Concerns rise over U.S. plan to close all overseas immigration offices

By Nicole Acevedo, Carmen Sesin and Reuters

Immigration advocates and attorneys like Nada Sater are concerned that the Trump administration is “creating a bigger catastrophe” if it follows through with plans to permanently close nearly two dozen U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services field offices across the globe.

“This is going to affect refugees, military servicemen applying for citizenship, the family reunification program,” Sater, an immigration attorney based in Miami, told NBC News.

The immigration agency said Tuesday that it was in “preliminary discussions” to shift its international office workloads to offices in the United States, agency spokesperson Jessica Collins said in a statement.

Officials at the agency claim that closing down international field offices would save millions of dollars each year.

“They are looking at bottom-line dollars, but bottom-line dollars will end up catching up to them,” Sater said.

Enrique Gutierrez and John Santos, media directors at the Democratic National Committee, said in a statement that “the administration’s explanation that the move is an effort to cut government spending does not hold up since USCIS’s funding comes primarily from fees paid by people who use its services.”

source: nbcnews.com