With tumult in their new home and homeland, Central Florida’s Venezuelans wonder where to turn

Alfonzo Castillo came to the U.S. in 2019, fleeing the oppressive Venezuelan regime with his wife, daughter and a dream to keep his restaurant alive. He’s done more than just that — graduating from a food truck to two restaurants, one in Orlando and one in Tampa, and adding a son to his family.

But now his stay in the country where he rebuilt his business and life is fraught with uncertainty.

Amid a turbulent series of deportation initiatives from the Trump administration, the Venezuelan community — numbering 98,000 in Central Florida — finds itself at the center of the storm. The administration is ending a special temporary protective status for immigrants from unsettled countries, known as TPS, under which many Venezuelans including Castillo came to the U.S. And it has dispatched alleged members of a notorious Venezuelan gang, Tren de Aragua, to an El Salvador prison, based on seemingly scant evidence that some say smears law-abiding immigrants as well. Both efforts are being challenged in court, but that only deepens the uncertainty…

Story continues

TRENDING NOW

LATEST LOCAL NEWS