You may recall that at the beginning of August I began the process of applying for my permanent Mexican residency visa. My two year temporary visa was going to expire in August, and, since I am married to a Mexican citizen, I was eligible for a permanent visa. Since obtaining my temporary visa had been such a pain in the derriere, we contacted an immigration lawyer to facilitate the process.
I assumed that I would have my visa before leaving on my trip to Ohio in September, but then I read that it can take between two to eight weeks to receive it. I had to get a special document allowing me to leave the country and return while my application was being processed By the time I returned from Ohio, more than eight weeks had passed. There was still no word on my visa. I was starting to worry a bit.
Then, last Monday, we received word from the lawyer's office that the visa had been approved. We were to meet the lawyer's assistant at 10:30 at the "Instituto Nacional de Migración". There I was to be fingerprinted, have my photo taken, and receive my visa card. The assistant met me outside and led me to the side entrance. He gave me a document that said that my visa had been approved, and that was my pass to enter the building. I was to go to the biometrics office upstairs. However, when I reached the stairs, the policeman told me to take a seat. "Old geezers", the disabled, and families with small children don't have to trudge up the steps. (I guess in the two years since my last visit, I had passed the threshold of being considered an "old man".) There was a separate biometrics office for us on the ground floor.
Judging from my experience when I got my temporary visa, I figured that I would have a lengthy wait. I think the wait would have been shorter if I had been upstairs in the large biometrics room where there might be one hundred or more people waiting their turn. Downstairs there were perhaps a couple dozen people waiting, but there was just one employee shuffling papers, doing the fingerprinting, taking the photos, and running to and from the office where the cards are printed.
I had entered the building around 11:00 AM and it was not until 1:30 PM that I left with my permanent residency card in my hand. My new status gives me all the rights of a Mexican citizen, except, of course, for the right to vote. I am even allowed to seek employment in Mexico. Yeah, right. As if this retired "geezer" is going to go back to work!

Congrats on your new citizenship status -now you can even buy property on the beach!
ReplyDeleteThanks, although I am not a citizen, just a permanent resident. Citizenship would require more years of residency and a test proving my ability to speak Spanish and my knowledge of Mexico.
DeleteCongratulations!
ReplyDelete-Scott
¡Gracias, Scott!
Delete