• TPS recipients face new job losses.
  • TPS work permits expire in July.
  • Risk of deportation increases.

TPS work permits. More than 300,000 foreign workers authorized to work in the United States under Temporary Protected Status (TPS) could become vulnerable to deportation after the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) notified employers that they will be required to remove TPS beneficiaries from their payrolls in the coming weeks.

The measure affects both workers protected under TPS and businesses that rely on this workforce in key sectors of the U.S. economy.

The Department of Homeland Security has begun informing employers about the upcoming expiration of TPS work permits.

DHS orders the dismissal of workers protected under TPS

The measure is part of President Donald Trump’s administration’s strategy to end this immigration program.

According to The New York Times, employers will be required to terminate foreign workers once their work authorizations expire.

Work permits for Haitian TPS beneficiaries are set to expire on July 24.

Expiring work permits accelerate workers’ departure

Work permits for citizens of Ethiopia, Myanmar, Somalia, South Sudan, Syria, and Yemen will expire on July 17, according to Univision.

The expiration dates were established through notices issued by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS).

Once those authorizations expire, workers will no longer have the legal right to remain employed.

In addition, they could become subject to deportation proceedings as the temporary protections are phased out.

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The decision follows a recent ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court.

The nation’s highest court upheld the federal government’s authority to terminate TPS protections for beneficiaries from Haiti and Syria.

That ruling cleared the way for the administration to move forward with ending temporary protections for those groups.

Currently, more than 330,000 Haitian nationals remain in the United States under the TPS program.

Approximately 6,100 Syrian nationals are also protected under TPS.

The TPS program was established in 1990 to protect people from countries affected by armed conflicts, natural disasters, or other humanitarian crises.

Uncertainty leads to early layoffs

In addition to Haitian and Syrian beneficiaries, nearly 20,000 people from Ethiopia, Myanmar, Somalia, South Sudan, and Yemen are covered under the program.

That figure is based on data from the National Immigration Forum.

In recent weeks, USCIS had temporarily extended the validity of some TPS work permits.

Those extensions were granted for short periods while administrative changes continued.

Initially, the permits were scheduled to expire on July 1.

The deadline was later extended to July 10.

Additional extensions were subsequently approved for the affected countries.

The series of changes created uncertainty for both employers and workers.

Some businesses chose to lay off TPS-protected employees before their permits expired.

Employers sought to avoid possible violations of U.S. immigration law.

Jacob Monty, legal adviser to the American Business Immigration Coalition, criticized the lack of clarity surrounding the process.

«TPS was still in effect, and USCIS could have done a better job of clarifying the situation,» he said.

Businesses and experts monitor new risks for TPS

Thousands of Haitian TPS beneficiaries currently work in hospitals and nursing homes.

They are also employed in the construction, manufacturing, and transportation sectors.

The loss of these workers could significantly affect businesses that depend on this labor force.

Meanwhile, the government recently extended TPS protections for Lebanese nationals.

However, immigration experts believe the recent Supreme Court ruling could make it easier for the government to end TPS protections for additional groups in the future.

Among the countries mentioned is El Salvador.

Approximately 200,000 Salvadoran TPS beneficiaries could lose their protected status in September.

Immigrant advocacy organizations argue that many of the countries covered by TPS continue to face violence and instability.

According to those groups, those conditions still make it unsafe for many beneficiaries to return to their home countries.

The debate over the future of TPS work permits remains ongoing as the federal government continues implementing policy changes that could affect thousands of workers and employers across the United States.