The Orlando Sentinel reports Henry Dorvil needed to briefly return to Haiti to straighten out his immigration status after unwittingly failing to renew his temporary protected status, which allowed him to stay in the US. But Dorvil has been stranded in Haiti since December.
This month, Dorvil's friends started a "Help Henry" campaign to urge US Citizenship and Immigration Services to speed up his immigration process.
They launched a Facebook page and posted "Help Henry" posters downtown. Also, more than 75 Sanford business owners and residents have sent letters to the federal government pleading for Dorvil's case to be expedited.
But all of that's on hold.
In Haiti, he's living without running water, electricity and little access to the internet as he awaits documents, which could take 18 months to obtain, that would allow him to return to the US as a legal resident.
"I was shocked because I wanted to follow the correct procedure," Dorvil said from Limbe, Haiti, a city of 33,000, about 210 kilometres north of the capital, Port-au-Prince. He said he returned to Haiti to get his paperwork in order because as an immigrant in the US, "there's a lot of things you can't do", and he wanted to build his business and attend college.
Many in the community call the energetic Dorvil "the hardest-working man in Sanford" for his ambitious drive in launching his own company while holding down several part-time jobs and doing volunteer work.
Dorvil arrived in the US from Haiti in 1993 when he was five-month-old with his family, who sought political asylum after a military coup.
His father became a naturalised US citizen and now lives in Fort Lauderdale. His mother obtained legal citizenship and lives in Orlando. His older sister is also a naturalised US citizen, and his American-born brother serves in the US Marine Corps in Hawaii.
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