The Pathway That Used to Exist No Longer Does—Here’s What You Can Still Do

For years, “Keeping Families Together” gave hope to mixed-status families: a pathway for undocumented spouses and stepchildren of U.S. citizens to apply for parole in place without leaving the country. That hope is gone.

On November 7, 2024, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas vacated the entire KFT parole process. The ruling was immediate and nationwide. USCIS stopped processing pending applications. New applications stopped being accepted. Biometrics appointments were cancelled on the spot. And with a new administration hostile to all forms of parole, no appeal ever came. The program simply ended.

If you filed a Form I-131F before that ruling, it’s still sitting in limbo today—unadjudicated, unresolved, going nowhere.

This Wasn’t an Isolated Setback—It Was the Beginning

KFT’s collapse turned out to be the opening move in a much broader campaign against parole as an immigration tool:

Family Reunification Parole (FRP) — terminated by Federal Register notice effective January 14, 2026, stripping status and work authorization from people who’d lawfully reunited with family from Colombia, Cuba, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, and Honduras. Litigation is ongoing, and a federal judge has issued a preliminary injunction pausing the termination—but the program’s future remains uncertain.

CHNV Humanitarian Parole (Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, Venezuela) — affecting roughly half a million people. The First Circuit Court of Appeals has already ruled the administration’s termination of this program lawful.

The pattern is unmistakable: every parole pathway built to keep families together or offer humanitarian protection is being systematically dismantled, one court ruling at a time.

What This Means If You Were Counting on Parole in Place

If your plan was to apply for parole in place as a path to eventually adjusting status without leaving the U.S., that door has closed. Here’s where things actually stand:

1. KFT is not coming back. There is no pending appeal, no revival in progress. Treat it as permanently gone.

2. A pending I-131F does nothing for you right now. It will not be adjudicated. It does not protect you from enforcement. Do not rely on it.

3. Parole in place for military families under INA §212(d)(5) may still exist in narrower circumstances—but eligibility is limited and scrutiny is high.

4. Form I-130 remains available. A U.S. citizen spouse can still file a petition for an alien relative—but without parole in place, the path to adjusting status for someone who entered without admission is far more complicated and often requires consular processing abroad, which carries its own risks.

5. If you have a prior removal order or are in active removal proceedings, this is not a wait-and-see situation. You need representation now.

The Real Danger: False Hope

The most damaging thing happening right now isn’t the legal landscape itself—it’s the number of families who don’t realize the ground has shifted. People are still waiting on applications that will never be approved. People are avoiding other options because they believe parole in place is still on the table. People are making decisions about travel, employment, and housing based on a program that no longer exists.

That confusion is dangerous. In this enforcement environment, betting on a dead program instead of pursuing what’s actually available can cost you the time you need to act.

What You Should Do Right Now

If you or your spouse has an unadjudicated I-131F, or you were planning to file one:

  • Stop waiting on it. It is not going to be approved.
  • Get a full case review. Marriage to a U.S. citizen, length of residence, prior immigration history, any criminal record, and current proceedings all change what’s actually available to you.
  • Explore every alternative now, before the next program on the list disappears too.

Families are running out of pathways faster than most people realize. The strategy that made sense eighteen months ago may no longer exist today—and the one that exists today may not exist next year.

Don’t build your future on a program that’s already gone. Find out what’s actually still on the table.