Miami officials announce subsidized citizenship classes after school district cuts program

Miami District 4 Commissioner Ralph “Rafael” Rosado, in partnership with Mayor Francis X. Suarez, has announced their joint effort to subsidize enrollment for City of Miami residents in the “Fast Track to Citizenship” course. This initiative ensures continued access to naturalization preparation following recent funding cuts to Miami-Dade County Public Schools’ adult education programs.

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The effort aligns with the Community Pillar of Commissioner Rosado’s C.A.S.A. Master Plan and reinforces the City of Miami’s commitment to inclusive opportunity and civic empowerment.

In a significant change to its educational offerings, Miami-Dade County Public Schools has ceased providing citizenship classes for the county’s immigrant community, which includes a large number of Caribbean nationals, a free service that has been instrumental in aiding lawful permanent residents to navigate the complex path to U.S. citizenship.

In the wake of federal funding cuts, the program, dubbed the Fast Track to Citizenship, will no longer afford immigrants the guidance once provided to fill out the extensive 20-page naturalization application, nor prepare for the civic examination, according to a report by 7News.

These classes, which had charged a $43 fee after being initially free, used to be available through the district’s Adult Education program at various locations throughout Miami-Dade County.

Falling victim to budgetary reductions, these services have seen their end.

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The English Center and adult education centers in Miami Beach and Hialeah, including Miami Coral Park’s Adult and Continuing Education Centers, were listed on the district’s 2025 curriculum as venues for the educational offering, with no indication of the impending cessation.

When prompted for enrollment information, operators now inform callers, “Unfortunately, we don’t have citizenship classes anymore. They cut the funding,” as noted by the Miami Herald.

These cuts are happening during a time of heated debate over immigration policies, deeply affecting a community built on immigrant stories.

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The importance of these programs was further underscored by the Miami-Dade superintendent’s comment to 7News that the district will struggle to offer the free courses in light of the diminished federal budget, although classes remain accessible at technical colleges and other adult centers for a fee.

The educational pivot is not the only matter raising uproar; the controversial ‘Alligator Alcatraz,’ a new migrant detention center proposed in the center of the Everglades, has attracted severe scrutiny. Miami’s Archbishop Thomas Wenski expressed his aversion towards this facility, and Betty Osceola, a member of the Miccosukee Tribe, has amplified this dissent through joining an environmental lawsuit to halt its construction.

These events coincide with Florida Congresswoman Maria Elvira Salazar’s introduction of the Dignity Immigration Act, aimed at a middle ground for those long-term undocumented immigrants who feed the economy’s underbelly, as per her statement obtained by 7News.

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