As part of an
assessment of her first months at the head of the Portuguese Consulate General
in New York, Luisa Pais Lowe stated that the summer months were used to catch
up on work that included civil registration, nationality and visa processes.
"It was six very
useful months, of learning and getting to know the community and its value. It
was six months in which I carefully planned the creation of conditions to, for
example, take the consulate to Portuguese clubs, but also other strategic
action initiatives in the economic and cultural areas, which are also part of
our mandate", said the diplomat.
"We are now going
to start planning the Cultural Activity Plan for the next year. But we had to
do something very important, which we all have to do from time to time: we
spent the summer catching up on work. Due to a shortage of human resources, work
had accumulated and this happens. It is not attributable to anything or anyone",
explained the consul, speaking to Lusa in the heart of Manhattan.
According to Luisa
Pais Lowe, the civil registration and nationality processes were the ones that
accumulated the most delays.
Demand for visas
"We also have a
very high demand for visas, because we know that Portugal is in fashion and
there are more and more Americans or residents in the United States who want to
move to Portugal. Therefore, we have registered a very large increase in work
in the area of visas and it was basically on these two aspects that we were
working", she detailed.
The number of North
Americans residing in Portugal is at the highest level in more than a decade,
according to data from the Foreigners and Borders Service (SEF), cited by
Jornal Económico. At the end of 2021, there were 7,000 people born in the
United States of America living in the country, twice as many as during the
last three years.
Considered strategic,
the Consulate General in New York has a mandate that includes not only the
provision of consular services, but also work to support the country's
promotion in the areas of business and business, culture and the Portuguese
language, in work carried out in close coordination with the Portuguese Agency
for Investment and Foreign Trade (AICEP), Turismo de Portugal and Camões –
Institute for Cooperation and Language.
About six months after
taking office, Luisa Pais Lowe assured that the consulate is at a level where
"the work arrives and is done, it does not accumulate" and considered
it "gratifying to see the joy and gratitude" with which the consular
team is received whenever you travel to cities further away from downtown New
York.
I sincerely hope that Brandon's Americans stay put in Brandon's America!!!
It's what they wanted, it's what they asked for, it's what they deserve.
By Hart from Lisbon on 05 Nov 2022, 11:53
So true not wanted.
By J from Lisbon on 05 Nov 2022, 18:17
Let's try and keep these loudmouths and gun toting "wild west" types out of here.. I see pretty soon Bachalau will be replaced by Steak and beans.. unfortunately
By ZURATH KAMDIN from Lisbon on 06 Nov 2022, 07:17
Um, the Americans wanting to leave the US would be the opposite of the "gun-toting" cowboy type. More likely they'd be part of the open-minded, industrious set. You know, for one small example, the ones behind the IMF, a de facto Amerian organization set up by the US to aid WW2 Allied nations (which Portugal, and its 3-day mourning period after Hitler died, was not) and the organization that, primarily funded by American taxpayers, gave us that 92 billion that is the ONLY reason our rapid decline into developing-nation status was thwarted. How soon we forget.
Go ahead and rip specific portions of the US--I'm no fan of the "cowboy" sector or the government's foreign policy--but it's pretty weird coming from a populace whose only nationalized wealth came from ruthless colonialism, and whose rate of immigration to the US still outpaces Americans-to-Portugal 1,000-to-1.
But stereotyping is easy and comforting, no?
By João C from Lisbon on 06 Nov 2022, 15:02
Ola from Coimbra today...I like to call this article trigger points...The chef I talked with today was happy to have me...He knows I support his restaurant everytime I come to town...Calls me Mr. Texas...and not a care is given to politics, and etc. both in Portugal and the United States...but appreciation of good food and conversations about what is right between the two countries...Boa Sorte!
By Sakamoto Saurezz from Other on 06 Nov 2022, 22:26
Pretty funny that the comments show that the immigrants are against other immigrants.
By John from USA on 07 Nov 2022, 09:45
Glad to see the Consulate has tightened up its work processes and responsiveness to Portuguese citizens living in New York State! Kudos to you…Obrigado!
By Sanford Mayer from USA on 07 Nov 2022, 14:20
As a soon to be retired American, I'd love to move to and retire in Portugal. I have my political and social reasons, which I'll keep to myself, but I just feel the need to leave the US for a more simple and slower paced life I can enjoy. At least that's the sense I get from all the YouTube videos I've been watching lately. But first, a long vacation to visit Madeira, The Algarve and uo the cost to Porto and maybe East. Who know, haven't made the plan yet.
By Rick from USA on 09 Nov 2022, 19:36