USCIS Initiates New Naturalization/Citizenship Test
On Thursday, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration
Services Director Emilio Gonzalez announced the release of 144
questions and answers for the pilot test of a new naturalization exam.
USCIS will administer the pilot exam to about 5,000 volunteer
citizenship applicants in 10 cities beginning in early 2007.
Click here to read The Associated Press article about the new citizenship test.
USCIS included new questions that focus on the concepts of democracy and the rights and responsibilities of citizenship.
Here are some sample questions:
1. Name one important idea found in the Declaration of Independence.
2. What is the supreme law of the land?
3. What does the Constitution do?
4. What does “We the People” mean in the Constitution?
5. What do we call changes to the Constitution?
6. What is an amendment?
7. What do we call the first ten amendments to the Constitution?
8. Name one right or freedom from the First Amendment.
9. How many amendments does the Constitution have?
10. What did the Declaration of Independence do?
11. What does freedom of religion mean?
12. What type of economic system does the U.S. have?
13. What are the three branches or parts of the government?
14. Name one branch or part of the government.
15. Who is in charge of the executive branch?
16. Who makes federal laws?
17. What are the two parts of the United States Congress?
18. How many United States Senators are there?
19. We elect a U.S. Senator for how many years?
20. Name your state’s two U.S. Senators.
21. How many U.S. Senators does each state have?
22. The House of Representatives has how many voting members?
23. We elect a U.S. Representative for how many years?
24. Name your U.S. Representative.
25. Who does a U.S. Senator represent?
Answers (Some questions have multiple correct answers)
1. Name one important idea found in the Declaration of Independence.
A: People are born with natural rights.
A: The power of government comes from the people.
A: The people can change their government if it hurts their natural rights.
A: All people are created equal.
2. What is the supreme law of the land?
A: The Constitution
3. What does the Constitution do?
A: It sets up the government.
A: It protects basic rights of Americans.
4. What does “We the People” mean in the Constitution?
A: The power of government comes from the people.
5. What do we call changes to the Constitution?
A: Amendments
6. What is an amendment?
A: It is a change to the Constitution.
7. What do we call the first ten amendments to the Constitution?
A: The Bill of Rights
8. Name one right or freedom from the First Amendment.
A: Speech
A: Religion
A: Assembly
A: Press
A: Petition the government
9. How many amendments does the Constitution have?
A: Twenty-seven (27)
10. What did the Declaration of Independence do?
A: Announce the independence of the United States from Great Britain
A: Say that the U.S. is free from Great Britain
11. What does freedom of religion mean?
A: You can practice any religion you want, or not practice at all.
12. What type of economic system does the U.S. have?
A: Capitalist economy
A: Free market
A: Market economy
13. What are the three branches or parts of the government?
A: Executive, legislative, and judicial
A: Congress, the President, the courts
14. Name one branch or part of the government.
A: Congress
A: Legislative
A: President
A: Executive
A: The courts
A: Judicial
15. Who is in charge of the executive branch?
A: The President
16. Who makes federal laws?
A: Congress
A: The Senate and House (of Representatives)
A: The (U.S. or national) legislature
17. What are the two parts of the United States Congress?
A: The Senate and House (of Representatives)
18. How many United States Senators are there?
A: 100
19. We elect a U.S. Senator for how many years?
A: Six (6)
20. Name your state’s two U.S. Senators.
A: Arlen Specter and Rick Santorum.
21. How many U.S. Senators does each state have?
A: Two (2)
22. The House of Representatives has how many voting members?
A: 435
23. We elect a U.S. Representative for how many years?
A: Two (2)
24. Name your U.S. Representative.
A: Rep. Don Sherwood.
25. Who does a U.S. Senator represent?
A: All citizens in that Senator’s state
U.S. Immigration To Pilot 1-Stop Shopping in S. FL
11/08/2006
(AP)
MIAMI – The Department of Homeland Security will start a pilot
program in 2008 to create one-stop shopping centers for immigrants
applying for citizenship services in South Florida, a top federal
immigration official said Friday.
100 Typical Questions on the Naturalization Exam
VIA THE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
I’ve listed 100 typical questions an applicant for US Naturalization (Citizenship) can be posed. For the record, my third generation US born drycleaner answered only 67 questions correctly.
QUESTIONS
1 . WHAT ARE THE COLORS OF OUR FLAG?
2. HOW MANY STARS ARE THERE IN OUR FLAG?
3. WHAT COLOR ARE THE STARS ON OUR FLAG?
4. WHAT DO THE STARS ON THE FLAG MEAN?
5. HOW MANY STRIPES ARE THERE IN THE FLAG?
6. WHAT COLOR ARE THE STRIPES?
7. WHAT DO THE STRIPES ON THE FLAG MEAN?
8. HOW MANY STATES ARE THERE IN THE UNION?
9. WHAT IS THE 4TH OF JULY?
10. WHAT IS THE DATE, OF INDEPENDENCE DAY?
11. INDEPENDENCE FROM WHOM?
12. WHAT COUNTRY DID WE FIGHT DURING THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR?
13. WHO WAS THE FIRST PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES?
14. WHO IS THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES TODAY?
15. WHO IS THE VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES TODAY?
16. WHO ELECTS THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES?
17. WHO BECOMES PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES IF THE PRESIDENT SHOULD DIE?
18. FOR HOW LONG DO WE ELECT THE PRESIDENT?
19. WHAT IS THE CONSTITUTION?
20. CAN THE CONSTITUTION BE CHANGED?
21. WHAT DO WE CALL A CHANGE TO THE CONSTITUTION?
22. HOW MANY CHANGES OR AMENDMENTS ARE THERE TO THE CONSTITUTION?
23. HOW MANY BRANCHES ARE THERE IN OUR GOVERNMENT?
24. WHAT ARE THE THREE BRANCHES OF OUR GOVERNMENT?
25. WHAT IS THE LEGISLATIVE BRANCH OF OUR GOVERNMENT?
26. WHO MAKES THE LAWS IN THE UNITED STATES?
27. WHAT IS CONGRESS?
28. WHAT ARE THE DUTIES OF CONGRESS?
29. WHO ELECTS CONGRESS?
30. HOW MANY SENATORS ARE THERE IN CONGRESS?
31. CAN YOU NAME THE TWO SENATORS FROM YOUR STATE?
32. FOR HOW LONG DO WE ELECT EACH SENATOR?
33. HOW MANY REPRESENTATIVES ARE THERE IN CONGRESS?
34. FOR HOW LONG DO WE ELECT THE REPRESENTATIVES?
35. WHAT IS THE EXECUTIVE BRANCH OF OUR GOVERNMENT?
36. WHAT IS THE JUDICIARY BRANCH OF OUR GOVERNMENT?
37. WHAT ARE THE DUTIES OF THE SUPREME COURT?
38. WHAT IS THE SUPREME LAW OF THE UNITED STATES?
39. WHAT IS THE BILL OF RIGHTS?
40. WHAT IS THE CAPITAL OF YOUR STATE?
41. WHO IS THE CURRENT GOVERNOR OF YOUR STATE?
42. WHO BECOMES PRESIDENT OF THE U.S.A. IF THE PRESIDENT AND THE VICE-PRESIDENT
SHOULD DIE?
43. WHO IS THE CHIEF JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT?
44. CAN YOU NAME THE THIRTEEN ORIGINAL STATES?
45. WHO SAID, “GIVE ME LIBERTY OR GIVE ME DEATH”?
46. WHICH COUNTRIES WERE OUR ENEMIES DURING WORLD WAR II?
47. WHAT ARE THE 49TH AND 50TH STATES OF THE UNION?
48. HOW MANY TERMS CAN A PRESIDENT SERVE?
49. WHO WAS MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR.?
50. WHO IS THE HEAD OF YOUR LOCAL GOVERNMENT?
51. ACCORDING TO THE CONSTITUTION, A PERSON MUST MEET CERTAIN REQUIREMENTS IN
ORDER TO BE ELIGIBLE TO BECOME PRESIDENT. NAME ONE OF THESE REQUIREMENTS.
26. WHO MAKES THE LAWS IN THE UNITED STATES?
27. WHAT IS CONGRESS?
28. WHAT ARE THE DUTIES OF CONGRESS?
29. WHO ELECTS CONGRESS?
30. HOW MANY SENATORS ARE THERE IN CONGRESS?
31. CAN YOU NAME THE TWO SENATORS FROM YOUR STATE?
32. FOR HOW LONG DO WE ELECT EACH SENATOR?
33. HOW MANY REPRESENTATIVES ARE THERE IN CONGRESS?
34. FOR HOW LONG DO WE ELECT THE REPRESENTATIVES?
35. WHAT IS THE EXECUTIVE BRANCH OF OUR GOVERNMENT?
36. WHAT IS THE JUDICIARY BRANCH OF OUR GOVERNMENT?
37. WHAT ARE THE DUTIES OF THE SUPREME COURT?
38. WHAT IS THE SUPREME LAW OF THE UNITED STATES?
39. WHAT IS THE BILL OF RIGHTS?
40. WHAT IS THE CAPITAL OF YOUR STATE?
41. WHO IS THE CURRENT GOVERNOR OF YOUR STATE?
42. WHO BECOMES PRESIDENT OF THE U.S.A. IF THE PRESIDENT AND THE VICE-PRESIDENT
SHOULD DIE?
43. WHO IS THE CHIEF JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT?
44. CAN YOU NAME THE THIRTEEN ORIGINAL STATES?
45. WHO SAID, “GIVE ME LIBERTY OR GIVE ME DEATH”?
46. WHICH COUNTRIES WERE OUR ENEMIES DURING WORLD WAR II?
47. WHAT ARE THE 49TH AND 50TH STATES OF THE UNION?
48. HOW MANY TERMS CAN A PRESIDENT SERVE?
49. WHO WAS MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR.?
50. WHO IS THE HEAD OF YOUR LOCAL GOVERNMENT?
51. ACCORDING TO THE CONSTITUTION, A PERSON MUST MEET CERTAIN REQUIREMENTS IN
ORDER TO BE ELIGIBLE TO BECOME PRESIDENT. NAME ONE OF THESE REQUIREMENTS.
78. WHAT KIND OF GOVERNMENT DOES THE UNITED STATES HAVE?
79. WHICH PRESIDENT FREED THE SLAVES?
80. IN WHAT YEAR WAS THE CONSTITUTION WRITTEN?
81. WHAT ARE THE FIRST 10 AMENDMENTS TO THE CONSTITUTION CALLED?
82. NAME ONE PURPOSE OF THE UNITED NATIONS.
83. WHERE DOES CONGRESS MEET?
84. WHOSE RIGHTS ARE GUARANTEED BY THE CONSTITUTION AND THE BILL OF RIGHTS?
85. WHAT IS THE INTRODUCTION TO THE CONSTITUTION CALLED?
86. NAME ONE BENEFIT OF BEING A CITIZEN OF THE UNITED STATES.
87. WHAT IS THE MOST IMPORTANT RIGHT GRANTED TO U.S. CITIZENS?
88. WHAT IS THE UNITED STATES CAPITOL?
89. WHAT IS THE WHITE HOUSE?
90. WHERE IS THE WHITE HOUSE LOCATED?
91. WHAT IS THE NAME OF THE PRESIDENT’S OFFICIAL HOME?
92. NAME ONE RIGHT GUARANTEED BY THE FIRST AMENDMENT.
93. WHO IS THE COMMANDER IN CHIEF OF THE U.S. MILITARY?
94. WHICH PRESIDENT WAS THE FIRST COMMANDER IN CHIEF OF THE U.S. MILITARY?
95. IN WHAT MONTH DO WE VOTE FOR THE PRESIDENT?
96. IN WHAT MONTH IS THE NEW PRESIDENT INAUGURATED?
97. HOW MANY TIMES MAY A SENATOR BE RE-ELECTED?
98. HOW MANY TIMES MAY A CONGRESSMAN BE RE-ELECTED?
99. WHAT ARE THE 2 MAJOR POLITICAL PARTIES IN THE U.S. TODAY?
100. HOW MANY STATES ARE THERE IN THE UNITED STATES?
ANSWER SHEET
1. RED, WHITE, AND BLUE
2. 50
3. WHITE
4. ONE FOR EACH STATE IN THE UNION
5. 13
6. RED AND WHITE
7. THEY REPRESENT TEE ORIGINAL 13 STATES
8. 50
9. INDEPENDENCE DAY
10. JULY 4TH
11. ENGLAND
12. ENGLAND
13. GEORGE WASHINGTON
14. GEORGE W. BUSH
15. DICK CHENEY
16. THE ELECTORAL COLLEGE
17. VICE PRESIDENT
18. FOUR YEARS
19. THE SUPREME LAW OF THE LAND
20. YES
21. AMENDMENTS
22. 27
23. 3
24. LEGISLATIVE, EXECUTIVE, AND JUDICIARY
25. CONGRESS
26. CONGRESS
27. THE SENATE AND THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
28. TO MAKE LAWS
29. THE PEOPLE
30. 100
31. (INSERT LOCAL INFORMATION)
32. 6 YEARS
33. 435
34. 2 YEARS
35. THE PRESIDENT, CABINET, AND DEPARTMENTS UNDER THE CABINET MEMBERS
36. THE SUPREME COURT
37. TO INTERPRET LAWS
38. THE CONSTITUTION
39. THE FIRST 10 AMENDMENTS OF THE CONSTITUTION
40. (INSERT LOCAL INFORMATION)
41. (INSERT LOCAL INFORMATION)
42. SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
43. WILLIAM REHNQUIST
44. CONNECTICUT, NEW HAMPSHIRE, NEW YORK, NEW JERSEY, MASSACHUSETTS,
PENNSYLVANIA, DELAWARE, VIRGINIA, NORTH CAROLINA, SOUTH CAROLINA, GEORGIA,
RHODE ISLAND, AND MARYLAND
45. PATRICK HENRY
46. GERMANY, ITALY, AND JAPAN
47. HAWAII AND ALASKA
48. 2
49. A CIVIL RIGHTS LEADER
50. (INSERT LOCAL INFORMATION)
51. MUST BE A NATURAL BORN CITIZEN OF THE UNITED STATES;
MUST BE AT LEAST 35 YEARS OLD BY THE TIME HE/SHE WILL SERVE; MUST HAVE LIVED
IN THE UNITED STATES FOR AT LEAST 14 YEARS
52. TWO (2) FROM EACH STATE
53. APPOINTED BY THE PRESIDENT
54. NINE (9)
55. FOR RELIGIOUS FREEDOM
56 GOVERNOR
57. MAYOR
58. THANKSGIVING
59. THOMAS JEFFERSON
60. JULY 4, 1776
61. THAT ALL MEN ARE CREATED EQUAL
62. THE STAR-SPANGLED BANNER
63. FRANCIS SCOTT KEY
64. THE BILL OF RIGHTS
65. EIGHTEEN (18)
66. THE PRESIDENT
67. THE SUPREME COURT
68. ABRAHAM LINCOLN
69. FREED MANY SLAVES
70. THE CABINET
71. GEORGE WASHINGTON
72. FORM N-400, “APPLICATION TO FILE PETITION FOR NATURALIZATION”
73. THE AMERICAN INDIANS (NATIVE AMERICANS)
74. THE MAYFLOWER
75. COLONIES
76.
(A) THE RIGHT OF FREEDOM OF SPEECH, PRESS, RELIGION, PEACEABLE ASSEMBLY AND
REQUESTING CHANGE OF GOVERNMENT.
(
THE RIGHT TO BEAR ARMS (THE RIGHT TO HAVE WEAPONS OR OWN A GUN, THOUGH
SUBJECT TO CERTAIN REGULATIONS).
(C) THE GOVERNMENT MAY NOT QUARTER, OR HOUSE, SOLDIERS IN THE PEOPL
E’S
HOMES DURING PEACETIME WITHOUT THE PEOPLE’S CONSENT.
(D) THE GOVERNMENT MAY NOT SEARCH OR TAKE A PERSON’S PROPERTY WITHOUT A
WARRANT.
(E) A PERSON MAY NOT BE TRIED TWICE FOR THE SAME CRIME AND DOES NOT HAVE
TO TESTIFY AGAINST HIMSELF.
(F) A PERSON CHARGED WITH A CRIME STILL HAS SOME RIGHTS, SUCH AS THE RIGHT
TO A TRIAL AND TO HAVE A LAWYER.
(G) THE RIGHT TO TRIAL BY JURY IN MOST CASES.
(H) PROTECTS PEOPLE AGAINST EXCESSIVE OR UNREASONABLE FINES OR CRUEL AND
UNUSUAL PUNISHMENT.
(L) THE PEOPLE HAVE RIGHTS OTHER THAN THOSE MENTIONED IN THE CONSTITUTION.
ANY POWER NOT GIVEN TO THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT BY THE CONSTITUTION IS
A POWER OF EITHER THE STATE OR THE PEOPLE.
77. THE CONGRESS
78. REPUBLICAN
79. ABRAHAM LINCOLN
80. 1787
81. THE BILL OF RIGHTS
82. FOR COUNTRIES TO DISCUSS AND TRY TO RESOLVE WORLD PROBLEMS; TO PROVIDE
ECONOMIC AID TO MANY COUNTRIES.
83. IN THE CAPITOL IN WASHINGTON, D.C.
84. EVERYONE (CITIZENS AND NON-CITIZENS LIVING IN THE U.S.)
85. THE PREAMBLE
86. OBTAIN FEDERAL GOVERNMENT JOBS; TRAVEL WITH A U.S. PASSPORT; PETITION FOR
CLOSE RELATIVES TO COME TO THE U.S. TO LIVE
87. THE RIGHT TO VOTE
88. THE PLACE WHERE CONGRESS MEETS
89. THE PRESIDENTS OFFICIAL HOME
90. WASHINGTON, D.C. (1600 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE, NW)
91. THE WHITE HOUSE
92. FREEDOM OF: SPEECH, PRESS, RELIGION, PEACEABLE ASSEMBLY, AND REQUESTING
CHANGE OF THE GOVERNMENT
93. THE PRESIDENT
94. GEORGE WASHINGTON
95. NOVEMBER
96. JANUARY
97. THERE IS NO LIMIT
98. THERE IS NO LIMIT
99. DEMOCRATIC AND REPUBLICAN
100. (50)
U.S. immigration agency speeding up procedures
Via Reuters
09/15/2006
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
said on Friday it will meet its goal of reducing the average wait time
for immigration services to six months by the end of September.
The
agency formerly known as the Immigration and Naturalization Service
also said the total number of pending cases that exceeded the six-month
wait period fell from 3.8 million in January 2004 to 1.1 million in
July this year.
“It really is a Herculean achievement that we’ve
been able to achieve this,” Emilio Gonzalez, the agency’s director told
reporters.
Nearly 1 million applications will still be pending at
the start of October, said Michael Ayetes, director of USCIS field
operations.
But the agency considers these outside its control because they
are awaiting feedback from other agencies such as the FBI, or
information or documents from applicants, Ayetes said.
In July
2001, President George W. Bush asked the agency to establish a
six-month standard from start to finish for processing immigration
applications.
Three main types of services still face backlogs,
Ayetes said. They include relative petitions, in which a U.S. citizen
asks for the naturalization of a relative, requests for permanent
residence and asylum applications.
The offices with the biggest numbers of backlogs are New York, Miami and Atlanta, he added.
Crystal
Williams of the American Immigration Lawyers Association said USCIS
holds some responsibility for the nearly 1 million applications it says
are outside the agency’s control.
“They have become faster and
they’ve made progress … but in many cases they are generating these
numbers by sending unneeded requests for extra documentation (to
applicants),” she said.
Williams added the agency should also establish procedures to get information from other agencies faster.
Deported Man Was Actually U.S. Citizen
Via Forbes.com
Duarnis Perez became an American citizen when
he was 15, but he didn’t find out until after he had been deported and
then jailed for trying to get back into the country.
He was facing his second deportation hearing
when he learned he was already a U.S. citizen. Still, federal
prosecutors fought to keep him in custody.
Last week, a federal judge scolded prosecutors for the mistake.
“In effect, the government is arguing that an
innocent man who was wrongly convicted should not be released from the
custody of the United States,” U.S. District Judge Lawrence Kahn wrote.
He ruled that Perez never should have been deported.
The case has gotten the attention of
immigration observers, who call it a striking example of the gaps in an
overworked immigration system.
Perez became a citizen when his mother was
naturalized in 1988 but apparently wasn’t aware of it. His lawyer, J.
Jeffrey Weisenfeld of New York, declined to release details other than
to say that Perez, now in his early 30s, remains in the United States.
DHS/DOD WELCOME AMERICA’S NEWEST CITIZENS; OVERSEAS
Ceremony Held In Balad, Iraq
WASHINGTON, DC ─ Sixty-nine (69) active-duty service members took the Oath of Allegiance and became America’s newest citizens during a special overseas military naturalization ceremony today at the Logistic Support Area Anaconda, Balad, Iraq. Joining the new citizens to celebrate their accomplishment were U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) Rome District Director Jack Bulger and Colonel Mark W. Hampton, 35th Area Support Group Commander. Today’s ceremony is part of the larger USCIS commemoration of the United States’ 230th birthday. In all, USCIS is hosting more than 150 special July 4th ceremonies for 18,000 men, women and children in the United States and members of the military serving in overseas locations.
“Thousands of immigrant troops are making extraordinary sacrifices for America,” said Bulger. “These men and women have pledged to defend with their lives liberties they have yet to secure for themselves. There is no more fitting way for a grateful Nation to show its appreciation than through granting qualified military service members U.S. citizenship as quickly as possible.”
Because of recent changes to the law governing U.S. citizenship, USCIS can now conduct naturalization interviews and hold naturalizations ceremonies overseas for U.S. military service members. Last year, USCIS personnel naturalized 1,006 Soldiers, Airmen, Sailors and Marines during ceremonies in Afghanistan, Germany, Iraq, Italy, Japan, Korea, Kuwait, Spain, the United Kingdom and in the Pacific aboard the USS Kitty Hawk.
Each year, USCIS welcomes nearly 500,000 citizens during naturalization ceremonies across the United States. That number includes nearly 7,000 members of the armed forces who naturalize both in the U.S. and abroad through an expedited process stemming from their military service.
This is the fifth trip USCIS personnel have made to Iraq to naturalize military service members serving in theater.
For more information regarding immigration services, please call 1-800-375-5283 or visit http://www.uscis.gov.
– USCIS –
In March 1, 2003, USCIS became one of three legacy Immigration and Naturalization Service components to join the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. USCIS is charged with fundamentally transforming and improving the delivery of immigration and citizenship services, while enhancing our nation’s security.
Critics say U.S. naturalization process too slow
By Tim Vandenack
The Hutchinson News
DODGE CITY – It was the 1980s, and with few work options at home in
Chichihualco, Mexico, Oscar Marino looked north of the border.
“I saw my family, the poverty,” Marino said.
In
the 1970s, his father had worked with a permit that let him travel
between the United States and Mexico. But with no such option available
when his turn to enter the workforce came up, Marino, now a meatpacker
here, took matters into his own hands.
“That pushed
me to come here illegally,” he said, remembering the mad scramble over
a chain-link fence separating Tijuana from southern California.
Many
others have similar stories – there are perhaps 12 million illegal
immigrants in the country, some say – and immigration experts and
others say it shouldn’t come as a big surprise. Though there might be
jobs, scant means exist for low-income, low-skilled foreigners to enter
the United States legally to take them, prompting many to sneak across
the border.
“I would have gone that way if I could,”
said Marino, now a legal U.S. resident, referring to the program that
let his father enter the country. “It didn’t exist anymore. I couldn’t.”
Indeed,
it strikes Angela Ferguson, a Kansas City, Mo., immigration attorney,
whenever she hears people say they have no problem with immigrants, as
long as they enter legally.
“They just don’t have a clue of how difficult the process is,” said Ferguson, who also practices in Garden City.
‘A long wait’
In
light of the apparent disparity between labor demand and supply, a
controversial U.S. Senate proposal emerged last month that would allow
more foreigners in to do low-skilled work. Some decry such plans as
misguided, saying lack of workers isn’t the issue, but depressed wages
that don’t appeal to natives.
A guest-worker element
would let up to 325,000 people in per year on a temporary basis, said
Laura Reiff of the Essential Worker Immigration Coalition, which favors
moves to grant some illegal immigrants pathways to legal residency.
Another prong would increase the quota of low-skilled workers
potentially eligible for U.S. residency from about 5,000 per year to
250,000.
As is, the most common means for Mexicans
to attain legal residency here and the ability to work legally are
through U.S. citizen or U.S. resident family members. Latinos,
particularly Mexicans, account for the largest share of southwest
Kansas’ immigrant population, and Mexicans account for the biggest
chunk of the nation’s overall undocumented population.
But
the process can take years, trying the patience of someone hoping for a
job now. First there’s the paperwork, background checks and medical
exams. Then there’s the delay while U.S. authorities process the
information.
“It’s a long wait,” said Consuelo
Sandoval of United Methodist Mexican-American Ministries in Garden
City, which assists immigrants.
People without a family member to petition on their behalf essentially are out of luck.
The
Mexican spouse or minor children of a U.S. citizen, meanwhile, face the
shortest wait, as little as a year. From there, the wait gets longer
and longer, particularly for legal residents petitioning for their
Mexican family members. Residency is one step short of citizenship. For
instance:
* The unmarried Mexican children over 21 years of age of a U.S. citizen must wait more than 15 years.
* The brothers and sisters of a U.S. citizen must wait more than 12 years.
*
The spouse and minor children of a U.S. resident must wait more than
six years. That is the largest category of people Sandoval helps
process.
* The unmarried children over 21 of a legal resident must wait more than 14 years.
The
wait stems from the backlog of cases U.S. officials must process and
annual quotas set for each country. For processing of residency
requests, U.S. immigration officials divvy the world into five zones:
Mexico, the Philippines, India and China – which all together account
for the bulk of petitions – and the rest of the world.
A lesson in immigration
Guest worker experiments transformed Europe
BERLIN — Germany needed workers. Turks needed work.
So starting in 1961, the country invited Turkish ”guest workers” to come do the dirty jobs that Germans didn’t want.
Only
7,000 ”gastarbeiter,” as they were called, arrived that first year, a
curiosity in a country where non-European faces were rare. Press
flashbulbs popped. Politicians made speeches of welcome. Ordinary
Germans watched, bemused.
Nobody grasped that the country — and
the continent, because neighboring nations soon undertook similar
experiments — was on the brink of a transformation whose effects are
still reverberating across Europe.
In Berlin, which today ranks
as the largest ”Turkish” city outside Turkey, falafel stands and kebab
joints far outnumber eateries offering schnitzel. In the Dutch city of
Rotterdam, Islamic calls to prayer are as common as church chimes. In
the raw-knuckled housing projects ringing Paris, graffiti are more
likely to be scrawled in Arabic than in the language of Voltaire.
”The
idea, originally, was that the foreign workers would stay for as long
as economically necessary, then go home,” said Michael Bommes, director
of the Institute for Migration Research at Germany’s Osnabrueck
University. ”It didn’t quite go like that.”
As the US Congress
wrestles with comprehensive immigration reform, one idea under
discussion is a new program that would allow guest workers to enter the
country, but not necessarily to stay on and become citizens.
In
Germany, guest workers — mostly poorly educated young men who were
issued special visas allowing them entry for one or two years to take
unskilled jobs — helped the nation to become the third-richest in the
world. The fabulous post-war prosperity of France, the Netherlands,
Denmark, Sweden, and other West European countries was also boosted by
immigrant labor, mainly from Turkey and North Africa.
But more
recently, as economic growth has slowed, swelling numbers of Muslim
immigrants from the Middle East and North Africa — many of them
arriving without any visas, or overstaying their visas and melting into
the ethnic suburbs — are being blamed for social stresses from urban
blight to chaotic schools.
In the words of the late Swiss writer Max Frisch: ”We wanted workers, we got people.”
Immigrants’ Interest in Citizenship Surges
Via Yahoo.com
WASHINGTON – Efforts by Congress and local governments to crack down on
illegal immigration — and the protests that followed those efforts —
have produced a surge of interest in learning how to become a U.S.
citizen.
More of the nation’s 8 million legal immigrants are showing up at
citizenship classes and seminars sponsored by churches and community
groups.
“I didn’t think it was important before, but now I think it’s very
important to be a citizen,” Leonida Santana said during a break in a
Saturday morning class discussion about the separation of powers among
Congress, the president and the courts.
Santana, a Dominican Republic native, arrived in the United States
in 1983 and a year later secured a green card, signifying permanent
legal residency. She signed up for the 10 weeks of citizenship
preparation classes after the House last year passed a bill that would
deport illegal immigrants as felons and erect 700 miles of fencing
along the U.S.-Mexico border.
Here Illegally, but Choosing to Pay Taxes
Via LATimes.com
Some undocumented workers hope that by establishing a record of their
time in the United States, it will be easier to gain citizenship later.
They may be here illegally, but tens of thousands of undocumented
immigrants are expected to abide by Uncle Sam’s rules by filing tax
returns — with the hope of someday becoming U.S. citizens.
Though there is no way of knowing how many people are filing taxes in
response to the national debate on immigration, Southern California tax
preparers are seeing a steady stream of clients eager to be on record
as taxpayers.
“There has definitely been an increase,” said Noemi Munoz, a senior tax
advisor at H&R Block in Los Angeles. “After whatever they’ve heard
on TV, I guess that’s why they want to file taxes.”
Some illegal immigrants have long paid taxes through special
identification numbers issued by the Internal Revenue Service for
people who are not eligible for Social Security numbers — whether out
of a sense of duty or hope for eventual citizenship.
But now that the U.S. Senate is considering a broad proposal that
could lead to citizenship for migrants who have lived here for at least
two years, there is a greater incentive to file a tax return. Some are
pulling out their W-2s and heading to the nearest tax office — not just
to pay this year’s bill but to catch up on back taxes. In interviews,
many said they wanted to prove how long they had lived in the United
States and that they would be good citizens.
“It’s important for all of us to pay our taxes, to have proof
that we are working in this country,” said Efrain Santa Cruz, 44, an
illegal immigrant from Mexico who recently filed his return, “so
someday maybe they will give us papers.”
Shorter Wait Proposed for Some Immigrants
WASHINGTON – Legal immigrants fluent in English could become U.S.
citizens in four years rather than five under a proposal that could
become part of a broad immigration bill.
The proposal by Sen. Lamar Alexander (news, bio, voting record),
R-Tenn., was at the top of the agenda as the Senate began a second week
of debate Monday on tightening U.S. borders against illegal immigrants,
increasing penalties on employers who hire them and on whether to let
more than 11 million undocumented aliens stay or make them leave at
some point.
An estimated 7.2 million legal permanent residents have lived in the
United States long enough to become Americans, according to the
Homeland Security
Department’s Citizenship and Immigration Services office. The wait to
become an American is five years, three years if the legal permanent
resident marries a U.S. citizen.
Reasons that officials give for permanent residents not seeking
citizenship include not speaking English well enough, an inability to
pay the fee and not wanting to forfeit citizenship in their native
country.
Alexander says a shorter naturalization wait might motivate more green card holders to seek U.S. citizenship.
Gregory W. Christian Acting Director, USCIS Nebraska Service Center, answers the American Immigration Lawyers Association’s Questions about PERM, I-129, I-130, I-131, I-140, I-485, I-765, TN and H-1B applications
March 9, 2006
The following are questions supplied prior to the March 9, 2006 AILA Northwest Regional Immigration Law Conference and the NSC’s answers.
1. If an H-1B petitioner asks for a
certain period of time (based on the “recapture” of time outside the
country) but the Service did not see the evidence or felt that the
evidence of “recapture-able” time was insufficient, should it have
issued an RFE or just issued the approval for the period of time it
felt was demonstrated by the evidence (i.e., without issuing an RFE).
Of course, this could be generalized to other issues, too.
A:
In accordance with the HQ policy memo we do not RFE on recapture
issues. The burden is on the petitioner to provide clear evidence to
support any assertions made. If the petition is otherwise approvable,
an approval will be issued for the period of time demonstrated by the
evidence submitted.
2.
The I-140 form has a place for CIS itself to check Schedule A, Group
II, but there is no place for the petitioner to check that box, so
which box is the petitioner to check for these cases? There is a
“members of the professions/exceptional ability” box, but that
“exceptional ability” is different from Schedule A, Group II
“exceptional ability.”
A: In the situation where the
applicant is applying under schedule A it is recommended that a cover
letter be submitted with the I140 indicating that a schedule A
occupation is requested.
3.
The Yates Memo on “ability to pay” seems to indicate that the three
scenarios listed are meant to be obviously approvable cases (i.e., so
obvious that not even an RFE should be issued), but the NSC seems to
treat these as the only tests capable of proving ability to pay. That
is, NSC appears to insist on denying the I-140 if the petitioner does
not meet one of the tests, but the wording of the memo seems to
indicate only that those scenarios are completely obvious and don’t
warrant an RFE. For example, we had a case in which the denial included
a CIS-created table showing that the company’s bank statements
reflected monthly cash balances of more than $90,000 for a position
with a proffered salary of only $45,000, and the alien was being paid
about $44,000 at the time of I-140 filing.
A: On Page
3 of the same memorandum, it was explained that if required initial
evidence has been submitted but fails to establish ability to pay,
USCIS adjudicators are not required to accept, request, or RFE for
additional financial evidence. If additional financial evidence is
submitted but does not clearly establish the petitioner’s ability to
pay, the USCIS adjudicator may deny the petition and not RFE for
additional evidence to further clarify the discretionary evidence that
was accepted.
4. What exactly is the third-prong test in national interest waiver cases?
A: For purposes of submitting and reviewing evidence, Service guidance regarding the final threshold in Matter of New York State Dept. of Transportation, 22 I&N 215 (Comm. 1998) is:
“…The Service here does not seek a quantified threshold of experience
or education, but rather a past history of demonstrable achievement
with some degree of influence on the field as a whole.” 22 I&N at
219, note 6.
“Because, by statute, “exceptional ability” is not by itself sufficient
cause for a national interest waiver, the benefit which the alien
presents to his or her field of endeavor must greatly exceed the
“achievements and significant contributions” contemplated in the
regulation at 8 C.F.R. § 204.5(k)(3)(ii)(F).” 22 I&N at 218.
(8 C.F.R. § 204.5(k)(3)(ii)(F) defines one of the criteria used to
demonstrate “exceptional ability”: “Evidence of recognition for
achievements and significant contributions to the industry or field by
peers, governmental entities, or professional or business
organizations.”)
Accordingly, petitioners seeking the national interest waiver should
present documentary evidence relating to achievement, influence in the
field and, if applicable, evidence of recognition as set out in 8
C.F.R. § 204.5(k)(3)(ii)(F).
5.
The Service Center says one thing, but the AAO always says something
else. For example, in national interest waiver cases, some CIS
examiners have denied cases stating that the beneficiary did not prove
that the national interest would be “adversely affected” if a labor
certification were required, but the AAO never uses that language in
its opinions.
A: The precedent decision states, “The
petitioner seeking the waiver must persuasively demonstrate that the
national interest would be adversely affected if a labor certification
were required for the alien.” 22 I&N at 217. Probably for that
reason many petitioners seeking the waiver assert the national interest
would be adversely affected if the waiver were not granted. When a
petition is approved it is because the evidence is persuasive on this
point. If a petition is denied, the adjudicator would normally be
correct in addressing the point, both because it was argued by the
petitioner and because it was used by the AAO in the precedent
decision.
6.
Some examiners imply that if the person has H-1B status, he or she is
eligible for ongoing research anyway, and therefore the national
interest would not be “adversely affected” by requiring a labor
certification instead. This kind of analysis, however, appears nowhere
in AAO opinions. In addition, the same statements could be made about a
Nobel Prize winner in H-1B status – i.e., the national interest would
not be “adversely affected” by requiring a labor certification, because
the Nobel Prize winner could continue on in H-1B status, too.
A:
If the evidence presents “a history of demonstrable achievement with a
degree of influence on the field as whole,” and assuming the underlying
visa requirements and prongs one and two are also satisfied, the waiver
is warranted regardless of the alien’s nonimmigrant status.
From
time to time, researcher petitioners assert labor certification is
inappropriate or unavailable, and from there contend the national
interest would be adversely affected if the immigrant petition is not
approved. In the precedent decision, the Service determined that
“inapplicability or unavailability of a labor certification cannot be
viewed as sufficient cause for a national interest waiver,” even for
“certain occupations wherein individuals are essentially self-employed,
and thus would have no U.S. employer to apply for a labor
certification.” 22 I&N at 218, note 3.
Because
researchers typically have university or laboratory employers, an
adjudicator would not be in error if s/he were not to give the
assertion significant weight. Also, it would not be incorrect for an
adjudicator to address the claim by noting there is no automatic bar to
the alien’s services (whether by way of labor certification, extension
of any current H-1B status, or potential change to H-1B or J
nonimmigrant status). Contrary to the claim presented in the question,
this analysis also appears in AAO decisions.
7.
Please ask them to explain the relationship among EB-1A, EB-1B, and
NIW. It seems that NSC does not recognize the great difference between
EB-1A and NIW.
A: Each benefit is to be adjudicated
under its own statute, regulation and case law. To illustrate, for
petitions seeking alien of extraordinary ability classification,
adjudicators should refer to Matter of Price, 20 I&N 953
(Assoc. Comm. Exams 1994)(reaffirming “Congress’ intent to reserve this
category to ‘that small percentage of individuals who have risen to the
very top of their field of endeavor’”) and Matter of Chawathe (USCIS
Adopted Decision January 11, 2006) note 6 (reaffirming that “that
specific objective evidence be submitted to demonstrate eligibility”),
whereas in petitions involving a request for the national interest
waiver, adjudicators should rely on Matter of New York State Dept. of Transportation, 22 I&N 215 (Comm. 1998).
8. Please verify again when duplicate petitions are required on I-129 petitions.
A:
Whenever an alien will be applying at a consulate or POE and we need to
send a duplicate copy. As a courtesy, we would appreciate being sent a
duplicate of the actual petition and supplement in all cases, but
duplicate copies the supporting evidence are not needed. In the event
classification is approved but the COS or EOS request is denied, we
would need to send a copy abroad.
9.
When there are a number of attorneys in a firm, must the G-28 be signed
by all attorneys or only the one filing the case? As long as the firm
name is mentioned, can all attorneys at the firm discuss the case? Can
the signature of the attorney be a copy or must it be original.
A:
The attorney signing the G-28 is the attorney with whom we correspond.
The applicant or petitioner signature must be original. We will accept
a rubber stamp or mechanically produced signature for the attorney.
10. If an I-130 IR is received in your office, is it immediately transferred to California?
A: Yes.
11.
Why, when the primary beneficiary files the I-140/I-485 concurrently
and the spouse enters at a later date and his/her I-485 is interfiled,
does CIS transfer the case to the local district office? The local
office has no idea why it is being done and all the information NSC
needs for the determination, such as a marriage certificate and the
person’s passport and birth certificate is submitted with the
interfiled case.
A: The NSC does not summarily
relocate EB485 cases as indicated in the above scenario. The NSC
generally relocates EB485 cases on a case-by-case basis applying the
national EB485 SOP standards. Some of the case considerations outlined
in the national SOP are:
- A need for validation of identity;
- A need for validation of legal status;
- Questionable admissibility and /or qualifications;
- Apparent fraud;
- A second filing;
- An applicant with fingerprint results rejected twice;
- An applicant medical condition class A or B;
- The A-file cannot be located at the time of adjudication
An officer may choose to modify the interview-waiver criteria based
upon articulable case aspects, in response to developing local
circumstances, or regional concerns. Cases that involve recent
marriages may be one of the areas in which NSC adjudicators may deviate
from the interview waiver criteria; however, these assessments are made
on a case-by-case basis, based upon the individual case’s facts and the
evidence of record.
12.
Our office filed a TN application at the NSC requesting notification of
the approval be sent to the consulate (aka: loose TN). Our client was
then going to present the TN approval notice at the port of entry
instead of having the TN adjudicated at the border. In December 2005,
our office received a denial of the Nonimmigrant Worker Petition and
the NSC denial letter cited Title 8, Code of Federal Regulations,
Section 214.6(e) and have quoted the pertinent section to read as
follows:
Application for admission. A citizen of
Canada seeking admission under this section shall make application for
admission with an immigration officer at a United States Class A port
of entry, at a United States airport handling international traffic, or
at a United States pre-clearance/pre-flight station. No prior petition,
labor certification, or prior approval shall be required ……
However,
Section 214.6(e) does not state the above referenced language, nor
could we locate any other section under 214.6 that reflects the above
cited language. It remains unclear to us whether our petition was
denied in error, or whether it reflects a change in the Service
Center’s policy with regards to adjudications of TN petitions requiring
consular notification. As this is a very significant deviation from
prior practice and therefore of significant concern to our client, we
request that NSC provide clarification as to the basis for this denial.
Thank you.
The regulation quoted in the
denial you received was taken from an old copy of the 8 CFR and is no
longer in that format in the current regulations. However, the
regulation is still in effect. The NSC has jurisdiction to adjudicate
extensions of TN status and changes to TN status from another valid
nonimmigrant status. We do not have jurisdiction or authority to
adjudicate a petition for initial TN status. Application for initial
admission in TN status must be made at a US Class A port-of-entry, a US
airport handling international traffic, or a US
pre-clearance/pre-flight station. Based upon the information provided,
the petition in question was for new employment for a person currently
outside the US. The NSC does not now, and has not previously, processed
any TN petitions for Canadian Citizens who are not already in the US in
a valid nonimmigrant status.
13.
What is the criteria and procedure for requesting an expedited re-entry
permit application? In the past, NSC has accepted and approved expedite
requests but we would like to know the current criteria/procedure as
well as the timeframe for the expedite.
A: I-131
expedite requests are handled in one of two ways. You may request the
expedite at the time of filing. Clearly and boldly mark the case as
“expedite requested” and attach a reason for the request. Simply asking
for an expedite without giving an explanation will not result in the
case being expedited. Expedite criteria include severe financial loss,
extreme emergent situations, humanitarian situations, Service error,
compelling interest of the Service, a request originating from a U.S.
Government entity, or a request originating from a non-profit
organization in furtherance of the cultural and social interest of the
United States.
You may
also request that an already-filed application be expedited. You may
submit such a request by mail, clearly and boldly marking the
correspondence as an expedite request and giving a reason. As an
alternative, you may FAX the request to 402-219-6170 or 402-219-6171.
Again, clearly request an expedite and give a reason for it.
For
I-131s that are expedited, the turn-around time is 7 to 14 days if no
additional information is needed. It is very important to submit a complete application
at filing with passport-style photos (non-digital), proof of status,
proof of identity (facial features should be clearly recognizable), and
the appropriate filing fee. If requesting delivery of the travel
document by UPS, FedEx or other service, include a prepaid,
preaddressed mailer.
You can request
expeditious handling for other form types in the same manner unless the
petition is eligible for premium processing.
14.
How do the Service Centers handle rider I-765 petitions for spouses of
Ls. There are liaison notes suggesting it is preferred that these be
filed this way, presumably because of the relationship of the petitions
(that is, if the L renewal is denied, so is the I-539 and I-765).
However, I’ve had mixed experiences doing this. E.g. Recently I filed
with California this way and the EAD petition was first returned to me,
then accepted but forwarded to Nebraska.
A: We have
found it most efficient to have the I-765 filed with the I-129 and
I-539 so all can be adjudicated together. The example you reference
refers to an application filed with the CSC – we cannot comment on the
practices in place at that office.
15. Is the I-140 line of the NSC acknowledging the Grace Church case
(Nov. 2005 Fed. Dist. Ct., Portland, OR) as persuasive for EB(3)
equivalency cases? The case says that the USCIS must consider the
qualifications of the foreign national under both professional and
skilled worker and also that the employer and DOL have more authority
in interpreting what is equivalent in terms of degree equivalency as
stated on a labor certification application. The appeal filed by the
Service in this case has been dismissed.
A: We do
consider applicants under both the professional and skilled worker
categories. What happens most often is that the labor certification
specifies that the alien must have a bachelor’s degree or “equivalent.”
Equivalent is interpreted to mean a single foreign degree that is
equivalent to a US bachelor’s degree. If the beneficiary does not meet
the degree requirement as outlined in the labor certification form, the
petition is not approvable as either professional or skilled worker.
This is because the alien does not meet the minimum qualifications as
stated in the labor certification, i.e., a bachelor’s degree. If the
labor certification stated the requirement of a bachelor’s degree, but
also stated in block 15 that the employer would be willing to accept
certain training, experience, and/or education in lieu of the
bachelor’s degree requirement, it could potentially support a petition
for a skilled worker.
With
regard to the Grace Church decision, the NSC is not following the
finding by the court. In essence, in concluding that USCIS has no role
in interpreting the requirements listed on the labor certification in
the visa approval process, the court in this decision held that DOL,
not USCIS, makes the final determination of whether a beneficiary’s
qualifications meet the requirements of the labor certification. This
is contrary to 8 U.S.C. 1154(b) and to precedent 9th Circuit case law.
See K.R.K Irvine, Inc. v. Landon, 699 F.2d 1006 (9th Cir. 1983); Tongatapu Woodcraft Hawaii, Ltd. v. Feldman, 736 F.2d 1305 (9th Cir. 1984); Black Const. Corp. v. I.N.S.,
746 F.2d 503 (9th Cir. (Guam)1984). In these cases, the Circuit Court
states that INS [USCIS] is the final authority on that issue. Implicit
in determining whether an alien meets the requirements, is determining
what those requirements are.
16.
Beginning April 1, 2006, when we begin filing H-1B Petitions for a
start date of 10/01, will the numbers be reserved upon receipt of the
petition, or when it is adjudicated.
A: Guidelines and instructions for FY07 cap cases will be issued by headquarters.
17.
If we have cases that are unadjudicated 30 days or more after you
receive our response to RFE, what can we do to obtain a decision?
A:
Please use normal inquiry channels on cases of this nature, that is,
contact the National Customer Service Center. Be sure to tell the
customer service rep that 30 days have expired since the Center
received the RFE response. The NCSC practice is to refer the inquiry to
us.
18.
If all evidence presented, including the cover letter, with a petition
reveals that a box was incorrectly checked on the I-129, [e.g. all
evidence supports an extension of stay for a successive petition, but
the notify consulate box is accidentally checked] it would be
appreciated if your examiner would telephone the attorney to clarify,
rather than err in the adjudication, due to one erroneously-checked box.
A:
The form is the guiding document guiding document. It would not be an
officer error to adjudicate an I-129 based on what the petitioner and
counsel marked on the I-129. That said, however, the NSC does encourage
officers to seek clarification if everything in the file appears to
belie what is checked on the form. The NSC encourages practitioners to
supply their e-mail addresses with their filings to facilitate this
contact.
19.
If all evidence presented reveals an attorney is representing the
petitioner, including signature of the cover letter on letterhead
paper, on the filing fee check, signature on the petition papers, etc,
but the G-28 is inadvertently unsigned in the attorney box, could you
examiner please call the attorney rather than ignoring the presence of
the attorney and sending correspondence to the petitioner.
A:
In the absence of a properly-executed G-28, we are required to
correspond with the applicant or petitioner. Per regulations at 8 CFR
103.2(a)(3) “where a notice of representation is submitted that is not
properly signed, the application or petition will be processed as if
the notice had not been submitted.”
20.
How do you want us to handle appeals/motions for reconsider under 8 CFR
§ 103.3 (a) (2) (iii) and § 103.5 (a) (8)? Is a particular form
required, or may we advise you in our letter that we wish for you to
first consider the matter as a reopening/reconsideration and then, an
appeal to the AAO? Is one filing fee sufficient for both?
A:
For appealable cases, an appeal must be submitted on an appeal form.
There is only one fee for an appeal. The appeal is treated as though it
were a motion to reopen/reconsider. Should the reviewing officer find
that the appeal overcomes the denial, he/she will reopen the case and
approve. If not, the appeal will be forwarded to the AAO.
21.
If an appeal is filed, does the same examiner who denied the case
review it again or does someone other examiner review it before
forwarding it to AAO?
A: Yes, the original deciding
officer reviews the appeal; however it is reviewed by a supervisor
before being sent to the AAO.
22.
My understanding is that the examiner can issue an RFE without
supervisory review, but cannot deny without supervisory review. Is that
true? Please explain. Thanks.
A: Regulation requires
supervisory review of most denials; however there is no such
requirement for RFEs. Supervisory review of RFEs would place an
unmanageable burden on the Center.
Sincerely,
Gregory W. Christian Acting Director

American dream sours for an exile
Via MiamiHerald.com
08/28/2006
For 12 years, Julio Rosell has lived, worked and paid taxes from his
roomy, idyllic Hollywood home — his lawn freshly mowed; his two cars
polished; his boat luxurious.
He fathered two American-born children: 10-year-old Jeannette and 9-year-old Julio Jr.
As a Cuban exile, he expected his American dream to continue.
But now Rosell finds himself in a situation unfamiliar to most Cuban exiles. His immigration status is in limbo.
The 41-year-old Havana native lost his bid for a green card because
he came to the United States as a stowaway. While he won’t likely be
deported, he cannot legally drive or work now.
”No one seems to care,” said his wife, Caroline Rosell, whose own
status depends on her husband’s. “My husband has no driver’s license,
mine’s about to expire and we are supposed to be supporting two kids
financially. I wonder how they really expect us to live — without
papers or a driver’s license.”
In the decade he adjusted to the American way of life, no one told Rosell he shouldn’t be here.
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