Their lawsuit prevented 400,000 deportations. Now it’s Biden’s call. Rose Law Group immigration law chair Darius Amiri weighs in.

By Marcela Valdes | The New York Times 

Cristina Morales got the news that she was going to lose her legal right to live and work in the United States via text. The news devastated Morales. But the texts from her friends arrived while Morales, who was then 37, was at the Catholic school where she ran the after-school program. She believed that part of her job was to create a safe place for children, so she said nothing about her despair at work. “You need to have a happy face,” she told me. “No matter how bad you feel.”

Morales kept up the pretense in the car with her family on the way home. As her 11-year-old son and 13-year-old daughter sang in the back seat, she swallowed her tears and tried not to look at her husband. Their children had no idea that Morales was not an American citizen. She and her husband didn’t talk about her status because they didn’t want to taint the kids’ lives with fear. Only a handful of people knew that Morales was a beneficiary of a program called Temporary Protected Status (T.P.S.), which allows some immigrants to reside in the United States while their home countries are in crisis. About 411,000 immigrants had T.P.S. in 2020. More than half of them came from El Salvador, like Morales. The rest emigrated from Haiti, Honduras, Nepal, Nicaragua, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria or Yemen.

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“Like DACA recipients, those with temporary protected status, or TPS, will always feel the weight of the tenuous nature of their immigration status hang over their heads until a long term solution is proposed. The Biden administration would be wise to push for legislation, or executive order, granting law abiding, taxpaying, productive members of our society with TPS status some pathway towards permanent residency in the United States.”

Darius Amiri, Rose Law Group Immigration Law Dept. Chair
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(Disclosure: Rose Law Group represents a coalition of property and business owners throughout Pinal County who have worked to bring new transportation infrastructure to the

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