Bill Of Fair
Ex-restaurateur puts hopes of returning to Portland in a “widow’s bill.”
October 1st, 2008
Letters to the Editor • Inbox0 comments
October 1st, 2008
The Weekly Fix • Our Spin On 7 Days of News 1 comment
October 1st, 2008
The Money Side of the Street | Some Oregon lawmakers took big bucks from Wall Street in flush times.3 comments
October 1st, 2008
Political News That’s Always Credit-Worthy | Meet the Oregonians who now back McCain after supporting Clinton.13 comments
October 1st, 2008
Trucked-Up Politics | Merkley and Obama say NAFTA is killing U.S. manufacturing. WW goes to Mexico to see what it’s doing there. 5 comments
October 1st, 2008
Obsession | Who’s obsessed with whom? 2 comments
October 1st, 2008
Rogue of the Week • You Can’t Spell “Obsession” Without The O. | A new way to spark reader interest: Distribute a DVD that PO’s subscribers.13 comments
October 1st, 2008
Murmurs • The Whatever-Happened-To Edition1 comment
October 1st, 2008
Browse the Beaver State | Web encyclopedia aims to be the go-to site for all things Oregon. 1 comment
October 1st, 2008
Cover Story • Jail Junkies | Who knows more about stopping property crime: Kevin Mannix or an ex-addict who stole 1,000 cars?14 comments
![]() RETURN TO SENDER?: Rose-Marie Barbeau Quinn is staking her hopes for a return to Portland on Congress. IMAGE: LeahNash.com |
[July 2nd, 2008]
Since being deported to her native Canada in 2005, ex-Portland restaurateur Rose-Marie Barbeau Quinn has been shoveling snow in Ontario the past three winters.
“I miss Portland a lot,” says Quinn, who owned the Vat and Tonsure restaurant in downtown Portland for 23 years before her deportation (see “Widow’s Lament,” WW, Sept. 21, 2005). “It’s like I’m in a time warp. I have my home in Portland, and I’m living in another country. It’s weird. I’m sad. I don’t belong here.”
But a bill in Congress is giving the 66-year-old widow—like more than 150 similarly situated men and women—some hope she’ll be able to return one day to her vacant home in Southwest Portland.
The bill, HB 6034, is nicknamed “a bill for widows,” because it will give surviving spouses of U.S. citizens two years to petition for citizenship after their spouse dies. The bill would start the citizenship application clock anew for Quinn and others.
Under current immigration law, surviving spouses who aren’t citizens—but are otherwise legal immigrants—are deported if they’ve been married less than two years and haven’t been granted citizenship at the time of their spouse’s death; the so-called “widow penalty.”
The current law has affected widows of soldiers who have died in Iraq, artists and teachers, as well as Quinn.
She and her husband, Mike Quinn, had lived together for almost 25 years. “Officially” married to Quinn a few hours before he succumbed to cancer in December 1991, she ended up losing her subsequent 14-year fight against deportation.
“We just want to come home,” she said in a recent telephone interview with WW about herself and others who’d be affected by the bill. She spoke from her apartment in Sudbury, a city of about 165,000 residents 280 miles west of the Canadian capital, Ottawa.
The widow’s bill introduced by Reps. James McGovern (D-Mass.) and Mark Udall (D-Colo.) has 27 co-sponsors. The only sponsor in Oregon’s congressional delegation is U.S. Rep. David Wu (D-Ore.). Wu tells WW he’s worried about the bill’s prospects because Republicans “have been pounding the drum for stronger immigration laws.”
Even though Democrats control Congress and the bill has three Republican co-sponsors, Wu says “[that pounding] has unfortunately resounded through the entire House.”
RECENT COMMENTS ON “Bill Of Fair”








