Posted on October 7, 2016

Twin Cities West Africans Decry End to Ebola-era Welcome

Mila Koumpilova, Star Tribune, October 4, 2016

James Tuan held his 2-year-old son Jamel at his home in Brooklyn Center. Tuan and his girlfriend are from Liberia and have Temporary Protected Status, a program that is expiring in May.

The news has roiled the Twin Cities’ West African community: A program that allowed natives of the countries hardest hit by the 2014 Ebola epidemic to stay and work here is ending next spring.

In September, U.S. officials granted a final six-month reprieve to about 5,900 visitors from Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea here on Temporary Protected Status (TPS) and urged them to make departure plans before the program expires in May.

Community leaders had lobbied for the status and successfully pushed for extensions, arguing that the economies and health-care systems of these countries are still damaged even as infections have decreased.

Local West Africans said a majority of visitors will probably stick around and slip into the immigration shadows. They say they will keep lobbying, emboldened by a recent letter signed by Sen. Al Franken that urged President Obama to consider a much longer extension.

{snip}

In late September, national advocacy efforts bore limited fruit: Obama announced he would block deportations for another 18 months for longtime residents from Liberia.

Critics of TPS often cite multiple extensions given to natives of other countries — stretching more than a decade in some cases — to argue that the program is not really temporary.

{snip}

Federal immigration officials have not released state-by-state numbers.

But local community leaders estimate between 500 and 1,000 people benefited in the Twin Cities — some who came to stay with relatives during the epidemic and others who had lived in the United States for years. More than 40,000 immigrants from the three countries live in the metro, one of the largest West African enclaves in the United States.

James Tuan’s pregnant girlfriend came to Minnesota to visit a family member before the contagion hit their native Liberia.

As infections mounted, she decided to stay, and Tuan joined her after the birth of their son. Both are supporting children from previous relationships who still live in the capital, Monrovia, as well as members of their extended families. Tuan, who works at a north metro gas station, says relatives and friends back home complain about the stagnant economy and worry the deadly disease might strike again.

{snip}

Critics of TPS have charged that the program offers open-ended reprieves to immigrants, including some who crossed the border illegally or overstayed visitor visas. They chastised the Obama administration for extending an application window for the three West African countries after the World Health Organization declared Liberia Ebola-free in the spring of 2015.

This past spring, the government offered what appeared to be a final six-month extension for the Ebola-affected countries. In the Twin Cities, a coalition of West African community leaders and the St. Paul-based nonprofit Immigrant Law Center pleaded with the state’s congressional delegation to intervene.

{snip}

In a letter to Obama this summer, Franken and 10 other U.S. senators cited the lingering effects of that war and a poverty rate of almost 65 percent in asking for at least a two-year extension. The letter also urged the administration to consider granting permanent status to end “perennial uncertainty about whether they will be able to remain members of the communities they have come to call home.”

But in September the government said it had concluded that conditions do not justify a longer extension. It gave TPS recipients another six months to plan their departures or, if they qualify, apply for another immigration status.

{snip}

Local advocates are unsure why the administration decided to end the program quickly compared with some Central American nations. Nationally, pundits speculated that’s because the number of West African recipients is fairly small, and that immigrant community does not have the political clout of U.S.-based Latinos.

{snip}

Last week, Obama said there are “compelling foreign policy reasons” to extend for another 18 months a separate program that has blocked deportations to Liberia since an earlier TPS granted during civil war there expired in 2007.

{snip}

Local advocates said they will press the next administration for a broader reprieve and a more permanent fix.