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Flying While Undocumented

Angy,
I am from Pennsylvania and I really want to fly out to California soon but I am undocumented. Is it okay for me to fly? What is the process or what should I do?
Thanks,
Namin

Hi Namin,
Thank you for the email. Flying while undocumented can be done, I know lots of people who do it. I haven’t boarded a plane since I came to this country; it’s still on my list of things to do. Namin, I hope this helped a little bit. Consider reading this article it was useful too. However, I do know that before and during your journey there are some things you need to be aware of.

  • Make a thorough search of which airport you’ll be flying out of and where you will be landing. Fly in and out of local airports. International airports are riskier.
  • Also, search detention centers in the area where you will be traveling too.
  • Make a copy of all your IDs, passport etc and leave that with someone. In case you are detained or something goes wrong, they need access to those documents.
  • Fill out a contact sheet and leave that along with your document copies. The sheet should include your address and an emergency contact.
  • Take any emails and phone numbers that may be useful with you like family, friends, lawyer etc.
  • Have family, an attorney or undocumented youth friendly organization aware of where you are going (addresses and all) so they’ll be on stand-by in case something goes wrong.
  • If you have a state ID, consulate ID and/or passport, make sure those are not expired. You don’t really need to show them, just have your boarding pass ready to be checked. If they do ask to see an ID, have your passport open to where it needs to be seen.
  • As much as we hate to admit it, people do get profiled in the airport depending on how they look. Don’t over dress or under dress. Dress comfortably, like you fly all the time; you’ll be taking items off anyway.
  • Once you have passed checkpoints leave the airport, don’t mingle.
  • Call whoever your contacts were to let them know you are safe. They were probably worried!

Email or fill out this form with any questions, concerns, comments or just your own story. This is a space to let it all out! You don’t have to bottle it up inside. Whatever you write is up to you and you will not be judged. Your stories and worries matter! You are not alone. Remember, the insecurities and fears you have, someone else is them having too. Don’t be afraid to speak out.

If you are a fan of the Ask Angy posts..

All We Want Is A Chance

My name is Florencia Palmitano and I am 18 years old. I also fall into the catergory of an undocumented immigrant. My parents decided to come to the US in 2002. I was 6 and had no idea what the US was or what to expect.

Since I was young, I didn’t have a say on wether to go or stay. I, like most kids, had to listen to mom and dad, so it’s not like I had a choice.

I had to learn english, and let me tell you, the teachers did their very best so I could learn the language as quickly as possible. 6 months in the country and I was a regular. You wouldn’t have known that I was from Argentina.

New Jersey is the only place I’ve ever known. This is what I call home. I was raised here. I made some good friends here. I’ve never got in trouble with the law, I was always a good someritan. Just because my parents made a decision that was for the best for my brother and I doesn’t make us criminals.

We are good people, we try our best to succeed and have a better life than what my parents had. Unfortunately we are expiriencing a dead end because we are undocumented immigrants. All we want is a chance. I think it’s time for America to expirience some change!

I was just nine.

When I was little my family moved from Argentina to Uruguay. I was young, and I didn’t really understand why we were moving from my house in Argentina to Uruguay, all I knew was that we were moving to my parent’s country and we were going to be closer to family. I was six at the time, and I really had no expectations. In all honesty, I thought we were going on another family vacation.

Months turned into years, and I began to adjust to my new life. That was until the economy went bad. Both my parents lost their jobs, and a lot of people in Uruguay started to move to different countries. My parents realized that if we didn’t move then, eventually me and brother would. Chances of us staying together as a family were slim to none. They began selling all of our belongings. I didn’t understand what was going on, I didn’t even know where the United States was. It’s funny remembering telling my friends at school, “we’re moving to Los Estados Unidos”, sounded so funny, like a promise land, like a place where only a certain few went, sort of like a myth. We had only heard a couple of stories of people going, but we didn’t know anyone close to us who went.

I didn’t think much of moving to America. I thought it was going to be exactly like my move from Argentina to Uruguay. I thought I was going to be able to come back easily. I thought I was going to be able to see my family every summer, and talk to them everyday. Thinking back to the time when I said goodbye breaks my heart. I didn’t understand what going on, I was just nine, so I said goodbye in a simplistic form and then we left. It has been eleven years since. I haven’t returned and it breaks my heart to say that the closeness between my family and I is now gone. If I were to go back, I really have nothing waiting for me, my life is here.

Anyway, we moved to New York. I went from living in a big house, and having my own room to moving to a tiny apartment in an unsafe neighborhood in the Bronx, sharing a room with my little brother. Adjusting to an all English speaking class was really tough, luckily I met a few people who spoke spanish, and would help me. I got made fun of a lot because my type of spanish was different than theirs. Eventually I learned English, stopped crying every night because I wanted to be with my family, and began accepting my life in this country.

I felt, I should say… I FEEL like an American. My life is here. Everything that makes me who I am I learned here. I am so grateful to be living here. I didn’t pay much attention to my immigration status until I was a senior in high school, then it hit me all at once. No financial aid? What do you mean I can’t enlist in the Coast Guard? I can’t get my license? What about an ID? To make matters worse, my passport expired and the embassy was helping me renovate my papers (still a work in progress, a slow dreadful one).

So here I am 18 years old, and I’m hit with so many things at once. I cried a lot, “it’s not fair,” I would cry to my parents, “why did you bring me to this country! I didn’t ask to be here, I didn’t ask to be in this situation!”

Eventually I got over my depression and I started to take action. I enrolled at the Fashion Institute of Technology for Communications. I am so lucky to live in New York because I’m able to receive in-state tuition, something that unfortunately many undocumented students don’t have the luxury of having. I’m in my second year, and I hope to one day become a journalist. I think it’s important to inform people of the world around us, what’s going on and educate. The Dream Act will change my life… our lives.

California was the first step, now New York!
NYSYLC, thank you for all your efforts. Looking at things on the website helped me realize I’m not alone in these struggles and that there is a support system. It was comforting.
- Maria Fernanda

Ask Angy




what are your experiences? Let me know! angy@nysylc.org

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