Appeal by the mother from an order of the Family Court, Nassau County (Danielle M. Peterson, J.), dated October 1, 2015. The order, without a hearing, dismissed the mother’s petition for custody of the subject children and, in effect, for an order making special findings so as to enable the subject children to petition the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services for special immigrant juvenile status pursuant to 8 USC § 1101 (a) (27) (J).
Ordered that the order is reversed, on the law, without costs *553 or disbursements, the petition is reinstated, and the matter is remitted to the Family Court, Nassau County, for a hearing and a new determination thereafter of the petition for custody of the subject children and, in effect, for an order making special findings so as to enable the subject children to petition the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services for special immigrant juvenile status pursuant to 8 USC § 1101 (a) (27) (J).
On or about August 28, 2015, the mother filed a petition pursuant to Family Court Act article 6 seeking sole custody of her two children, who were then ages 15 and 12. In her verified petition, she stated that the father died in 2004, she and the children moved from Honduras to the United States in 2014, and the children were pursuing special immigrant juvenile status (hereinafter SIJS) as a means to obtain lawful permanent residency status in the United States
(see generally
8 USC § 1101 [a] [27] [J];
Matter of Marisol N.H.,
The mother appeals, arguing, among other things, that the Family Court erred in dismissing her custody petition, and that an order of custody will enable the children to seek SIJS so that they are not “deported to a violent and chaotic country where they have neither mother nor father.”
SIJS is a form of immigration relief that affords undocumented children a pathway to lawful permanent residency and citizenship
(see Matter of Marisol N.H.,
In New York, a child’s parent or guardian may request that the Family Court issue an order making special findings so that the child may petition USCIS for SIJS
(see Matter of Hei Ting C.,
Here, although the mother was presumptively entitled to custody of the children as their surviving parent
(see
Domestic Relations Law § 81;
Baker v Bronx Lebanon Hosp. Ctr.,
Accordingly, the Family Court should not have dismissed the custody petition without conducting a hearing and considering the children’s best interests. Instead, the court should have
*555
proceeded to conduct a hearing on the petition, which sought a custody order as well as an order making the requisite declaration and special findings so as to enable the children to petition for SUS
(see Matter of Cecilia M.P.S. v Santos H.B.,
