Immigration Institute of the Bay Area seeks hope Today Us News


Share the Spirit logoIt was April, just a few months since the new administration took over in the White House, and Cynthia Verduzco walked into an office for the most important interview of her life: She was applying to be a United States citizen.

After she was born in Mexico, her family moved to Los Angeles when she was an infant, then to Newark when she was in middle school.

She raised three kids here. She built her entire life here. For as long as she can remember, the United States was her home.

But when she arrived for her interview at the Department of Homeland Security office in Santa Clara, her husband, Juan, a U.S. citizen, wasn’t allowed to enter with her. Nervous as ever, she stepped into the waiting room and looked up at a television. On the screen: government officials threatening to deport undocumented people.

But Verduzco had a leg up: A team of experts from the Immigration Institute of the Bay Area had been working with her, preparing her for this interview, helping her understand her rights and organize her documents, and offering emotional support along the way.

Fear is one of the weapons being used to keep immigrants from going through the necessary steps to acquire citizenship, institute officials say. But they can help with that.

This year, folks are calling the Immigration Institute of the Bay Area in record numbers seeking to learn their legal rights, receive education about the citizenship process and find emotional support from a team of hard-working experts at an institution that’s over a century old.

In January 2024, the institute received about 8,000 calls from folks looking for help.


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