The Needle: Park Police Want More Officers In D.C., And Mount Pleasant Community Builder Might Leave U.S. After TPS Revoked
The Supreme Court ruling puts 250,000 Venezuelan Temporary Protected Status holders at risk of deportation and losing work permits starting November 7, amid ongoing legal challenges.
4 Articles
4 Articles
On November 7, the formal cancellation of the Temporary Protection Status (TPS) of 2021 for Venezuela came into effect. With this measure, more than 250,000 Venezuelans – including María Fernanda Angulo and Mariano Santana – will lose key benefits such as the opportunity to work, drive and travel within or outside the US country. The new panorama of Venezuelans following the suspension of TPS María Fernanda Angulo, or Mafe, is a psychologist who…
The Needle: Park Police Want More Officers In D.C., And Mount Pleasant Community Builder Might Leave U.S. After TPS Revoked
Stargazer: Gael Gomez, a co-founder of the Mount Pleasant Sidewalk Astronomers, will almost certainly have to leave the country soon. He came to the U.S. with his family at age 12, and was among the hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans with Temporary Protected Status until the Trump administration revoked that designation. The 19-year-old helped build a community around his love for astronomy and stargazing. He hopes it will continue even after …
María Fernanda Angulo, or Mafe, as she prefers to be called, is anxious about the days that are missing by November 7. On that date, 250,000 Venezuelans who, like her, live and work in the United States as beneficiaries of the Temporary Protection Status (TPS), will become undocumented. “That day I lose everything: I lose my driver’s license, lose my status and lose my work permit. And a deportation process may be opened against me, which would …
250,000 Venezuelans who enjoyed the Temporary Protection Status (TPS), in the United States will become undocumented as of November 7. María Fernanda Angulo, a Venezuelan migrant, was saddened by what she is preparing for. “That day I lose everything: I lose my driver’s license, lose my status and lose my work permit. And a deportation process may be opened against me, which would separate me from the family I built here,” she told El País. The …
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