News

The United States has ended federal protections shielding thousands of migrants from Nicaragua and Honduras from deportation, ...
This woman, a TPS (Temporary Protected Status) recipient from Honduras, was crying with joy when this picture was taken in 2014.
But because so many have been in the US for so long — 63 percent of Hondurans have been in the US 20 years or more — the real likely outcome is that these TPS holders will stay in the US ...
Now, thanks to the Trump administration, nearly 90,000 TPS holders will be expected to leave the United States and return to Honduras. But conditions there have not improved.
While the TPS programs for El Salvador, Nicaragua, Nepal and Honduras are technically set to expire on Dec. 31, as outlined by a government announcement, DHS agreed to provide a 120-day wind down ...
As a result of pending litigation challenging the Trump administration’s efforts to terminate TPS designations for six countries including El Salvador, Honduras, and Nicaragua, the Department of ...
The Trump administration has opted to end almost all of the temporary protected status designations on the books this year, including those for nearly 60,000 immigrants from Haiti, more than ...
Julio Calderon, 28, an undocumented immigrant from Honduras, listens after speaking in favor of renewing Temporary Protected Status during a 2017 news conference in Miami. The Trump administration ...
Honduras was granted TPS in 1999 after a deadly hurricane devastated the country. TPS allows eligible Hondurans to live and work in the U.S. without fear of deportation.
Tens of thousands of Nicaraguan and Honduran immigrants who were previously shielded from deportation could soon become more vulnerable as the Trump administration rolls back legal protections for ...
Honduras received its TPS designation in 1998, in the wake of Hurricane Mitch. That was “no golden age” for Honduras, says Dana Frank, a professor of modern Honduran history at the University ...
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) had a Monday deadline to decide whether to keep TPS for Honduras and Nicaragua. Duke kept the deadline, but waited until 8 p.m. to make an announcement.