HomeMy WebLinkAbout2017-135-3240 - Extending Temp Protected Status for Haitian NationalsRESOLUTION NO. 2017-135-3240
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
MIAMI GARDENS, FLORIDA, URGING PRESIDENT TRUMP TO
HONOR HIS CAMPAIGN PLEDGE TO THE HAITIAN AMERICAN
COMMUNITY BY EXTENDING TEMPORARY PROTECTED
STATUS FOR HAITIAN NATIONALS FOR 18 MONTHS BEYOND
JANUARY 22, 2018; PROVIDING FOR THE ADOPTION OF
REPRESENTATIONS: PROVIDING FOR AN EFFECTIVE DATE.
WHEREAS, President Donald F. Trump addressed a crowd of Haitian Americans
in Miami's "Little Haiti" on September 16, 2016 and promised to be the Haitian
community's "greatest champion," saying, "The Haitian American community adds so
much to our country: dedication to country, perseverance, entrepreneurship, creativity,
faith, a lot of faith; all the things that make America good and strong can be found right
here, amazing people, so I come here today to say that the Haitian American
community deserves our gratitude and our respect, and I want you to know you have
my respect," winning applause, and
WHEREAS, President Trump in those remarks lamented the "horrible and
catastrophic devastation" caused by Haiti's earthquake, saying "the truth is Haiti is still
suffering very badly, maybe as badly, after all of the tears and all of the money and ail of
the work," and
WHEREAS, President Trump in those remarks said, "I send my prayers, I've
been seeing so much as to what's been going on in Haiti, and its simply hard to believe
that something like that could have happened, the turmoil and pain and suffering that so
many people are going through. The 2010 Haitian earthquake unleashed a horrible and
catastrophic devastation: over 300,000 dead, unbelievable, 300,000, millions displaced
or injured, homes, businesses, schools reduced to rubble; amid the suffering Haiti
showed the world so much heart and so much incredible resilience, but the truth is Haiti
is still suffering very badly, maybe as badly, after all of the tears and all of the money
and all of the work," and
WHEREAS, President Trump said during those remarks, winning further
applause, "The Haitian people deserve better, so I intend to give them, I will give them
better. Today we begin a new chapter, together we will build a relationship based on
mutual respect and friendship and love, and our community (sic) and we will really do
something very special with our commonly shared values, because we have lots of
commonly shared values, maybe full shared values. I'm wanting to be president of all
Americans, that's everybody, and whether you vote for me or don't vote me, I really
want to be your greatest champion, and I will be your champion whether you vote for
me or not," concluding, "we are going to do things for you folks that you have really
deserved for a long time. You're an amazing community, and it's an honor to be with
you, and
WHEREAS, an issue of great concern and shared value in Haitian American
communities throughout the United States is that the Trump administration should
extend Haiti's Temporary Protected Status (TPS) designation for at least 18 months
beyond its current expiration date due to, and until it has recovered from, the
extraordinary and massive calamities which have recently befallen Haiti, including the
2010 earthquake from which recovery remains incomplete with scores of thousands of
quake victims still homeless; the unchecked cholera epidemic introduced by United
Nations (UN) peacekeepers to Haiti in October 2010 (after cholera's absence from Haiti
for at least the prior 100 years) which has killed at least 10,000 and sickened over
800,000 to date, and for which the UN to date has raised only $10 million of its target of
$400 million to begin addressing the epidemic and eradicating the disease from Haiti;
Resolution No. 2017-135-3240
and last October's Hurricane Matthew, the worst to hit Haiti in 52 years, which killed
1,000 people, effected two million, left hundreds of thousands without safe drinking
water or adequate food, destroyed crops and livestock in broad areas, inundated vast
areas and towns and destroyed infrastructure; struck Haiti's southern peninsula, one of
the nation's breadbaskets, greatly exacerbating the nation's food insecurity crisis after a
three-year drought in Haiti's rice-growing Artibonite; significantly exacerbated the
cholera epidemic, spiking cases of the disease; and has caused Haiti's government to
declare a "state of emergency" in Haiti's south due to the destruction, and
WHEREAS, on May 22, 2017, the United States Department of Homeland
Security (DHS) extended Haiti's Temporary Protected Status (TPS) designation for only
six months beyond its then-scheduled July 22, 2017 expiration date, and it is now
scheduled to end on January 22, 2018, and
WHEREAS, DHS's May 22 announcement warned Haitian TPS recipients to
prepare to return to Haiti after January 22, 2018, because further extension is by no
means assured; and
WHEREAS, DHS took these steps despite the requests of Haiti's government,
which prior to May 22 in meetings with and at least one letter to high U.S. government
officials specifically requested TPS's extension for at least 18 months, and which
currently continues to desire an extension beyond January 22, 2018 of at least 18
months to enable it to deal with the overwhelming challenges facing the country due to
the above-referenced catastrophes, and
WHEREAS, DHS by November 23, 2017 must decide whether to terminate or
extend Haiti's TPS designation, and if the latter for how long, and
Resolution No. 2017-135-3240
WHEREAS, President Trump will violate his campaign pledge to the Haitian
American community, including to be its "greatest champion," if DHS, which is under his
control, does not by November 23 extend Haiti's TPS designation for 18 months beyond
January 22, 2018; and
WHEREAS, before DHS's May 22 announcement, prior Haiti TPS extensions
had appropriately, based on an assessment of Haiti conditions, always been for 18-
month periods, and
WHEREAS, in a detailed, eight-page, single-spaced December 2016
assessment. United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), concluded
that conditions in Haiti warranting TPS persist, and then-Secretary of State Kerry
recommended its extension, and
WHEREAS, USCIS a few months later during the Trump administration and
despite and contrary to its own detailed assessment a few months earlier as referenced
above, recommended against extending Haiti's TPS designation, as reported in April,
2017, and
WHEREAS, adding insult to injury, USCIS's new head of policy and strategy in
emails leaked in April inappropriately urged staff, as a means of justifying terminating
Haiti's TPS designation, to dig up evidence of Haitian "criminality," demonizing an entire
ethnicity and despite or ignorant of the fact that the TPS statute itself makes anyone
with a felony or more than a single misdemeanor statutorily ineligible for TPS, and
WHEREAS, TPS is a humanitarian program to which such considerations are
also irrelevant, indicating that newly-appointed, anti-immigrant zealots within the Trump
administration were seeking arguments to terminate Haiti's TPS designation regardless
of the merits, contradicting President Trump's expressions last September of "respect"
Resolution No. 2017-135-3240
for Haitian Americans and of appreciation for their "dedication to country, perseverance,
entrepreneurship, creativity, [and] faith," and in violation of his promise if elected to be
the community's "greatest champion," and
WHEREAS, as stated Haiti has not yet recovered from the 2010 earthquake and
since then has been hit by unique and additional calamities including Hurricane
Matthew last October, which cost Haiti $2.7 billion or 32% of its GDP per a March, 2017
United Nations report; the unchecked cholera epidemic inadvertently introduced in
October 2010 by UN peacekeepers from Nepal, which by conservative estimates has
killed at least 10,000 and sickened over 800,000 and which was exacerbated by
Hurricane Matthew; the current food insecurity crisis; and Zika and Chikungunya, and
WHEREAS, as previously referenced, on October 4, 2016, Hurricane Matthew
was the first Category 4 hurricane to hit Haiti in 52 years, affected 2 million Haitians, left
at least 1.4 million in need of emergency aid, killed 1,000 people, rendered 806,000
people extremely food insecure, left 1,250,000 Haitians—including a half-million
children—^without safe drinking water, wiped out livestock and crops in broad areas,
damaged or destroyed 1,663 schools, dramatically increased the number of cholera
cases in Haiti, and left entire towns completely destroyed and cut off from the outside
world by flooding, destruction of infrastructure, and damage, and
WHEREAS, the United Nations confirms that hundreds of thousands of Haitians
remain "extremely food insecure" as a result of Matthew, many have died as a result of
malnutrition, and thousands may starve in what experts have described as a looming
humanitarian disaster, leading to a declared "state of emergency" in effected areas; and
Resolution No. 2017-135-3240
WHEREAS, such reports reflect a well-reported severe humanitarian crisis
affecting a few million Haitians with which Haiti's government, overwhelmed by these
recent extraordinary calamities, is struggling to cope, and
WHEREAS, the 50,000 Haitians with TPS have been in the US since at least
January 12, 2011, the vast majority for 7 to 15 years, and have strong community ties
including families with U.S.-born, American-citizen children who should not have to
choose between their parents and their birthright as Americans if their parents are
deported to Haiti, and
WHEREAS, the 50,000 with TPS regularly send remittances which sustain
perhaps 250,000 to 500,000 family members in Haiti and under present conditions are
crucial to Haiti's stability, and Haitians in the United States sent to Haiti $1.3B in
remittances in 2015, which are Haiti's chief source of foreign aid, and
WHEREAS, Haiti's government while seeking to recover from the recent
catastrophes described above — including incomplete earthquake recovery with scores
of thousands of quake victims remaining homeless, the unchecked cholera epidemic for
which the UN to date has raised insufficient funds. Hurricane Matthew's vast
destruction, and the food insecurity crisis — is and until at least mid-2019 will be able to
neither additionally safely assimilate the 50,000 Haitians with TPS should they be
deported nor replace their remittances which are crucial to its economy; and it remains
unsafe to deport them to Haiti, and
WHEREAS, their deportation to Haiti would therefore be destabilizing, increasing
desperation and leading to more unsafe sea voyages, entailing increased loss of life at
sea and the commitment of increased U.S. Coast Guard interdiction actions and
resources, and
Resolution No. 2017-135-3240
WHEREAS, Haiti's recovery and stability are in the national security interest of
the United States, and therefore the extension of Haiti's TPS designation for no less
than 18 months beyond its current January 22, 2018 expiration date is in the national
security interests of both the United States and of Haiti, and
WHEREAS, under the TPS statute, Haiti is a textbook case for TPS and for its
generous extension beyond January 22, 2018, given the extraordinary events described
above, which also make it unsafe and unwise to terminate TPS for 50,000 long-resident
Haitian TPS holders whose remittances are important to Haiti's stability and the welfare
of her people, and
WHEREAS, bipartisan political, editorial, and civil society support for a generous
extension of Haiti's TPS designation based on Haiti conditions is great and has included
100 members of Congress, major national and Florida editorial boards. Republican
governors Scott of Florida and Baker of Massachusetts, religious leaders, and
professionals, among many other national and local organizations and political and
other leaders, and
WHEREAS, Councilman David Williams, Jr., is recommending that the City
Council support this resolution urging President Trump to honor his campaign pledges
to the Haitian American Community,
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY
OF MIAMI GARDENS, FLORIDA AS FOLLOWS:
Section 1: ADOPTION OF REPRESENTATIONS: The foregoing Whereas
paragraphs are hereby ratified and confirmed as being true, and the same are hereby
made a specific part of this Resolution.
Resolution No. 2017-135-3240
Section 2; EXPRESSION OF SUPPORT; The City Council of the City of
Miami Gardens hereby supports urging President Trump to honor his campaign pledges
to the Haitian American Community.
Section 3: INSTRUCTIONS TO THE CITY CLERK: The City Clerk is hereby
directed to transmit certified copies of this Resolution to President Donald F. Trump,
White House Chief of Staff John F. Kelly, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, and Acting
DHS Secretary Elaine Duke
Section 3: EFFECTIVE DATE: This Resolution shall take effect immediately
upon its final passage.
PASSED AND ADOPTED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF MIAMI
GARDENS AT ITS REGULAR MEETING^teO)) ON SEPTEMBER 12, 2017.
OLIVER GILBERT, III, MAYOR
ATTEST:
RONETTA TAYLOfyMMC, CITY CLERK
PREPARED BY: SONJA KNIGHTON DICKENS, CITY ATTORNEY
SPONSORED BY: COUNCILMAN DAVID WILLIAMS JR
Moved by:
Seconded by:
VOTE:
Mayor Oliver Gilbert, III (Yes) (No)
Vice Mayor Erhabor Ighodaro, Ph.D. (Yes) (No)
Councilwoman Lisa C. Davis (Yes) (No)
Councilman Rodney Harris (Yes) (No)
Councilwoman Lillie Q. Odom (Yes) (No)
Councilwoman Felicia Robinson ^ (Yes) (No)
Councilman David Williams Jr (Yes) (No) /Vo'f'
Resolution No. 2017-135-3240
18605 N W 27th Avenue, Suite 165
Miami Gardens, Florida 33056
City of Miami Gardens
Agenda Cover Memo
Council Meeting Date:
September 12, 2017 Item Type:
(Enter X in box)
Resolution Ordinance Other
X
Fiscal Impact:
(Enter X in box)
Yes
No Ordinance Reading:
(Enter X in box)
1st Reading 2nd Reading
X Public Hearing:
(Enter X in box)
Yes No Yes No
X
Funding Source:
Advertising Requirement:
(Enter X in box)
Yes No
X
Contract/P.O. Required:
(Enter X in box)
Yes No RFP/RFQ/Bid #:
X
Strategic Plan Related
(Enter X in box)
Yes No Strategic Plan Priority Area:
Enhance Organizational
Bus. & Economic Dev
Public Safety
Quality of Education
Qual. of Life & City Image
Communication
Strategic Plan Obj./Strategy: (list the
specific objective/strategy this item will address)
N/A X
Sponsor Name
Councilman David
Williams Jr
Department: Mayor/Council
Short Title:
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF MIAMI
GARDENS, FLORIDA, URGING PRESIDENT TRUMP TO HONOR HIS
CAMPAIGN PLEDGE TO THE HAITIAN AMERICAN COMMUNITY BY
EXTENDING TEMPORARY PROTECTED STATUS FOR HAITIAN
NATIONALS FOR 18 MONTHS BEYOND JANUARY 22, 2018;
PROVIDING FOR THE ADOPTION OF REPRESENTATIONS;
PROVIDING FOR AN EFFECTIVE DATE.
Staff Summary:
This resolution urges President Trump to honor his campaign pledges to the Haitian American
Community by extending temporary protected status for Haitian Nationals for 18 months beyond
January 22, 2018.
Proposed Action:
That the City Council approve the attached resolution.
AGENDA ITEM K-2
EXTENDING TEMPORARY PROTECTED
STATUS FOR HAITIAN NATIONALS
18605 N W 27th Avenue, Suite 165
Miami Gardens, Florida 33056
Attachment: