South Florida Venezuelans face uncertainty
Digest more
Venezuela, temporary protected status
Digest more
They fear a labor shortage in South Florida as trades such as construction and landscaping lose workers. Those workers also are consumers, they say.
Walt Disney Co. notified Florida-based employees who are losing temporary legal residency that their jobs would be terminated next month after a Supreme Court ruling.
South Florida businesses, immigrants brace for fallout after TPS ruling, rollback of parole programs
A recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling affecting Temporary Protected Status for Venezuelans has sent shockwaves through South Florida’s immigrant communities and among business owners.
"The fight is far from over, but this is a very big setback," said Adelys Ferro, executive director of the Venezuelan American Caucus.
The Supreme Court's ruling letting the Trump administration revoke TPS for about 350,000 Venezuelans may have wrenching effects on Florida's economy.
Venezuelans have long considered the Miami suburb of Doral their refuge. Trump’s immigration crackdown is calling that into question.
A ruling allows Kristi Noem to begin deportations of 650,000 foreign nationals. Salazar directed her scorn at Justices.
Venezuelan strongman Nicolás Maduro is blaming Cuban-American officials in the U.S., specifically Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Miami U.S. Rep. María Elvira Salazar, for the Trump administration’s decision to revoke the Temporary Protected Status that allows hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans to live and work in the United States.