WHO NEEDS CITIZENSHIP?
Some eligible immigrants say no to U.S. citizenship
MIAMI—More than an estimated 8.5 million immigrants living in the U.S. were eligible for citizenship in 2012. Yet fewer than 800,000 took the leap, according to the latest Department of Homeland Security numbers.
If statistics hold, nearly 60 percent of the remainder eventually
“It’s not that I don’t like the U.S. I love it here. It would be almost to renounce my family, my background.”— Lena Dyring
will—a percentage that has been slowly rising.
Still, there are many holdouts. Immigrants give a variety of explanations as to why, most commonly:
The cost of the process that most of the time takes seven years. It usually costs $680,
though fee waivers are available for some, and the cost is often multiplied by several family members;
A lack of English. Immigrants must demonstrate basic knowledge of U.S. history and government and pass an English proficiency language exam, unless they are over 50, and then certain waivers may apply.
The potential loss of benefits from their native land, such as the ability to freely travel and work across Europe.
Still others say they simply don’t see the need. Here, some legal permanent residents explain their reticence in their own words to The Associated Press.
LANGUAGE BARRIER
Nancy Alvarez, 35, came to the United States a decade ago from Havana. She ticks off the list of jobs she’s held since then: nursing assistant, notary, childcare worker, school nutritionist. She has half a dozen diplomas and certificates, but the one she doesn’t have: citizen. Alvarez blames her lack of English skills.
“I should have studied English when I first came here,” she says. But in the Miami suburb of Hialeah where she first landed, everyone spoke Spanish. Only a few years later did she notice that even employers doing business primarily in Spanish still wanted an English speaker.
By then, she was working all day, coming home to prepare meals for her family. With only one car and a spouse working nights, she says she would have had to take the bus and find someone to watch her baby. And with cutbacks to education programs, few classes were offered.
“Now I’m too embarrassed,” she says. Recently, she moved to the Orlando area. Maybe with fewer Spanish speakers there, she’ll finally start learning English, she says, and then she will think about citizenship.
THE EUROPEAN PASSPORT
“I guess it’s an emotional thing,” said Lena Dyring, as to why she hasn’t sought to become a U.S. citizen. “I’d have to renounce my Norwegian citizenship. “It’s not that I don’t like the U.S. I love it here. It would be almost to renounce my family, my background.” Dyring came to the U.S.
in 2005 with her husband, a naturalized U.S. citizen who was born in Colombia. The two met at a bar in Norway. She still isn’t used to some American customs: the hello hug—or in Miami, the hello kiss—and the “how are you?” greeting. In Norway, people don’t ask that question until halfway into the conversation when they really want to hear an answer, she says.
But her decision to opt out is more than an emotional one. The Norwegian Seafarer’s labor union representative acknowledges the practical benefits.
“If I wanted to live or work in Europe one day, I could do that without much difficulty. And my children can have Norwegian citizenship through me.”
Although in Norway, individuals must give up their citizenship to become Americans, other European countries allow people to retain dual citizenship.
Dyring says she’d like to be able to vote, not so much for president but on local issues.
Still, she isn’t convinced becoming a citizen offers her that much. The blonde 39-yearold mother of two fears neither racial profiling nor deportation.
And since health care is cheaper in Norway, she wants to keep all options.
NEVER FELT QUITE WELCOME
“I thought that American girl was extremely interesting,” Luis Sanz says of falling for his future wife while she studied Spanish in his native Madrid. When she returned home, he decided to visit, never imagining he would stay. More than a decade later in the U.S., the couple has three children. Sanz works as a Website designer for the University of California, Riverside.
“When I came to the U.S., I didn’t speak any English,” he says. “And with all the process with my papers, I felt very mistreated, and I felt like a secondhand person.”
They did move briefly to Spain, “but I’d become too used to the United States, to the freedom,” he says. “I truly love this country. We know we are not moving back,” Sanz says, adding that he has yet to take the oath of allegiance for a combination of reasons. “I get a little lazy, but I still keep a little bit of that pain—and I feel it every day because of my accent—and if people meet me, they still view me as a secondhand citizen. It makes me feel bad, and that I don’t want to completely commit.”