MILAN, Minn.
In this tiny western Minnesota town, Michael Elias can't picture a return to his tropical birthplace in the western Pacific.
Natives of Micronesia such as Elias have flocked to this "Little Norway" on the prairie since 2000. Now, more than half the population of about 400 is Micronesian, an occasionally rocky transformation that some residents say reinvigorated the town.
"The Micronesians now belong to Milan, and Milan belongs to them," said Mayor Ron Anderson.
But even as the Micronesian community in Milan (pronounced MY-lan) sees its first homeowners and college students, its members remain essentially visitors. Under a longtime agreement, Micronesians can stay and work in the United States but have few pathways to citizenship.
A recent debate in Micronesia about pulling out of the agreement brought this in-between status into sharp relief, spurring anxiety and a petition Elias mailed to politicians back home. Community supporters have also turned to Minnesota lawmakers for help. Sens. Amy Klobuchar and Al Franken wrote to Secretary of State John Kerry this week about Milan's Micronesians.
"Though their legal status in the United States does not have an expiration date, it does not provide the long-term stability that families need," they wrote.
In a Milan park on a recent evening, residents helped themselves to a potluck meal: ribs, baked beans and blueberry crumble, but also fried bananas with coconut milk prepared by Elias' wife, Hellen Yowanes. Mostly white-haired residents shared picnic tables with Micronesian women wearing sports jerseys and hoodies over long, flower-patterned skirts.