Immigrant Woman Sees ‘Cloudy’ Future Ahead

For one widowed mother, the promise of immigration into the United States has been far from easy. Her immigration status for herself and her children was terminated when her husband died, only two years after arriving in America.
Immigrant Woman Sees ‘Cloudy’ Future Ahead
Tara MacIsaac
3/8/2011
Updated:
10/1/2015
<a><img src="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/09/cloudyfuture_2.jpg" alt="A BETTER LIFE: Sherin Inniss immigrated to the US from Guyana for a better life with her husband and children, her hopes were soon dashed when her husband passed away and she was left to raise her children on her own. (Tara MacIsaac/THE EPOCH TIMES)" title="A BETTER LIFE: Sherin Inniss immigrated to the US from Guyana for a better life with her husband and children, her hopes were soon dashed when her husband passed away and she was left to raise her children on her own. (Tara MacIsaac/THE EPOCH TIMES)" width="320" class="size-medium wp-image-1807063"/></a>
A BETTER LIFE: Sherin Inniss immigrated to the US from Guyana for a better life with her husband and children, her hopes were soon dashed when her husband passed away and she was left to raise her children on her own. (Tara MacIsaac/THE EPOCH TIMES)
NEW YORK—Sherin Inniss, 51, came to New York from Guyana in 2006. In 2001, the New York City Department of Education (DOE) began recruiting Caribbean teachers to come work in the city’s public schools. Inniss’s husband was one of these teachers. He passed away two years after arriving in America.

Left to raise two sons on her own, her sorrow was aggravated by the fact that the immigration status Inniss and her children enjoyed passed with her husband. The Social Security he paid into was not offered to his family, as they are not permanent residents.

Inniss is sponsored by Tuoro College to work. The boys are covered under her H-1B work visa that depends on continued employement with Tuoro College. She is an accounting tutor, but it is not consistent work. She brings in about $800 a month. The family was homeless for a while. They are crowded in a friend’s living room for now, paying $400 a month, but the friend wants his space back soon.

“It’s like you’re seeing a cloudy glass,” said Inniss, describing how she feels when looking into her future. “You can’t see clearly what’s happening on the other side.”

Her eldest son is 16 years old and hopes to attend college. At a loss for what to do, Inniss says her son “gets very, very depressed.” Inniss, along with other Caribbean teachers recruited by the DOE, continue to petition the city to fulfill what they feel are the “broken promises” of a better life in America.