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North Carolina Honors Student Facing Deportation Can Stay

A regional office of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. Photo: Wikimedia contributor Gulbenk for Creative Commons http://bit.ly/2oLYhC7

A North Carolina college student bracing for a deportation hearing has learned she can stay in the U.S. after all.

Sthefany Flores Fuentes was scheduled to appear Wednesday in Charlotte for an immigration meeting that could have led to her being deported to Honduras.

Flores Fuentes, a junior honors student at Gardner-Webb University, received a letter from Immigration and Customs Enforcement on April 1. The letter said arrangements had been made to send her back to a country she hasn't been to since she was 7 years old.

On Monday, Flores Fuentes was told ICE was canceling the meeting. She said officials told her signals had gotten crossed between ICE and the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, which handles renewals for the Deferred Action for Child Arrivals program. Her DACA extension has since been located.

 

Neal Charnoff joined 88.5 WFDD as Morning Edition host in 2014. Raised in the Catskill region of upstate New York, he graduated from Sarah Lawrence College in 1983. Armed with a liberal arts degree, Neal was fully equipped to be a waiter. So he prolonged his arrested development bouncing around New York and L.A. until discovering that people enjoyed listening to his voice on the radio. After a few years doing overnight shifts at a local rock station, Neal spent most of his career at Vermont Public Radio. He began as host of a nightly jazz program, where he was proud to interview many of his idols, including Dave Brubeck and Sonny Rollins. Neal graduated to the news department, where he was the local host for NPR's All Things Considered for 14 years. In addition to news interviews and features, he originated and produced the Weekly Conversation On The Arts, as well as VPR Backstage, which profiled theater productions around the state. He contributed several stories to NPR, including coverage of a devastating ice storm. Neal now sees the value of that liberal arts degree, and approaches life with the knowledge that all subjects and all art forms are connected to each other. Neal and his wife Judy are enjoying exploring North Carolina and points south. They would both be happy to never experience a Vermont winter again.

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