By Joe Guzzardi | @joeguzzardi19 | 5:30 p.m. Earlier this month, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the immigration program known as Temporary Protected Status — protected from deportation — doesn’t necessarily mean a permanent stay. The court’s unanimous decision may represent a pause in the relentless pursuit by President Joe Biden’s administration of never-ending, permanent immigration increases both at the border and, through weakened enforcement, in the interior. One can hope! In the 1990s, Jose Santos Sanchez and his wife, Sonia Gonzalez, illegally entered the United States from El Salvador. The federal government granted them TPS in 2001 when the United States included El Salvador as part of the TPS program after that country’s Jan. 13 earthquake. TPS allows unlawfully present foreign nationals to remain if conditions are deemed unsafe in their home countries.