Change in US immigration laws sparks spate of marriages
Donna Watson's proposal for marriage from her year-long boyfriend,
Zachary, came with a deadline: April 1, the date on which many
undocumented immigrants in the United States believe they could
face penalties if they are not naturalised citizens.
Though Watkins was in love with her Moroccan boyfriend, she wondered
if they were ready for marriage. They belonged to different religions
and cultures, she worried. ''But Zachary was so sweet, offering
to take me to marriage counseling, so I thought we should get
married quickly,'' says Watkins, who spoke on condition that her
real name not be used.
Weeks later, however, the marriage was off. ''It turned out that
getting married by April 1 doesn't really help your chances of
becoming naturalised,'' Watkins explains.
This couple may have reconsidered their wedding plans, but others
are queuing up to get married. Immigrants are marrying US citizens
at a rapid rate in the mistaken belief that the April 1 deadline
- all fool's day - is the last date by which such marriages can
help to speed up naturalisation proceedings. (Under US law, a
spouse of a US citizen can be naturalised if he or she first lives
three years as a legal resident of the United States).
The city clerk's offices in the Five Boroughs of New York City
have all reported being swamped by the flood of new marriages.
A civil marriage in New York normally takes about half an hour
to perform, an officer at the Queens City clerk's office explains.
But with the daily lines of over 100 couples outside the office
each day, the wait could be four hours or more, she explains.
And that wait may be for nothing.
''Most of the (rush for marriages) is based on myth and confusion,''
says Roseann Micallef, executive director of the New York-based
Centre for Immigrants' Rights. ''By April 1 some of the provisions
of last year's Immigration Reform Act go into effect, but not
any that makes or breaks anyone's chances to become a citizen.''
Under laws passed last year by Congress to restrict immigration
to the United States, April 1 was to be the cut-off date for undocumented
immigrants to remain in the United States without paying a cash
fine. However, under pressure from supporters of immigration,
the threat of cash penalties against illegal immigrants was lifted
this month, Micallef says.
Still, with little information about the new laws reaching the
immigrants themselves, many have mistakenly come to see April
1 as a major cutoff date for becoming naturalised through marriage
to a citizen.
''If you miss that deadline, it could take 10 years before they
look at your application,'' one prospective suitor, who calls
himself Ahmed, insists.
That's not true, says Micallef, who argues that even people getting
married before April face the same delays as everyone else in
having their applications processed by the Immigration and Naturalisation
Service. ''The delays are related to the volume of petitions that
the INS has,'' she says. ''Right now, they're swamped.''
The problem, immigration activists argue, is that the recent changes
in immigration laws have created a system in which many groups
of immigrants stand to lose either federal welfare benefits or
their right to stay in the country under a confusing array of
deadlines that kick in this year. ''It's creating a panic,'' Micallef
argues.
UNI
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