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Regular-article-logo Tuesday, 23 April 2024

New limits cause anxiety in families

President Trump signalled a 60-day ban on most green cards

Caitlin Dickerson And Miriam Jordan/New York Times News Service New York Published 22.04.20, 07:40 PM
Nurses attend a demonstration outside a public hospital to protest their lack of protective gear

Nurses attend a demonstration outside a public hospital to protest their lack of protective gear (AP photo)

Families that have waited years to be reunited, businesses that rely on foreign workers, universities that recruit international students with the promise of high-paying American jobs — all their plans faced new uncertainty on Tuesday as the Trump administration announced new temporary restrictions on permanent residency in the US.

President Trump signalled that a 60-day ban on most green cards, which could be imposed as early as Wednesday, was intended to protect work opportunities for the millions of Americans who have lost their jobs in the coronavirus pandemic. But, if it is extended, its impact on businesses and families could be much broader.

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The new policy would close the doors to thousands of people hoping to enter the US or lay down permanent roots in the country through long-term work or family connections — at least temporarily.

“It’s really worrying news,” said Elsa Ramos, whose 22-year-old son, Eder, is in Honduras, waiting for a green card that would allow him to join his parents and sister in the US. They are among many families and employers who have spent thousands of dollars on years of legal work and are now on hold.

“Imagine the excitement that you have that your son is on his way into the country and then Trump destroys that. It’s really hard,” Ramos said.

Ramos applied for residency through his father, a legal permanent resident who lives in Philadelphia. His application had already been mired in months of unexpected delays because of the extra reviews applied to green card applications since Trump took office.

Living alone in the small house the family left behind, which is in a dangerous neighbourhood, her son is vulnerable to exploitation by gangs because of his connections to the US, Ramos said.

But because his father is not a US citizen, he would most likely be ineligible to enter the country under the planned new order.

“He’s desperate and sad. He told me, ‘I never thought I would be stuck here for so long,’” Ramos said.

Newly tightened policies have already imposed drastic limits on immigration in recent months, all but ending prospects of asylum for most people fleeing troubled situations in their home countries, and imposing higher fees, added scrutiny and longer wait times onto those pursuing visas.

The announcement that, amid a pandemic, Trump planned to impose a temporary block on most permanent residency applications opened the door to a situation with few parallels, in which almost no level of family connection, education or resources guarantees the right to immigrate to the US — though it was not clear for how long.

Administration officials said the pause would be re-evaluated after 60 days, and Trump said he could extend the ban “based on economic conditions at the time”.

Of the roughly one million green cards that were issued in 2019, nearly two-thirds of applicants, like Ramos, were granted on family-based petitions for permanent residency in the US.

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