You are reading

USCIS opens new Long Island City office as Queens Public Library launches citizenship workshops

Via Getty Images

Sept. 25, 2024 By Shane O’Brien 

The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) is set to move its Queens Field Office to Long Island City next month.

The last day of operations for USCIS’s current Queens Field Office at the Jacob K. Javits Federal Building, located at 26 Federal Plaza in Manhattan, is scheduled for Friday, Sept. 27.

USCIS said it will begin accepting a limited number of pre-scheduled appointments at the new office location at 31-00 47th Ave. in Long Island City starting Oct. 9 and estimates that the office will be running at full capacity by the end of the month.

USCIS field offices conduct interviews for lawful permanent residency (Green Card) and naturalization and handle appointments for case-specific issues that require in-person help.

Field offices do not allow walk-ins, and appointments are required for every interview and case-specific query. Members of the public in need of emergency immigration services or an appointment can submit an online appointment request form or contact the USCIS Contact Center at 1-800-375-5283.

The relocation of USCIS’ Queens Field Office to Long Island City coincides with the Queens Public Library initiative offering free citizenship classes and mock citizenship interviews.

The free virtual citizenship classes will take place every Monday at 6 p.m. from Sept. 30 until Dec. 16, with a break on Oct. 14 for Columbus Day and on Nov. 11 for Veterans Day.

The course, which includes 10 free sessions, will educate immigrants about American history, government, and culture before their citizenship exams.

Meanwhile, QPL’s free citizenship mock interviews launched on Sept. 12 and will take place every Thursday at 4:30 p.m. until June 26 next year. There will be no mock interview sessions on Thanksgiving on Nov. 28, Boxing Day on Dec. 26, or Juneteenth on June 19.

The initiative allows immigrants to avail of a virtual one-on-one practice interview to test their speaking, reading, and writing skills and their knowledge of the United States government and history. The online interview will be led by a volunteer and will give participants a good idea of what typically occurs during the USCIS Naturalization Interview and Test.

QPL also held a free virtual Immigration & Citizenship Legal Clinic on Wednesday, Sept. 11, enabling immigrants to obtain free aid with citizenship applications, Green Card renewals, requesting immigration files, work permit renewals, and other issues.

 

email the author: news@queenspost.com

One Comment

Click for Comments 
Alenn Nidea

I can assist in citizenship workshops. I can teach citizenship classes. I live in Long Island City. Where can I apply for this kind of work?

Reply

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.


The reCAPTCHA verification period has expired. Please reload the page.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Disgraced former Queens Council Member Dan Halloran arrested on child porn charges

Former Queens Council Member Dan Halloran, who was convicted in 2014 for his role in two bribery and corruption schemes and served five years in federal prison, is in trouble with the law again.

Halloran was arrested at Miami International Airport on Saturday, March 29, and charged with possessing child pornography and transporting child pornography after U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers inspected his Apple iPhone 14 Pro Max and an Apple iPad 6th Generation tablet and discovered several videos of suspected child pornography located in a hidden folder album on the phone’s photos application, according to the criminal complaint filed in the Southern District of Florida.

Southeast Queens man convicted of triple murder in 2022 stabbing rampage that killed girlfriend, her son and cousin: DA

A Jamaica man was convicted at trial Tuesday of murder in the first degree and other crimes for the vicious stabbing deaths of his girlfriend, her son and a visiting cousin during a bloody rampage in June 2022.

Travis Blake, 31, of 155th Street, faces up to life in prison at sentencing following the three-and-a-half-week-long trial. The jury deliberated for just two hours before reaching the guilty verdict in Queens Supreme Court.

Op-ed: The crisis facing immigrant gender-based violence survivors

April 2, 2025 By Assembly Member Jessica González-Rojas, Zeinab Eyega and Yasmeen Hamza

As advocates who have dedicated our careers to achieving gender equity and justice, and as the representative of and service providers for some of the most culturally diverse districts in the country, we know firsthand the importance of ensuring that survivors of gender-based violence receive support that speaks to their specific needs. In Queens, where nearly 300 languages and dialects are spoken and we face the third-highest rate of reported domestic violence in New York State, the call for culturally specific services is urgent—and it is time for us to act.