Chico News & Review:
http://www.newsreview.com/chico/content?oid=1894337


Chico Filmmaker Stuck in France
Gerard Ungerman Has Been in the U.S. for 20 years, but May Not Be Allowed to
Return.

By Christine G.K. LaPado: [email protected]
<http://www.newsreview.com/chico/Contact?content=1894337> 
This article was published on December 23rd, 2010 

 
Documentary filmmaker Gerard Ungerman and partner Stacey Wear in November
2010 on the hill of Montmartre overlooking Paris. Wear's flight to visit
Ungerman was possible through the generosity of a family member who works
for United Airlines and secured her an affordable "buddy pass." 
PHOTO COURTESY OF GERARD UNGERMAN       
Help Ungerman get home:
Go to: www.FreeWillProd.com to help with Ungerman's attorney fees and to
learn more about his films. Join Facebook group "Help Gerard Ungerman return
to the United States."
        
At the beginning of the year, the CN&R named Gerard Ungerman one of nine
local movers and shakers to pay attention to in 2010 (see "Who to watch in
2010 <http://www.newsreview.com/chico/content?oid=1349673> ," Jan. 7, 2010).
We dubbed the French-born environmental filmmaker a "green visionary" for
his devotion to a more sustainable world.
His cutting-edge documentary films, such as 2005's The Oil Factor,
questioning the connection between the U.S. military's role in Iraq and
Afghanistan and America's consumption of oil, and 2008's
sustainability-focused Belonging, narrated by Dustin Hoffman, were both part
of Chico State's popular 10-week Green Films & Solutions Series in 2009.
Ungerman also set up a go-to website, www.greentransitionchico.org
<http://www.greentransitionchico.org/> , that posts events and stories
related to local sustainability, and was working on a follow-up film to
Belonging.
"For his part, in the coming year Ungerman would appear to be setting the
bar for involvement in the green movement," we wrote.
Little did we-or he-know that 2010 would end up being the year that Ungerman
would become involved in what may be the most difficult battle of his life.
On Dec. 13, Ungerman-after being "stuck" in Paris for five months while he
wrangled with U.S. immigration authorities over his right to return home to
Chico-was officially barred from re-entering the U.S. and coming home to his
partner of five years, former KZFR Music Director Stacey Wear, and her two
children, with whom he has lived since November 2008. This happened despite
U.S. Homeland Security's previous approval of his immigrant visa, which
should have allowed him to return and continue living in the U.S., his
adopted home country for 20 years.
U.S. immigration authorities in Europe charged that Ungerman had been living
in the U.S. illegally, and therefore was not eligible for the visa that had
already been promised him and that he had traveled to the U.S. Consulate in
Paris to pick up on orders from Homeland Security.
Ungerman has until mid-January 2011 to wage a legal fight for his right to
return to the U.S., for which he and Wear recently secured a high-powered
(and costly) immigration attorney from Portland, Ore. Failing that, Ungerman
faces a 10-year wait before he is eligible to apply for another visa,
according to current U.S. immigration law.
"I've lived in the U.S. since early 1991 and I have always been under one
visa or another (mostly work or press)," Ungerman explained recently by
e-mail from France. "I applied for an immigrant visa last year that was
finally approved early this year. ... all the trouble came from the fact
that my previous legal status ran out after U.S. immigration had already
started processing my case."
Both Ungerman and Wear believed that, as Ungerman put it, "being under
immigration procedure pretty much universally gives you blanket protection
because you are in the fold of immigration, they know your whereabouts and
they are treating your case."
In other words, even though Ungerman's visitor visa had run out at the end
of February 2009, and Homeland Security did not grant him his immigrant visa
(which he applied for early that same month) until April 2010, Ungerman
believed he was in the U.S. legally, since his new visa was in process and
he was in ongoing contact with immigration authorities. They never told him
he had become "illegal."
"What I didn't know is that I should not have left the country," Ungerman
continued, "but I should have worked out with a lawyer to convert my
immigrant-visa approval into an actual immigrant status from inside the
country. Instead I went out to Paris, where I had been 'invited' to pick up
my visa at the U.S. Consulate. By doing that, I stepped into a bear trap
because the consul there accused me [in July] of having stayed illegally and
told me I was ineligible for my visa for 10 years and couldn't go back
home."
Ungerman next filled out a "Waiver of Ineligibility" form that, if granted,
could have allowed him re-entry into the United States, while Wear worked
frantically stateside assembling piles of documents and letters in support
of Ungerman's returning home. He waited five months in France for a reply,
only to find out that his waiver request had been denied.
"The legal fees that I will now incur are going to be brutal, and that is an
area where my family and I are really going to need help," said Ungerman.
"According to the [waiver-request] denial notice, what's not at issue is our
relationship," said a weary Wear by phone recently. "Gerard's political
activism doesn't seem to be, either. What they said is that we failed to
illustrate that it's an extreme hardship for me [that Ungerman remains in
France], which is ridiculous. Not only is he my partner, but they're well
aware of a situation ... concerning my daughter at the precise time Gerard
was leaving to presumably pick up his visa."
Wear said that her 10-year-old daughter, Marley, had just been diagnosed
with an autoimmune disorder and was put "on a serious course of treatment"
involving several months of trips to UC San Francisco and the Enloe Cancer
Center. Wear said Ungerman had told her, "I'll be back [from Paris] in three
weeks. We'll get through this together."
Additionally, Wear's divorce agreement with her daughter's father stipulates
that she cannot relocate outside of Chico until Marley, her youngest child,
is 18, or she must give up custody of her children to their father.
"I pled with [immigration authorities] to send him home," said Wear of
Ungerman. "I got together three pounds of documents in four days-letters,
medical records, all sorts of stuff. I was like Erin Brockovich. ... The
kids wrote letters, too. I don't know how anyone could read Marley's letter
and not send him home."
"I know he's OK," said Wear, "and there's beautiful things coming out of
this-he's writing a book. But the thought of him not being able to return to
me and to this place he calls home on a technicality-is insanity. I don't
think it's melodramatic to say that this has the potential to totally ruin
our lives. If we had known this was going to happen, he wouldn't have gone
[to Paris]. ... Basically, he paid his own deportation costs."

Contact us about this story
<http://www.newsreview.com/chico/Contact?content=1894337> 






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