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TPS for El Salvador extended 18 mos.;
reregistration period ends Mar. 8

Immigrants' Rights Update, Vol. 19, No. 1, February 10, 2005


The secretary of Homeland Security has published a notice in the Federal Register extending the designation of El Salvador as a country whose nationals and residents currently in the United States qualify for temporary protected status (TPS).  The designation, which had been due to expire on Mar. 9, 2005, will be in effect a further 18 months, until Sept. 9, 2006.  The notice also automatically extends the validity of employment authorization documents (EADs) issued under the TPS program for El Salvador until Sept. 9, 2005.

To continue receiving the benefits of TPS—i.e., permission to remain temporarily in the United States and authorization to be employed in the U.S.—nationals of El Salvador (or individuals of no nationality who last habitually resided in El Salvador) who have already been granted the status must reregister during the 60-day reregistration period that began on Jan. 7, 2005, and ends on Mar. 8, 2005.

TPS is granted to persons from countries that are designated by the secretary of the Dept. of Homeland Security as experiencing armed conflict, environmental disaster, or certain other conditions that prevent those persons from returning to those countries.  The authority to make this designation was transferred to the secretary of the DHS from the U.S. attorney general as part of the 2002 legislation creating the DHS.  The attorney general designated El Salvador for TPS in March 2001 following a series of severe earthquakes that left over one fourth of the country’s population without adequate housing; and, prior to the current extension, the designation had been extended twice, the latest extension notice having been published in the Federal Register on July 16, 2003.  The current extension notice states that, “Due to ongoing reconstruction of infrastructure and housing damaged by the earthquakes, the Secretary of DHS has determined that an 18-month extension of the TPS designation is warranted because El Salvador remains unable, temporarily, to adequately handle the return of its nationals.” 

To reregister under the extension, nationals of El Salvador (and individuals of no nationality who last habitually resided in El Salvador) previously granted TPS must file the following:  (1) Form I‑821, Application for Temporary Protected Status; (2) Form I‑765, Application for Employment Authorization; and (3) a “biometric services fee” of $70 if the applicant is age 14 or older, or if the applicant is under age 14 and requesting an EAD.  Applicants who seek work authorization under the extension must submit the $175 filing fee or a “properly documented” fee waiver request with the Form I‑765; those who do not need work authorization must still submit Form I‑765, but without the fee.  

Reregistrations submitted during the reregistration period (under the current extension)—i.e., Jan. 7 through Mar. 8, 2005—must be submitted on I‑821 forms whose “Revision Date” is “11/5/04.”  Submissions on older versions of the I‑821 form will be rejected.  All applications for reregistration and “late initial registration” (see eligibility criteria for the latter, below) must be submitted to the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Lockbox in Chicago, Ill. 

Applicants for reregistration who previously filed their TPS registration and reregistration applications with the Vermont Service Center should mail their complete applications under the current extension to:  U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, P.O. Box 6943, Chicago, IL 60680-6943.  Alternatively, applicants who previously filed with the Vermont Service Center and who choose to send their applications via a non–U.S. Postal Service delivery company (such as United Parcel Service or Federal Express) should address them to:  U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, Attn: TPS/VSC, 427 S. LaSalle – 3rd Floor, Chicago, IL 60605.

Applicants for reregistration who previously filed their TPS registration and reregistration applications with the California Service Center, the Texas Service Center, or the Nebraska Service Center, or applicants who are filing for “late initial registration,” should mail their complete applications under the current extension to:  U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, Attn: TPS El Salvador, P.O. Box 87583, Chicago, IL 60680-0583.  Alternatively, applicants in these same categories who choose to send their applications via a non–U.S. Postal Service delivery company should address them to:  U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, Attn: TPS El Salvador, 427 S. LaSalle – 3rd Floor, Chicago, IL 60605.

CIS also makes available a service whereby applicants for reregistration can file their I‑821 and I‑765 forms, along with required fees, electronically.  To file electronically, applicants should go to the CIS website (www.uscis.gov), click on the “E-Filing” link (under “Hot Topics,” in the bulleted column at the right of the web page), and follow the directions.  Applicants should start the e-filing process by completing the I‑821 form; the system will link the applicant to the I‑765 form once the I‑821 is complete.  Electronic applications will be accepted only from Jan. 7 through Mar. 8, 2005, and only from people applying to reregister.  Applicants for late initial registration may not file electronically, nor may applicants seeking to file a reregistration after Mar. 8. 

Late initial registration is also available under the extension.  In order to apply, an applicant must:

  • be a national of El Salvador or a person with no nationality who last habitually resided in El Salvador;

  • have been continuously physically present in the U.S. since Mar. 9, 2001;

  • have continuously resided in the U.S. since Feb. 13, 2001; and

  • be admissible as an immigrant, except as otherwise provided under Immigration and Nationality Act sec. 244(c)(2)(A), and not ineligible under INA sec. 244(c)(2)(B).
     

Each applicant for late initial registration must also be able to show that during the initial registration period (from Mar. 9, 2001, to Sept. 9, 2002), he or she:

  • was a nonimmigrant or had been granted voluntary departure status or any relief from removal;

  • had an application for change of status, adjustment of status, asylum, voluntary departure, or any relief from removal pending or subject to further review or appeal;

  • was a parolee or had a request for reparole pending; or

  • was the spouse or child of an individual currently eligible to be a TPS registrant.

To be eligible for late initial registration, applicants must file for it no later than 60 days after the expiration or termination of the conditions described above.  

The notice also announces the automatic extension of the employment authorization documents of Salvadorans who received EADs under the TPS program.  The reason for this extension is that because of the large number of individuals eligible for the extension, many reregistrants will not receive new EADs until after their current ones have expired.  The extension applies to Salvadorans who currently hold EADs that expire on Mar. 9, 2005, and have the notation “A-12” or “C-19” (under “Category,” for Form I‑766 EADs) or “274a.12(a)(12)” or “274a.12(c)(19)” (under “Provision of Law,” for Form I‑688B EADs).  Such cards are automatically valid now until Sept. 9, 2005.  However, the individuals who benefit from this extension still must reregister for TPS by Mar. 8, 2005, in order to have employment authorization throughout the extended TPS period.

When completing the I-9 employment eligibility verification (or reverification) process, employers must accept the above-described EADs of Salvadoran TPS beneficiaries as proof that they are employment-authorized.  Employers who have questions may call the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Office of Business Liaison employer hotline at 1-800-357-2099; or they may call the employer hotline of the U.S. Justice Dept.’s Office of Special Counsel for Immigration Related Unfair Employment Practices (OSC) at 1-800-255-8155 or (TDD) 1-800-362-2735.  Employees or job applicants may call the OSC worker hotline at 1-800-255-7688 or (TDD) 1-800-237-2515.  Information is also available on the OSC’s website:  www.usdoj.gov/crt/osc/.

70 FR 1450–54 (Jan. 7, 2005).

By Richard Irwin, IRU editor

 

 

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