Yesterday, the Mexican government began issuing birth certificates to its citizens at its consulates in the United States.
That will make it a little easier for Mexicans hoping to obtain US work permits, driver's licenses and protection from deportation.
Up until now, Mexico required its citizens to get birth certificates at government offices in Mexico. Many of those living in this country had to ask friends and relatives back home to retrieve the paperwork.
Before the change too place, Zamora had to ask his sister-in-law to pick up his son's and daughter's birth certificates in Colima, Mexico, so they could apply for Obama's immigration program for those brought to the US illegally as children. But Zamora said the paperwork got lost in the mail twice.
"It would take seven or 15 days and there was a risk of losing it," Zamora said.
About half the 11 million immigrants living in the US illegally are from Mexico, and immigration experts say roughly 3 million of them could be eligible under the administration's plan.
Immigrants will probably need to produce photo identification such as a passport to apply for the program. And to get a Mexican passport, they need a birth certificate.
That has proved to be a problem for many Mexican immigrants.
