And then after secondary and denied boarding-- what next? |
I was a bit disappointed by Merida. It is fine, but nothing like as nice as somewhere like Oaxaca. |
The denied boarding would have occurred on the Mexico end and you would have had to go to the US Consulate to get him a passport or rebook a direct flight to Canada. Technically US citizens must present US docs when leaving the US too if asked (although there is no exit immigration), so he could have made him go to the Miami Passport Office If you think the Miami airport is bad, try that place. Honestly, Canadians aren’t very popular in the US right now, so he could have made your life miserable by merely detaining you long enough to miss your flight. There’s plenty they can do - don’t give them the opportunity. |
Well it's a good thing he was reasonable because it would have taken weeks to get a US passport, so we would just hang out at the passport office in Miami or Mexico? Anyway I just mention this because people have asked about whether they need to travel with 2 passports as dual citizens of US and another country. And tbh, I've traveled with him before across the US Canada border and it's been brought up most times but we've never been detained. It did seem like a bigger issue this time. Also I have read it's better to wait until age 18 to renounce US citizenship because I can't do this on his behalf and it's a decision that ideally isn't made by a minor. Apparently if a minor does renounce, they can request to be reinstated within 6 months after reaching age 18. We've only been detained ever on the Canadian side when he was a baby because we had different last names and I was traveling without his dad as a single parent and they thought I was kidnapping him. I just had to show the court order allowing me to travel with him without father present. Now that he can talk, it's hasn't been an issue. I'm just mentioning all of this for information to others, hope it's helpful. |
You can get a travel document at a Consulate, or a same day passport at a passport agency, if necessary. If traveling to the US in the future, he definitely should have a US passport. For travel to any other country, of course he can use a Canadian passport only. It’s less an issue at land borders because he could self declare as a US citizen. Americans often cross into Canada and Mexico without passports by land and are let back in that way. Regarding renunciation, you should consult with a US immigration attorney as there are exit tax consequences, among other considerations. Honestly, for people who don’t want US citizenship, it’s a huge and costly headache, as your son will no doubt find out. |