[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 86 (Thursday, May 18, 2017)]
[House]
[Page H4317]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
WELCOMING A STRANGER
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
New York (Ms. Clarke) for 5 minutes.
Ms. CLARKE of New York. Mr. Speaker, a few days ago, I received a
letter from a third grade student at the Brooklyn Friends School and
the Kane Street Synagogue Hebrew School named Elijah.
Elijah wrote: At our synagogue, we learned that welcoming a stranger
is an important mitzvah, and I know that my people were immigrants and
sometimes refugees trying to find a new home in the USA. So it is
important to me that we extend our welcome to refugees from Haiti.
Elijah is right. The people of Haiti have suffered through numerous
tragedies over the past few years alone. They have experienced a
devastating and catastrophic earthquake, tragic cholera epidemic,
ongoing food scarcity crisis, deadly hurricanes, and continued
flooding.
For these reasons, the Obama administration designated Haiti for
temporary protected status in 2010, and redesignated it four times
thereafter. However, Haiti's TPS designation will expire in July if the
administration does not act immediately.
That is why I organized with my colleagues of the Congressional Black
Caucus and called for DHS Secretary John Kelly to redesignate Haiti for
an additional 18 months of TPS.
We also asked DHS to issue a new TPS designation that would include
the tens of thousands of Haitians who are in the United States but are
not covered by the existing TPS designation.
The continuing humanitarian crisis on the ground in Haiti should make
this an easy call. But news reports indicate that the acting head of
USCIS, James McCament, is looking for evidence of crimes committed by
Haitians to use as a pretext for ending Haiti's TPS designation. Such
actions are part of the Trump administration's attempt to depict
immigrants as criminals. They are also part of a flagrant effort to
obscure the fact that TPS is based on the conditions on the ground in
Haiti rather than the actions of some TPS beneficiaries here in the
United States.
I call on Director Kelly to ignore these misguided voices and instead
listen to people like Elijah. Human decency demands that the Department
of Homeland Security extend temporary protected status to all Haitians
present in the United States prior to November 4, 2016, as the country
continues to rebuild.
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