Temporary Protected Status (TPS)
"The Secretary of Homeland Security may designate a foreign country for TPS due to conditions in the country that temporarily prevent the country's nationals from returning safely, or in certain circumstances, where the country is unable to handle the return of its nationals adequately."
"The government's site says 'TPS does not lead to permanent resident status,' and strictly speaking, that is correct; the attorney general can terminate it, at which point the people in question revert to their original status - i.e., in most cases go back to being illegal aliens. But in practice, TPS is renewed as many times as necessary to ensure that no one is deported. Only in the smallest of cases, involving a few dozen or at most a few hundred people, has this 'temporary' status actually been ended without everyone getting a green card, and as far as I know, no one has ever been made to leave because they lost TPS."
How Can You Swear to Have Been in the U.S. Continuously since March 4, 2017, when It Is January 2017?
How Can You Swear to Have Been in the U.S. Continuously since March 4, 2017, when It Is January 2017?
As Haitians Head North from Brazil, DHS Announces Resumption of Deportations
DHS Says It Will Actually Terminate TPS for a Few Thousand Aliens
Jessica Vaughan Explains Syrian TPS
Originally Aired by Fox on August 2, 2016
Jessica Vaughan, CIS Director of Policy Studies, explains what Temporary Protected Status for Syrian illegal aliens means.