being forced to return to a warzone
NEW YORK & CHICAGO - On the eve of the federal government’s anticipated determination on Syrian TPS, leaders from New York City and Chicago authored a joint op-ed urging the President and his Administration to extend TPS for the nearly 7,000 Syrians living in the United States. The two cities have some of the largest Syrian communities in the United States and represent Cities for Action, a national coalition of cities and counties advocating for smart, inclusive immigration policies. In the op-ed, Bitta Mostofi, the Acting Commissioner of the NYC Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs, and Seemi Choudry, the Director of the Mayor’s Office of New Americans for the City of Chicago, state that the civil war in Syria has devastated the country and would prevent its nationals’ safe return.
The full text of the op-ed is available on Medium as well as below:
CITIES URGE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION NOT TO FORCE SYRIANS BACK TO A WARZONE
By Bitta Mostofi, Acting Commissioner of the NYC Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs, and Seemi Choudry, Director of the Mayor’s Office of New Americans for the City of Chicago
Meet Sarah[1], a Syrian New Yorker. Sarah came to the United States from Syria on a student visa and attended graduate school, eventually obtaining two advanced degrees. By the time she graduated in 2016, conditions in Syria were too dangerous for her to return. So, she applied for Temporary Protected Status, or TPS, and built a life in New York City, which she considers her “home away from home.” A natural teacher, she is intelligent, warm, and generous, committed to her profession and volunteering for a variety of Syrian women and children’s causes. But today, she is living in a state of uncertainty, a cruel limbo. Even identifying her may endanger her family still in Syria. Now she is unsure if she will be forced to leave her adopted city and return to a country still engulfed in war.
Sarah is not alone. Nearly 7,000 Syrians have received TPS since 2012, when the Department of Homeland Security designated the protection for Syrians residing in the United States because of a violent armed conflict in Syria. TPS enables Syrian nationals already in the United States at the time the war broke out to stay here and work lawfully until Syria is safe enough for them to return. Our cities, New York and Chicago, are home to some of the United States’ largest Syrian communities, and are part of Cities for Action, a national coalition of over 175 U.S. cities advocating for smart, inclusive immigration policies. As leaders of our cities’ immigrant affairs offices, we are responsible for our immigrant residents’ safety and well-being. In light of clear evidence that Syrians still cannot return safely, we call on the Administration to re-designate Syria for TPS.
Syria was first designated for TPS after the Syrian government brutally suppressed protestors, sparking a civil war. Since then, government forces and mercenaries have targeted civilians with forced conscription, arbitrary detentions, disappearances, torture, bombings, and executions. According to a 2017 U.S. State Department human rights report, the regime has also attacked children and humanitarian workers and used barrel bombs and chemical weapons on civilians. Due to persistently dire conditions, Syria was re-designated for TPS in 2013, 2015, and 2016. Today, humanitarian conditions in Syria remain bleak. The war has devastated the country’s health infrastructure and destroyed more than half of its hospitals.
According to the standards under federal law, Syria is a clear-cut case for TPS: a country in which extraordinary conditions prevent its nationals’ safe return. But recent terminations of TPS for countries like El Salvador and Haiti show that the Trump Administration prioritizes ideology over these standards, and over the safety of our residents. Failure to extend Syrian TPS would demonstrate a willingness to put people in mortal danger to satisfy a xenophobic agenda. We urge the Trump Administration and the Department of Homeland Security to extend TPS for Syrians seeking safety in our country, and not send nearly 7,000 people back to a warzone.
[1] Pseudonym to protect the contributor’s identity
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2018/01/08 - CITIES FOR ACTION: IT'S CRUEL AND COUNTER-PRODUCTIVE FOR TRUMP ADMINISTRATION TO TERMINATE TPS FOR SALVADORANS
For Immediate Release: January 8, 2018
Contact: [email protected]
Trump Administration's decision to end Salvadoran TPS cruel and counter-productive, Congress must pass legislation to protect TPS recipients
For thousands of Salvadorans across the country, today’s decision means losing their homes and livelihoods, and being torn from their children and communities. For the White House, this is another brick in the wall of Donald Trump’s deportation-driven immigration agenda. As Cities for Action leaders told the Trump Administration as recently as last week, it is simply cruel and counter-productive to send nearly 200,000 individuals to a country that cannot absorb and reintegrate them. Salvadoran TPS recipients have lived in the United States for two decades on average, contribute to the economy, and have gone through regular security screening. Rescinding TPS for these residents will throw into chaos hundreds of thousands of lives, including for 192,700 U.S.-born children. We now need Congress to pass legislation providing TPS recipients with a pathway to citizenship so that we can keep families together and our cities prosperous.
2018/01/03- BIPARTISAN MAYORS ISSUE LETTER URGING THE ADMINISTRATION TO EXTEND TPS FOR EL SALVADOR
For Immediate Release: January 3, 2018
Contact: [email protected]
BIPARTISAN MAYORS ISSUE LETTER URGING THE ADMINISTRATION TO EXTEND TPS FOR EL SALVADOR
Cities for Action leaders call on the Trump Administration to extend TPS for Salvadorans ahead of January 8 deadline
WASHINGTON –With the January 8 deadline looming, 19 mayors and municipal leaders issued a letter today to Secretary of Homeland Security Kirstjen Nielsen and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson imploring them to extend Temporary Protected Status (TPS) by 18 months for Salvadorans who cannot safely return to El Salvador.
Cities for Action mayors and county leaders represent most of the estimated 195,000 Salvadoran TPS holders nationwide. In the letter the local leaders emphasize the social, economic, and cultural contributions of Salvadoran TPS recipients to their localities, as well as the dire conditions that persist in El Salvador. TPS recipients from El Salvador have lived in the United States for an average of 21 years and they contribute over $3 billion to the US GDP. Ending TPS, the elected officials write, would callously send many of our long-time community members back to a country that struggles to address basic infrastructural needs and cannot safely absorb its nationals. Any decision to terminate or wind down TPS for El Salvador would needlessly divide families and put long-time residents in danger.
About Cities for Action
The mayors and county executives who have signed today’s letter to Secretaries Nielsen and Tillerson are part of Cities for Action, a coalition of over 175 cities and counties that are committed to driving the national debate on immigration policies and integrating immigrants through best practices at the municipal level.
See below for quotes from signatories:
“The people of El Salvador have suffered tremendously in their homeland in recent years. The City of Houston has welcomed them with open arms. We continue to do so, and El Salvadoreans have contributed profoundly to our culture and our economy. We ask that Temporary Protected Status be extended so El Salvadoreans can safely remain in Houston.” - Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner
“Americans do not want to turn their backs on people who have fled horrific circumstances and begun building lives in the United States. The Administration should extend TPS for El Salvador, so that thousands of our neighbors don’t face the anguish of worrying that they — or their children — are at risk for violence.” - Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti
“I stand shoulder to shoulder with Mayors across the country and the 4,000 Salvadoran New Yorkers with TPS to call for an 18-month extension. When their country was hit by a natural disaster, these individuals took refuge in our city and have since become deeply embedded in our economy, houses of worship, schools and neighborhoods. Not only that, but over 3,500 U.S.-born children live in families with a Salvadoran TPS recipient. It would be callous and cruel to rip these productive residents from their homes to force them back to a country that is experiencing tremendous violence and instability.” – New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio
“TPS recipients are our friends, neighbors, classmates, and colleagues. In Washington, DC and in cities across the country, Salvadorans own businesses, lead our communities, and make tremendous contributions to our economy. Many Salvadorans have legally lived and worked in the U.S. for nearly two decades; they have built lives and careers in the U.S., and, for many, their children know no other home. Since 2001, the U.S. has continued to renew El Salvador’s TPS designation, recognizing that the country is still not ready to successfully and safely receive tens of thousands of people. Today, I am proud to join mayors and county officials from across the country in urging the Trump Administration to help build a safer, stronger country by extending El Salvador's Temporary Protected Status." - Washington, DC Mayor Muriel Bowser
Below is the full text of the letter from Cities for Action:
The Honorable Kirstjen Nielsen
Secretary of Homeland Security
U.S. Department of Homeland Security
3801 Nebraska Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20528
The Honorable Rex Tillerson
Secretary of State
U.S. Department of State
2201 C Street NW
Washington, DC 20520
January 3, 2018
Dear Secretary Nielsen and Secretary Tillerson:
We, the undersigned mayors and county executives, urge you to renew El Salvador’s Temporary Protected Status (TPS) designation before it comes due for extension on January 8, 2018. We write on behalf of our communities as well as Cities for Action, a national coalition of more than 175 cities and counties that advocate for policies that protect and support our immigrant residents. Most of the estimated 195,000 Salvadoran TPS holders live in metropolitan areas that are represented in our coalition. As local officials, it is our obligation to ensure all of our residents’ safety and well-being, including those of immigrants and their families. We are gravely concerned that failure to renew El Salvador’s TPS designation will harm hundreds of thousands of people in our communities.
Congress created TPS for circumstances in which a country’s conditions are too dangerous to permit the safe return of a group of nationals, and El Salvador is a textbook example of such conditions. El Salvador was first designated for TPS status by the Bush Administration in 2001, after two devastating earthquakes. Its designation has been renewed at every juncture since because subsequent natural disasters have impeded the country’s recovery and have given rise to unstable living conditions, including drought, housing shortages, poverty, and water shortages. In the security vacuum left by a government that struggles to address even its most basic infrastructural needs, violence and crime ravage the country. Activity by brutal gangs such as 18th Street and MS-13 is widespread, armed robbery is common, and the country has one of the world’s highest murder rates. As the State Department human rights report from 2017 noted, one in five families in El Salvador claims to have been victims of violent crimes. Women and children have been particularly vulnerable to endemic sexual abuse and gender-based violence.
The Salvadoran TPS recipients we represent have deep roots in our communities. Allowing their TPS status to expire will divide families and harm our cities. Salvadoran TPS recipients have lived in the United States for an average of 21 years and have 192,700 U.S.-born children. Salvadoran TPS recipients have an extremely high rate of participation in the labor force—88%. They contribute over $3 billion to the U.S. Gross Domestic Product. Of households with a Salvadoran TPS recipient, 34% have a mortgage. Our long-time Salvadoran residents are integral members of our neighborhoods and our cities depend on their critical contributions.
Ending TPS would send many of our long-time Salvadoran residents back to a country that cannot adequately handle the return of its nationals. Their removal would also harm hundreds of thousands of Americans, particularly their U.S. citizen children, as well as their neighbors, coworkers, and employers. We call upon the federal government to renew El Salvador’s TPS designation for 18 months and protect our hardworking community members.
We urge you to continue protecting these longstanding members of our societies, who contribute so much to our communities and economies.
Sincerely,
Ed Pawlowski, Mayor of Allentown, PA
Steve Hogan, Mayor of Aurora, CO
Martin J. Walsh, Mayor of Boston, MA
Lydia Lavelle, Mayor of Carrboro, NC
Thomas G. Ambrosino, City Manager of Chelsea, MA
Rahm Emanuel, Mayor of Chicago, IL
Michael S. Rawlings, Mayor of Dallas, TX
Riley H. Rogers, Mayor of Dolton, IL
Sylvester Turner, Mayor of Houston, TX
Eric Garcetti, Mayor of Los Angeles, CA
Paul R. Soglin, Mayor of Madison, WI
Megan Barry, Mayor of Nashville, TN
Bill de Blasio, Mayor of New York City, NY
Libby Schaaf, Mayor of Oakland, CA
Christopher B. Coleman, Mayor of Saint Paul, MN
Sam Liccardo, Mayor of San José, CA
Ted Winterer, Mayor of Santa Monica, CA
Joseph A. Curtatone, Mayor of Somerville, MA
Muriel Bowser, Mayor of Washington, D.C.
2017/11/22 - CITIES FOR ACTION: TRUMP ADMINISTRATION'S DECISION TO END TPS FOR HAITI IS ABHORRENT, CONGRESS MUST FIND A PERMANENT SOLUTION
Cities for Action calls on Congress to pass legislation to protect TPS recipients as Trump Administration announces the phase-out of TPS for Haitians
Cities for Action condemns the Trump Administration's decision to end Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haiti. This decision will endanger the lives of 50,000 Haitians who have lived in the U.S. for many years, have U.S. citizen children and family members, and have contributed economically and culturally to the U.S. They will have to return to a country that has yet to fully recover from the devastating impacts of the 2010 earthquake and subsequent problems of widespread displacement, food shortages, and insufficient medical care, conditions which were exacerbated by Hurricane Matthew and a cholera epidemic. Haiti cannot safely absorb 50,000 people, and exposing Haitian TPS recipients to deportation is inhumane.
Ending TPS will tear apart families and harm the cities and communities that depend on them. Mayors and Cities for Action will continue to advocate for a permanent solution to protect TPS recipients. We encourage people to make their voices heard on TPS by calling the Department of Homeland Security and the White House, as well as their representatives in Congress.
2017/11/02 - MAYORS ISSUE LETTER URGING THE ADMINISTRATION TO EXTEND TPS FOR HONDURANS AND NICARAGUANS
For Immediate Release: November 2, 2017
Contact: [email protected]
Cities for Action leaders call on the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and the U.S. Department of State to extend Temporary Protected Status for Hondurans and Nicaraguans
WASHINGTON – A coalition of 32 mayors and county executives released a letter to Acting Secretary of Homeland Security Elaine Duke and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson calling on them to extend Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Hondurans and Nicaraguans as the deadline approaches to announce TPS determinations for these countries.
The letter discusses the TPS holders’ significant civic and economic contributions to their local communities. Ending TPS, the elected officials write, would separate families and negatively impact their cities, since many Honduran and Nicaraguan TPS recipients have called them home for almost two decades.
The TPS Program provides permission to reside and work in the United States to the nationals of designated countries who are living in the United States and cannot safely return to their home countries because of temporary dangerous conditions there. TPS is renewed typically at 18-month intervals, by assessing whether such conditions have persisted to the point of preventing the safe return of these nationals. The letter points out that over the past two decades, Honduras and Nicaragua have experienced successive natural disasters, which have in turn exacerbated public health crises, economic decline, and public safety concerns. There are currently 57,000 Honduran and 2,550 Nicaraguan TPS recipients in the United States.
The mayors and county executives who have signed today’s letter to Secretaries Duke and Tillerson are part of Cities for Action, a coalition of over 175 cities and counties that are committed to driving the national debate on immigration policies and integrating immigrants through best practices at the municipal level.
“One of the reasons Everett was named one of the top ten spots to live is because we are the most diverse community in Massachusetts. Diversity is our strength and many of our immigrants come from Honduras and Nicaragua. Extending Temporary Protection Status is good for the City of Everett, needed to protect our most vulnerable residents and the right thing to do.” - Everett Mayor Mayor Carlo DeMaria
"I stand with my fellow mayors to call on the Administration to extend TPS for the Honduran and Nicaraguan community. We cannot make members of our community return to countries that have yet to fully recover from natural disasters, in effect forcing them back to dangerous and unstable conditions. There is only one choice. The Administration must provide a full, 18-month extension of TPS." –New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio
“Our Nicaraguan and Honduran TPS recipients have made this country their home. To turn them away now, after so many years, back to dangerous circumstances is un-American. I am proud to stand with my fellow Mayors and take action to show our support of immigrant and refugee communities in all our cities.” – Philadelphia Mayor James Kenney
“Extending this status to Hondurans and Nicaraguans is in keeping with the best ideals of American foreign policy: to protect innocent people who cannot return to their native lands. This is critically important now as those nations address internal strife. I urge the Secretaries to do the right thing and protect these people who cannot return home.” – Syracuse Mayor Stephanie A. Miner
Below is the full text of the letter from Cities for Action:
The Honorable Rex Tillerson
Secretary of State
U.S. Department of State
2201 C Street NW
Washington, DC 20520
The Honorable Elaine Duke
Acting Secretary of Homeland Security
U.S. Department of Homeland Security
3801 Nebraska Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20528
November 2, 2017
Dear Acting Secretary Duke and Secretary Tillerson:
On behalf of the approximately 57,000 Honduran and 2,550 Nicaraguan recipients of Temporary Protected Status (TPS) living in the U.S., we urge you to extend the Temporary Protected Status (TPS) designation for Honduras and Nicaragua before it expires on January 5th, 2018.
Our cities stand to lose greatly if TPS designations for Honduras or Nicaragua are terminated. Honduran and Nicaraguan TPS recipients contribute to our communities and economies with the help of TPS. According to a report from the Center for American Progress, the U.S. would lose an estimated $31.3 billion from its GDP over a decade without Honduran workers who hold TPS. TPS holders are our neighbors, our coworkers, local small business owners, and members of our religious communities. TPS recipients participate in the labor force at high rates, own homes and hold mortgages, and are long-time residents of this country with citizen spouses and children. Indeed, more than half of all TPS recipients have lived here for more than two decades. These productive members of society are also among those that have submitted to the highest levels of security screening and vetting. In order to remain eligible, TPS holders undergo criminal background checks every 18 months.
Moreover, current conditions in Honduras and Nicaragua clearly demonstrate that neither country is in a position to safely absorb thousands of people. We cannot conscionably send members of our communities to danger. Since 1998, when Hurricane Mitch killed 10,000 individuals across Central America devastating the region and giving rise to TPS designations for Honduras and Nicaragua, these countries have faced successive natural disasters, which have in turn exacerbated public health crises, economic decline, and public safety concerns.
Our Honduran and Nicaraguan communities have called upon us, their local leaders, to help ensure that they and their family members are not forced to return to conditions that will endanger their lives and livelihoods, in countries that simply cannot safely receive them.
As you render a decision on the futures of Honduran and Nicaraguan TPS recipients, we offer a pragmatic perspective informed by our position as local government leaders. The forced departure of tens of thousands of Honduran and Nicaraguan TPS recipients from our communities would deprive us of hardworking, upstanding members of our societies, would needlessly tear apart fathers and mothers from their U.S. born children, and would subject these families to unstable and unsafe conditions in countries that cannot absorb them.
Sincerely,
Ed Pawlowski, Mayor of Allentown, PA
William A. Bell, Mayor of Birmingham, AL
Martin J. Walsh, Mayor of Boston, MA
E. Denise Simmons, Mayor of Cambridge, MA
Lydia E. Lavelle, Mayor of Carrboro, NC
Thomas G. Ambrosino, City Manager of Chelsea, MA
Rahm Emanuel, Mayor of Chicago, IL
Mary Casillas Salas, Mayor of Chula Vista, CA
Clay Jenkins, County Judge of Dallas County, TX
Riley H. Rogers, Mayor of Dolton, IL
William V. “Bill” Bell, Mayor of Durham, NC
Carlo DeMaria, Mayor of Everett, MA
Karen Freeman-Wilson, Mayor of Gary, IN
Eric Garcetti, Mayor of Los Angeles, CA
Paul R. Soglin, Mayor of Madison, WI
Tomas Regalado, Mayor of Miami, FL
Isiah Leggett, County Executive of Montgomery County, MD
Megan Barry, Mayor of Nashville, TN
Bill de Blasio, Mayor of New York City, NY
Libby Schaaf, Mayor of Oakland, CA
Buddy Dyer, Mayor of Orlando, FL
Jim Kenney, Mayor of Philadelphia, PA
Adrian O. Mapp, Mayor of Plainfield, NJ
Rushern L. Baker, III, County Executive of Prince George’s County, MD
Liz Lempert, Mayor of Princeton, NJ
Christopher B. Coleman, Mayor of Saint Paul, MN
Ron Nirenberg, Mayor of San Antonio, TX
Ted Winterer, Mayor of Santa Monica, CA
Stephanie A. Miner, Mayor of Syracuse, NY
Sarah Eckhardt, County Executive of Travis County, TX
Muriel Bowser, Mayor of Washington, DC
Jim Provenza, County Supervisor of Yolo County, CA