el_expatriado
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- Joined
- Jun 6, 2005
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I applied for citizenship in 2006 without a lawyer and from 2006-2011 I got nowhere. There's even a sign at the office where you start the trámite that says "No se necesita gestores ni abogados" (No lawyers are needed.)
I put an ordinary lawyer on the case in 2011 (not a citizenship lawyer) and by the end of 2012 I got my carta de ciudadania.
Mine was a pretty simple case and I fulfilled all the requirements (legal income in white, I speak fluent spanish, plenty of years of residency, no criminal record, I have a permanent DNI, etc.) So once the lawyer started dealing with all the bureaucracy, things started moving. Basically you need a lawyer to just go to the office every once in a while, speak with the different legal secretaries, pressure them to send out the oficios (official requests from the court to the different government agencies), etc.
The Federal Courts here don't have an IT system, so the lawyers here know they need to get all the papers they submit stamped just in case they lose the originals, etc. I had a lot of delays just due to missing papers in my case. So the lawyer had to reconstruct my file. Add to this the fact that the secretaries at the court are not helpful (neither are any of the government agencies) and it is worth it to have someone helping you through this.
If I was to do this all over again, I would go with a lawyer from the very beginning instead of attempting to do it on my own. But I'm the kind of person who hates paperwork and bureaucracy. I would much prefer to pay someone else a little something to deal with all of that for me and help me through the process.
I put an ordinary lawyer on the case in 2011 (not a citizenship lawyer) and by the end of 2012 I got my carta de ciudadania.
Mine was a pretty simple case and I fulfilled all the requirements (legal income in white, I speak fluent spanish, plenty of years of residency, no criminal record, I have a permanent DNI, etc.) So once the lawyer started dealing with all the bureaucracy, things started moving. Basically you need a lawyer to just go to the office every once in a while, speak with the different legal secretaries, pressure them to send out the oficios (official requests from the court to the different government agencies), etc.
The Federal Courts here don't have an IT system, so the lawyers here know they need to get all the papers they submit stamped just in case they lose the originals, etc. I had a lot of delays just due to missing papers in my case. So the lawyer had to reconstruct my file. Add to this the fact that the secretaries at the court are not helpful (neither are any of the government agencies) and it is worth it to have someone helping you through this.
If I was to do this all over again, I would go with a lawyer from the very beginning instead of attempting to do it on my own. But I'm the kind of person who hates paperwork and bureaucracy. I would much prefer to pay someone else a little something to deal with all of that for me and help me through the process.