TPS Holders

Watch Our YouTube Channel Free Legal Videos

Changes To Adjustment Of Status Policies For TPS Holders

29 December 2019

Author: Green Card Lawyer Alena Shautsova

The changes to the policy happened right before the start of the holiday season, December 20, 2019. Unfortunately for some, these changes are not gifts. Since the development of temporary protected status (TPS), and the ability to travel outside the country temporarily and return if you obtained a special permission from USCIS; a TPS holder who previously had an illegal entry or outstanding order of removal could legally adjust their status in the US if their previous illegal entry was the only thing preventing them from adjusting based on an immediate relative petition. See more on How to Get a Green Card.

What did it mean? It mean that:

Basically, TPS Holders were in a much better position to get a green card after they traveled outside of the country with an advance parole document. The recent changes to the policy are trying to eliminate these benefits for TPS holders who traveled outside the US and came back. In a policy alert announcement last week, USCIS announced that since the language of the immigration laws regarding TPS (INA 244(f)) state that TPS beneficiaries may not be removed from the US while they have TPS, they will no longer view travel and return outside of the US as a change in a person’s entry from an illegal entrance to a legal entrance. USCIS is also insisting that for TPS holders with final orders of removal, the travel does not execute the final order.

Essentially, now:

The problem with this policy update is that it is misconstruing the legal terms in an attempt to make changes to the law. While USCIS may be able to prevail initially that they made these changes in good faith to execute the immigration laws of the US, they are likely to lose on procedural grounds as they have in the past when such radical changes to policy occur suddenly. Luckily, USCIS is not the last stop; the Federal courts have the final decision. After TPS holders have their cases denied, they can appeal arguing that USCIS has misapplied the law. Moreover, USCIS is likely to have a federal injunction placed against them for failure to comply with the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) because their actions exceed their executive power and invade the sovereignty of Congress.

For TPS holders that have had their case denied due to the policy changes, two options are available:

Note that if you reside in the Sixth and Ninth Circuits, a grant of TPS by itself, without the travel is considered an admission according to the local court’s decisions.

If your case for adjustment of status has recently been denied due to the recent policy change, please call our office at 917-885-2261 or book it here to schedule a consultation and discuss the pros and cons of either appealing with the BIA or filing for an I-601A waiver and starting the process over.

Stay Connected and learn the latest news and updates on U.S. Immigration:

We use cookies to deliver our online services. Details of the cookies and other tracking technologies we use and instructions on how to disable them are set out in our Cookies Policy. By using this website you consent to our use of cookies.

×

Free Asylum Guide

Enter your name and email to receive the guide.