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  1. #1
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    2008 Sees Most New US Citizens in More Than 100 Years

    updated 4:59 p.m. EST, Thu November 6, 2008

    2008 SEES MOST NEW U.S. CITIZENS IN MORE THAN 100 YEARS


    WASHINGTON (CNN) -- More than 1 million people took the Oath of Allegiance and became U.S. citizens during fiscal 2008, the largest number in the 100 years the government has been keeping records, according to the Department of Homeland Security.

    A fee increase that paved the way for adding personnel and overtime, and smoother coordination with the FBI were keys to reducing a backlog of citizenship applications, the department said Thursday.

    That backlog was a product of a 2007 spike in applications for citizenship, coming on top of decades of increases in the number of people navigating the protracted naturalization process that culminates in the oath and full citizenship rights.

    Last year's spike was prompted by Hispanic media and grass-roots organizations that encouraged eligible residents to apply for citizenship during the heated debate on granting citizenship to undocumented residents.

    The number of naturalization applications doubled from 730,000 in 2006 to almost 1.4 million in 2007.

    The surge led to a 16- to 18-month delay in processing naturalization applications, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services acting Director Jonathan Scharfen said Thursday. But the agency has reduced processing times to no more than 10 months and is on track to reduce the wait to five months by next summer, he said.

    The fee increase enabled the agency to hire 1,600 adjudication officers and pay for employee overtime during fiscal 2008, he said.

    Additionally, the agency has worked with the FBI to speed name checks, reducing a backlog of 350,000 checks to 33,000, Scharfen said.

    "We had people waiting five years for an FBI name check," he said, but now every case is cleared within a year.

    By next summer, 98 percent of name checks will be done within 30 days, he said. The change is improving the nation's security, because it reduces the amount of time questionable people can legally remain in the country, he said.

    "We're back on track. We're back on goal to what we had promised the public with the fee increase," Scharfen said. "We're going to be able to do it."

    "We did it because a lot of people worked very, very hard -- our new people and leadership in our offices. Folks were working Saturdays and Sundays," he said.

    The growth in immigrants gaining citizenship has occurred alongside the much more publicized growth of unauthorized immigrants in the United States.

    In the 1960s and '70s, the annual number of new citizens hovered in the 100,000 to 200,000 range. In the 1980s, the numbers were in the 200,000 to 300,000 range. But there was a spike in the mid-1990s after Congress voted to legalize 2.7 million undocumented immigrants. As a result, about 1 million people were naturalized in 1996.

    Since then, the numbers have bounced between 441,000 and 886,000 a year. Part of the fluctuation has been the bureaucracy's inability to handle surges, culminating in the deluge of applications in 2007.

    According to Homeland Security figures, an estimated 11.8 million unauthorized immigrants were living in the United States in January 2007, up from 8.5 million in 2000.

    http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/11/06/new.ci ... index.html
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  2. #2
    Senior Member Populist's Avatar
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    In the 1960s and '70s, the annual number of new citizens hovered in the 100,000 to 200,000 range. In the 1980s, the numbers were in the 200,000 to 300,000 range.
    There is no reason why the number of new citizens has to well exceed these figures like they do now. In other words, there is nothing inevitable about the current figure of over a million a year -- which is the result of political decisions in which the public is largely kept out of the decision making process -- not as a result of rational public policy deliberation about what is good for the environment, budgets, taxpayers etc. And to question this does not make one a "restrictionist" or "anti-immigrant."
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  3. #3
    Senior Member crazybird's Avatar
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    I still say there are more new citizens and 1st generation than there are regular long standing citizens.

    Normally that might not be a big deal, if it weren't for the fact the vast majority are from 3rd world nations used to being controlled.....add, wow, America folds when you cry racism, and what about the children.....and well.....it's not America anymore. I mean how many first generation people make it to positions of power? How many immigrants, legal or illegal make the American dream right from jump street? Swam the river, own a McMansion and are in political positions of power and are wealthy picking tomatoes in 10 years of landing? They don't. Someone outside is planting them in order to change things.
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  4. #4
    Senior Member butterbean's Avatar
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    More than 1 million people took the Oath of Allegiance and became U.S. citizens during fiscal 2008,
    Where did they all come from? Doesnt that exceed the number of visas that were given out in the past 5 years? Did they all apply for citizenship while being in the country illegally? Were they MAINLY HISPANIC?
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