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Plano's long-standing citizenship class continues amid immigrant fears

New citizens pledge take their citizenship oath during the naturalization ceremony Friday, Dec. 6, 2024, in Dallas City Hall.
Yfat Yossifor
/
四虎影院
Plano's Multicultural Outreach Roundtable is hosting its annual citizenship workshop at 2 p.m. on Saturday at Plano ISD's Sockwell Center.

The city of Plano is hosting its annual citizenship workshop on Saturday 鈥 amid growing tensions over immigration in the United States.

 
The workshop, which is scheduled for 2 p.m. at the Plano ISD Sockwell Center on Chapel Hill Boulevard, isn鈥檛 new. Shaheen Salam, the co-chair of the city鈥檚 Multi Cultural Outreach Roundtable, said the city has hosted it for almost two decades on the second Saturday in February.

Plano has a large immigrant population. Salam said the workshop is the city鈥檚 way of giving back to its immigrant community. Everything is free. Several Plano restaurants are providing food. Plano ISD is allowing the city to use the facility through their intergovernmental partnership. There will also be pro bono attorneys who speak Spanish, Chinese and Arabic and information on citizenship and English classes.

Salam said she hopes the workshop will inspire people.

鈥淚f you become a citizen, so many doors will open for you, and you can do so much for the city and for yourself,鈥 she said.

Monica Saenz-Rodriguez, a North Texas immigration attorney, said many immigrants are worried about their status because of President Donald Trump鈥檚 recent executive orders .

鈥淓ven U.S. citizens are concerned about their status,鈥 Saenz-Rodriguez said. 鈥淣aturalized citizens are concerned about their status. We鈥檙e just living in a time of fear because of the rhetoric against immigrants.鈥

The Trump administration has authorized immigration and customs enforcement to in schools, churches and healthcare facilities. There鈥檚 also an executive order that could end for children of immigrants without legal permanent residence. A federal judge in Seattle has the executive order.

Karen Kanhai-Snorton, the volunteer coordinator for South Asian American Voter Education Empowerment ( said immigrants and their families are afraid that Immigration and Customs Enforcement could detain them.

鈥淚 see people with their passport in their pockets just recently,鈥 Kanhai-Snorton said.

Chanda Parbhoo, the executive director and founder of SAAVETX and the , said she never expected to face this when she became a citizen as a teenager.

鈥淚n 1984, when I became a naturalized citizen, I was told it is illegal for anybody to question my citizenship,鈥 Parbhoo said. 鈥淎nd I'm thinking to myself, where have we come since then?鈥

Got a tip? Email Caroline Love at clove@kera.org.

Caroline Love is a corps member for 四虎影院.

四虎影院 is made possible through the generosity of our members. If you find this reporting valuable, consider today. Thank you.

Caroline Love covers Collin County for 四虎影院 and is a member of the Report for America corps. Previously, Caroline covered daily news at Houston Public Media. She has a master's degree from Northwestern University with an emphasis on investigative social justice journalism. During grad school, she reported three feature stories for 四虎影院. She also has a bachelor's degree in journalism from Texas Christian University and interned with 四虎影院's Think in 2019.