Trump Administration Ends TPS Extension for Haiti

Trump Administration Ends TPS Extension for Haiti

STATEWIDE - Under direct guidance from the Department of Homeland Security, The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services published an update this evening stating that the extension for Temporary Protective Status for Haitian migrants has been ended.

Previously, the Biden administration had put an 18 month extension on the TPS, making quicker moves by the new administration difficult. On Thursday, Security Secretary Kristi Noem vacated that decision. As it stands, the Temporary Protective Status of Haiti will end August 2025.

The move by the Trump administration comes as the TPS system has been systematically abused by staffing agencies such First Diversity, leading to around 20,000 Haitian migrant workers flooding small towns like Springfield, Ohio. Organizations like Welcome Springfield, headed by Carl Ruby, helped kick open the door to massive third-world immigration into the area which has driven up the cost of housing creating new homeless in the area and employment disparities among citizens. 

"President Trump and I are returning TPS to its original status: temporary," Noem said."

While emergency and government funded services have been stretched to their limits to shoulder the burden of the orchestrated replacement migration, over the last several years, citizens have been left to the wayside and nonprofit organizations and even government officials have participated in property dealings with the mass influx of immigrants, with some making significant profits. In the case of Springfield, over the last several years, the Clark County justice system has consistently failed to uphold their oaths of office by not prosecuting crimes that would see the replacement workers deported and have gone so far as to encrypt dispatch communications, making emergency services more difficult to provide, just to prevent citizens from listening in.

With the TPS extension now ended, it is expected that nearly 520,000 Haitians currently here under the TPS protection could be targeted for deportation, the result of which could potentially see a balancing of the job market and lower the cost of living for areas like Springfield Ohio come summer.

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