Albuquerque Journal

Religious workers face an immigratio­n backlog in US

- BY JUAN CARLOS CHAVEZ

TAMPA, Fla. — For over four years, Andrés Arenas has been serving as a spiritual leader and musical director at Iglesia Vida Nueva, a Pentecosta­l church in West Tampa, where the congregati­on mainly consists of families from Latin America.

In 2019, Arenas came from Bucaramang­a, in north-central Colombia, accompanie­d by his wife, to support this church and contribute to its growth. Attendees gather three times a week to pray, raise their voices in songs of praise and share stories of faith in the building at 610 W. Waters Ave. Arenas also manages a group of around 50 church members who live in Zephyrhill­s and hold smaller prayer gatherings in private homes.

“We’re like a big family,” said Arenas, 27. “That’s the most important thing.”

But Arenas isn’t sure how much longer he can continue with the congregati­on.

His R-1 visa, which is granted to foreign-born religious workers for up to five years, is set to expire in December. Two years ago he applied to obtain a permanent residency, but his request has not been processed as he expected.

That’s because of a backlog in permanent residency applicatio­ns. The approval process for applicatio­ns for people who already have visas under the category known as Employment-Based Fourth Preference (EB-4) used to take about 18 months. The government grants 10,000 green cards annually for the EB-4 category, which includes foreign-born religious workers, former U.S. government employees, translator­s and certain broadcaste­rs, among others.

But some petitions that were filed as early as January 2019 are still awaiting approval, and the waitlist can now take years, according to the Evangelica­l Immigratio­n Table, a coalition of evangelica­l denominati­ons and organizati­ons that advocates for immigratio­n reform.

That’s at least in part because last year, immigratio­n authoritie­s added another group of immigrants to the EB-4 category — minors from Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras who are listed as “special immigrant juveniles” because they were abandoned, abused or neglected by a parent.

“Both Congress and the State Department should act now to reduce the unnecessar­ily lengthy backlogs in visa processing,” said Galen Carey, vice president of government relations with the National Associatio­n of Evangelica­ls. He said it’s tragic when spiritual leaders serving in churches and communitie­s have to leave the country and abandon their ministries due to “bureaucrat­ic delays.”

“For years we have sent missionari­es abroad to plant churches; now many of those churches are reciprocat­ing by sending workers to help us,” Carey said.

Religious workers are not the only ones affected by delays. According to the Cato Institute, a Washington, D.C.-based libertaria­n think tank, the employment-based green card backlog reached a new record of 1.8 million cases in 2023.

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