The federal government is amending an extension from the previous administration.
The federal government on Feb. 20 said it is ending protection against deportation for some 500,000 Haitians early.
Noem made the move because previous administration officials did not say why they chose an 18-month extension versus a shorter period of time, according to the agency. The default extension period set by Congress is six months. The Biden-era officials also did not explain how they determined that allowing Haitian nationals to remain in the United States is not contrary to the U.S. national interest.
The law giving the homeland security secretary the power to issue protection under TPS says the secretary may not place a country in the program or extend protection if the secretary concludes that doing so would be âcontrary to the national interest of the United States.â
âAbbreviating the period from 18 to 12 months will allow for a fresh review of country conditions in Haiti and of whether such conditions remain both âextraordinaryâ and âtemporary,’ whether Haitian may return in safety, and whether it is contrary to the U.S. national interest to continue to permit the Haitian nationals to remain temporarily in the United States,â the notice states.
Noem will study the matter and could take additional action, the agency said.
Some lawmakers condemned the step.
Haitians were first granted TPS in 2010, and attempts by the federal government during President Donald Trumpâs first term to end the protection were blocked by the courts.
The number of Haitians protected through TPS was about 57,000 in 2011, according to federal data. That number soared to about 520,000 in 2024.
âBiden and Mayorkas attempted to tie the hands of the Trump administration by extending Haitiâs Temporary Protected Status by 18 monthsâfar longer than justified or necessary,â a DHS spokesperson said in a Feb. 20 statement. âWe are returning integrity to the TPS system, which has been abused and exploited by illegal aliens for decades. President Trump and Secretary Noem are returning TPS to its original status: temporary.â
About one million immigrants from 17 countries were covered by TPS when Trump took office in January.
Even if the conditions were still temporary and extraordinary, keeping the TPS protection for Venezuelans runs counter to the national interest, the DHS notice said at the time.
âDHS lacks authority to âvacateâ a prior TPS extension,â the complaint, filed in federal court in Maryland, stated. âThe TPS statute tightly restricts the procedures and timeframe by which a TPS designation can be terminated, and DHS cannot flagrantly ignore these restrictions.â
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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