03/18/2024
As of the most recent census, just over 28% of Acton residents are foreign-born. While some of these residents may have since obtained naturalized citizenship, it is just as likely that many may not yet have, for any number of reasons including the barriers put in place by our government. The wait time for a Green Card can be anywhere from a few months to 100+ years. Despite the best efforts and intentions of a tax-paying legal resident, citizenship my literally not be an option in their own lifetime due to this green card backlog.
While waiting for a Green Card, immigrating individuals have limited options. Get selected in the H1B lottery (another incredibly flawed process) and continue to work somewhere that sponsors H1B employees - extending/renewing the H1B visa until your Green Card is approved. You can transition to "Authorized Stay" (which is legally overstaying your Visa), if you submitted your Green Card application prior to your visa expiring. Generally (without government authorization for specific circumstances) you cannot leave the country while your Green Card application is pending, and you run the risk of being penalized for overstaying your visa if for any reason your Green Card application is denied. Additionally, unless you're approved for an EAD (employment authorization document), you'd be unable to work during that period of time either. An EAD requires employee sponsorship and is only available to certain categories of Green Card seekers.
To tie all of this together, while waiting what could be a literal lifetime for a Green Card (which you must hold for three to five years before being able to apply for citizenship), many of these residents opt to go the H1B or EAD route. And these tax-paying residents will be unable to voice their opinions about where their tax dollars go, how their town services and resources are managed, what happens in the school systems to which they may well send their children, etc.
At an immigration summit in the US Capitol, lawmakers from both parties called for addressing the Green Card backlog, which is disproportionately affecting Indian professionals and H-1B visa issues. They urged the removal of the seven percent country quota to expedite the process and prevent waiting...