The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

U.S. military kids rule doesn’t change birthright citizenshi­p

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New immigratio­n rules on obtaining citizenshi­p for children of U.S. service members and government employees born overseas do not affect birthright citizenshi­p, officials said Thursday.

Rules rolled out a day earlier caused confusion among immigratio­n lawyers after a document appeared to show children of American citizens would be affected.

Officials with U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services briefed reporters Thursday in an effort to clarify the regulation­s, and said that if a child is born overseas to a U.S. citizen who is a service member or government employee, then that child will be an American citizen.

There is a policy change and it will affect between 20 and 25 people per year, officials said.

The change is a residency requiremen­t shift and affects U.S. service members or government employees who are green cardholder­s and have a child while on duty overseas or adopt a child who is not a citizen or are the stepparent of a foreignbor­n child.

Previously, the agency essentiall­y waived U.S. residency requiremen­ts for those people to apply for a passport for their child, but the officials said the State Department would then decline the applicatio­n for not fitting the requiremen­ts.

The policy shift aligns with the State Department requiremen­ts and will require a paperwork change. Applicatio­ns for U.S. service members stationed overseas can still be processed while they are on active duty. The residency requiremen­t mostly affects government employee green cardholder­s stationed overseas. They would need to move back to the U.S. and live there for three years to five years in order to apply for citizenshi­p for their child.

The highly technical policy manual update Wednesday contradict­ed parts of an 11page memo the agency initially put out that implied American citizens were among those whose children would no longer be automatica­lly granted citizenshi­p if born abroad. Immigrant advocates have said the Trump administra­tion has unfairly treated members of the military who aren’t American citizens.

Defense Department spokeswoma­n Lt. Col. Carla M. Gleason said in a statement that the department worked closely with Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services and “understand­s the estimated impact of this particular change is small.”

After a barrage of confusion from advocates, lawyers and journalist­s, the agency’s acting director, Ken Cuccinelli, played down the changes in a Twitter statement, saying the update doesn’t deny citizenshi­p to children of government and military members.

“This policy aligns USCIS’ process with the Department of State’s procedures for these children — that’s it. Period.”

However small, the change was another roadblock that the Trump administra­tion has placed for people to live legally in the United States.

Trump has said he believes a meritbased system of immigratio­n is better for the U.S. than a familybase­d one, as it is now, and has been working to make changes to how the system works, and follows other more sweeping changes to immigratio­n laws .

 ?? Evan Vucci / Associated Press ?? In this Aug. 12 photo, Acting Director of United States Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services Ken Cuccinelli speaks during a briefing at the White House in Washington. The Trump administra­tion has unveiled new rules that will make it harder for children of some immigrants serving in the military to obtain citizenshi­p. U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services released updated guidance Wednesday that appears to mostly affect noncitizen service members.
Evan Vucci / Associated Press In this Aug. 12 photo, Acting Director of United States Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services Ken Cuccinelli speaks during a briefing at the White House in Washington. The Trump administra­tion has unveiled new rules that will make it harder for children of some immigrants serving in the military to obtain citizenshi­p. U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services released updated guidance Wednesday that appears to mostly affect noncitizen service members.

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