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Oct 26, 2025

DHS Cancels Haiti’s Temporary Protected Status Extension, Program to End August 2025

DHS Cancels Haiti’s Temporary Protected Status Extension, Program to End August 2025
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem announced on October 26 that the U.S. will allow Haiti’s Temporary Protected Status (TPS) designation to expire on August 3, 2025, reversing an 18-month extension granted by the prior administration. TPS had shielded more than half-a-million Haitians from deportation since the 2010 earthquake.

DHS justified the rollback by claiming conditions in Haiti no longer meet the statutory threshold for "extraordinary and temporary" crises. The department framed the decision as part of an effort to “return integrity” to humanitarian programs it says were over-extended.

The announcement throws corporate mobility programs into uncertainty. Thousands of Haitian nationals hold Employment Authorization Documents tied to TPS and work in healthcare, hospitality and manufacturing. Unless Congress acts or litigation succeeds, their legal status and work authorization will terminate next summer, triggering compliance challenges and potential labor shortages.

Immigrant-rights groups condemned the move as "reckless" given Haiti’s escalating gang violence and political instability. They are preparing lawsuits similar to earlier battles over TPS terminations for El Salvador and Nicaragua. Employers with affected staff should begin contingency planning, including PERM sponsorship or relocation options, and monitor forthcoming Federal Register notices on re-registration windows.
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