Albuquerque Journal

Legal status

Citizenshi­p applicatio­ns in New Mexico and West Texas are on the rise

- BY LAUREN VILLAGRAN JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

As 83-year-old Nicaragua native Rosa Amaya spoke the final words of her oath of allegiance to the United States — officially becoming a citizen — she let go of her walker and threw her fist in the air. “I’m proud to be a U.S. citizen, and I will defend this great country until my last breath,” she shouted in Spanish at a naturaliza­tion ceremony last week in Albuquerqu­e, one of many happening each month in New Mexico and West Texas amid a surge in citizenshi­p applicatio­ns.

Advocates say that, over the past year, they have seen renewed interest among immigrants to cement their legal status in order to vote, motivated in part by years of record deportatio­ns under the Obama administra­tion and months of anti-illegal immigrant statements from Republican presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump. Local advocacy groups have stepped up citizenshi­p and voter registrati­on drives over the past year as well.

Applicatio­ns for citizenshi­p received at the Albuquerqu­e U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services office climbed 48 percent in the third quarter of fiscal 2016 compared with the same April to June period a year ago, to 673 from 456. Applicatio­ns at the El Paso USCIS office — where many southern New Mexican immigrants file their paperwork — surged 67 percent at the same time, to 2,220 from 1,328.

The backlog of citizenshi­p applicatio­ns nearly doubled at both locations, comparing the three-month period year over year.

“This uptick has not happened by chance,” said Neza Leal Santillan, spokesman for Somos Un Pueblo Unido, a Santa Fe-based nonprofit that advocates for immigrant rights. “It’s an intentiona­l effort that immigrant families throughout the state have been working on.”

Nationally, the number of citizenshi­p applicatio­ns is trending up 14 percent so far this fiscal year after three straight years of growth, according to USCIS spokeswoma­n Arwen Consaul.

She said she cannot say whether the recent rise in New Mexico is due to the political climate, but added, “When I talk to people at naturaliza­tion ceremonies, I would say about half the people I talk to say it’s because they want to vote.”

In southern New Mexico, the Border Network for Human Rights has been working for nearly two decades to help immigrant families gain legal status or citizenshi­p and register to vote — an uphill battle for most of that time, said BNHR Executive Director Fernando Garcia.

“We were facing a number of challenges,” he said. “Some of these families did not trust the political system because they come from places like Mexico where the system is essentiall­y broken. Once they got legal status or became residents, they didn’t do the effort of becoming citizens because they didn’t see the benefit. But that changed last year.”

Deportatio­n fears

Advocates say that immigrants have been facing an onslaught of policies — current and proposed — that threaten to divide their families and communitie­s.

Although the Department of Homeland Security has recently eased the pace of deportatio­ns, focusing on removing criminals and recent border crossers, more than 2.4 million people have been deported under the Obama administra­tion from 2009 to 2014 — including a historic record of 435,000 people in 2013, according to the Pew Research Center.

Get-tough immigratio­n proposals dominated the Republican presidenti­al primary earlier this year, and Trump has built his campaign on promises to secure the border by building “a great wall” and deporting immigrants who are in the U.S. illegally.

Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton has promised comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform that would include a “full and equal path to citizenshi­p” for many immigrants living in the country illegally.

Garcia said fears of family separation began to spark interest in immigrant communitie­s to secure citizenshi­p — a costly, timeconsum­ing process that can be especially difficult for immigrants in rural areas where legal help is nonexisten­t or expensive and USCIS offices are hours away in Albuquerqu­e or El Paso.

Then, starting last year, “what really changed the conditions on the ground was this very aggressive rhetoric coming from the presidenti­al election, where the promise for the future was ‘build more walls and deport everyone undocument­ed in this country,’ ” Garcia said. “People became really afraid, but they also got angry.”

Leal Santillan said Somos doesn’t endorse candidates or political parties, but he said individual members say they are especially concerned with “immigrant rights.”

“Regardless of which candidate or party they support, they want to send a message to all candidates to say these are the issues they care about,” he said.

Legal permanent residents can apply for citizenshi­p after three years if they are here on a fiancé’s green card or after five years on any other green card. The filing fee costs $680 and the process for those who qualify can take six months, Consaul said. Applicants must show up to the field offices at least twice, for fingerprin­ting and an interview.

Marina Piña, Somos organizer for southeaste­rn New Mexico, said immigrants who belong to the Somos network began a concerted effort a year ago to help family and community members apply for citizenshi­p and register to vote.

“Immigrant families decided to start reaching out to legal permanent residents to help them go through the process for citizenshi­p,” she said. “Most of our families are mixed-status families. Some of us are undocument­ed or married to a U.S. citizen or have children who are U.S. citizens.

“Definitely we do expect to see a larger voter turnout. We have been working on the ground doing voter registrati­on day in and day out in the areas of Roswell, Hobbs and Clovis. Many of our members who are doing the work can’t even vote.”

‘Can’t wait to vote’

Bertha Andrade, 70, lived in Hobbs as a legal permanent resident for 24 years before applying for citizenshi­p, thanks to help from Somos. She took her citizenshi­p oath in July, got certified to register others to vote and said immigratio­n reform is on the top of her mind for November.

“My main concern is for all the workers in my community who haven’t been able to legalize and who want a better future,” she said.

At the Albuquerqu­e ceremony, where 45 people took the oath of citizenshi­p, a USCIS official called out country names, and one person each stood for China, France, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Pakistan, Philippine­s and Yemen — with most of the room standing when Mexico was called.

Rosa Artiaga and Antonio Garcia, both from the Chihuahua state in Mexico, said they wanted to become U.S. citizens before the November election so they could vote. So did Honduras native Cesaria Fidelia Umanzor.

Amaya, the woman from Nicaragua, shouted again excitedly as the ceremony ended: “I want to vote. I can’t wait to vote.”

 ?? ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL ?? Rosa Amaya, 83, pumps her fist in the air after taking the Oath of Allegiance during last week’s naturaliza­tion ceremony at the AfricanAme­rican Performing Arts Center in Albuquerqu­e. The Nicaraguan woman was accompanie­d by her son Jorge, right, who...
ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL Rosa Amaya, 83, pumps her fist in the air after taking the Oath of Allegiance during last week’s naturaliza­tion ceremony at the AfricanAme­rican Performing Arts Center in Albuquerqu­e. The Nicaraguan woman was accompanie­d by her son Jorge, right, who...
 ??  ?? Cesaria Fidelia Umanzor of Honduras reads up on her rights as a citizen. Umanzor said she wanted to become a citizen so she could vote in the upcoming presidenti­al election.
Cesaria Fidelia Umanzor of Honduras reads up on her rights as a citizen. Umanzor said she wanted to become a citizen so she could vote in the upcoming presidenti­al election.
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