News

The proposal to expand or redesignate the TPS program for Nicaragua would have made nearly 400,000 Nicaraguan migrants in the U.S. eligible to apply for government work permits and 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 ...
Cassandra has lived and worked in the US over 20 years. Threats to her life have been made to her family and friends back in Nicaragua. It would be “suicide” to move back, she says.
The move will allow 337,000 immigrants from El Salvador, Honduras, Nepal and Nicaragua to continue living in the U.S. under the Temporary Protected Status policy.
Nicaragua was first designated for Temporary Protected Status on Jan. 5, 1999, a few months after Hurricane Mitch killed more than 11,000 people and devastated several countries in the region.
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 will end a temporary program that allows some Nicaraguans to work and live in the United States, while leaving the door open to canceling the program for over 200,000 ...
The Trump administration will end a temporary program that allows some Nicaraguans to work and live in the United States, while leaving the door open to canceling the program for over 200,000 ...
But TPS holders challenged the legality of that decision in a lawsuit in court. Since then, the duration of TPS for Nicaragua depends on a court order from a federal judge.
Imara cares for her two U.S. citizen children, aged 12 and 19. Neither Imara nor her husband have returned to Nicaragua since they left more than 20 years ago, and her children have not set foot in ...