@advantage - O.M.G!!! Overall, the ceremony itself was worth it. I waited (and waited and waited) around to get ym photo taken with the District Judge who presided over the proceedings. BUT, seriously, my middle school and its kids have organized things better. The run of my day went like this...
- Up at 5am, get the kids up at 5.30, out the door at 6am
- drive around the beltway (from Richmond/Katy area) to Aldine ISD location (~1hr), arrive just before 7am
- See everyone waiting in (long long) line in car park, join the line.
- HEar/see people talking about a form THAT I DIDN'T RECEIVE, that says if the last 3 digits of your A# are 0-499 then go to the East carpark, 500-999 go to West. By luck, we'd parked in West and my digits were for West.
- get to the top (or near enough) of the line. Sheriff or whoever tries to tell people (with no megaphone or anything) that you *DON'T* have to wait in line to go in, simply make sure you're ont he right side (they had desks set up to check people off to ensure they arrived). SO, 30 minutes of being a sheeple wasted - coulda/shoulda just walked on in. If they had posted just 2-5 signs along the pathway, *everyone* would have known what to do...... but noooo.
- sit for ***3 hours*** before ceremony starts. Ok, i get it, they had 2210 people there to become citizens, and then there were family members and all too, but seriosuly, you evere been to the football? or baseball? seriously more people there and much faster seating/preparation time.
- after the 3 hr wait, judge presides, says his thing, all very formal (basically 'court is in session'). We all say oath as a group. Cameras and video cameras all allowed to be running during the proceedings (so, in a way, not like court i guess).
- after the judge does his thing, we do our thing, judge welcomes us as US citizens, we get speech (sorta like at graduation) from prominent lawyer (whose parents were naturalized concentration camp survivors)
- then, like being in school *not allowed to leave* to get certificate - wait until your 'color' is called. So, when u signed in in the morning, u got your certificate # written on a sheet of paper, that was colored. This is the color u neeed to wait for. This took a while......
- in the end, because we waited to get photo taken with the judge, we walked out at 12.10..... U full 5 hours 20 mins after we had arrived.
- drive home for an hour and we'd made 6+ hours! yay me!
Overall, I liked the judge (heck, his mom was australian , as was I before today), the 'inspirational' speech was good. The overal organization by USCIS left me wondering why I don't go help these guys out.
SO, my advice to anyone going to the next one.....
#1 ensure u get the descriptive piece of paper telling you to go Eats or West car park. Fromj where u get this, I can't tell you.
#2 go to the appropriate car park, *ignore* any line that may be formed (or *at least* put your family members in line while u walk to the front - make sure all cell phones are on so u can call them), go tot the top of the line and ask the dude if you can just walk on up, when he says yes (becasue he will, and did to me), call the fam, tell them to walk up with you. Tell people around you to do the same thing (stop being sheeple) and get inside.
#3 take some money - they sell kolaches, donuts and coffee and such.
#4 make sure the kids have something to do. and yes, u can bring in your own food and drink. NO bag searches of any kind were done.
If i've forgotten anything, its due to my fatigue
any quesiton, definitely ping them thru and i'll answer as best as i can.
Steve (a new US citizen).