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Posted

we've just received my husband's paperwork and visa from the consulate today---we were granted our waiver earlier this month (yay!); the stamp is in his passport and we got the mysterious brown packet that we're not allowed to open, but the expiration date of the visa states 29 March 2008!!!!!!!

it says: Visa issued 13 Feb 2008, Visa expires 29 March 2008----can this possibly be right??? do they determine the expiration date based on when the visa was granted or from your initial visa interview (which was in Oct 2007)??? can they possibly expect us to be ready to travel in 6 weeks??

i phoned the £1.20/minute line but they couldn't deal with it and gave me a reference number and told me to email the consulate; this i have done, but they sent me a reply saying that they're taking 3-4 days to address stuff...so i thought i would check and see if anyone else had had a similar experience

help!

anna

Filed: K-3 Visa Country: United Kingdom
Timeline
Posted

OMG I HOPE THAT ISN'T THE CASE ANNA. WE HAVEN'T GOT OUR VISA YET BUT WEREN'T PLANNING ON GOING UNTIL THE END OF APRIL. WE HAVE TO GET THE BABIES PASSPORT AND REGISTER HIS BIRTH. THE EARLIEST APPOINTMENT WAS THE 7TH OF APRIL AND THEY SAID IT COULD TAKE UP TO 15 WORKING DAYS TO GET THE BABIES PASSPORT BACK. WE HAVE TO GO TO THE EMBASSY TO DO THIS TOO. WE LIVE IN THE NORTH SO THIS WILL BE A MINI VACATION I SUPPOSE. ONE THING AFTER ANOTHER ISN'T IT!!!

Baby Boy born on November 24th 2008

Received Visa Feb 10th 2008

Waiting for appointment at Embassy on April 7th for Baby's passport and report of birth abroad!!!

After three long years moving back to America on May 4th 2008

Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Canada
Timeline
Posted

What kind of visa is it? If it's a CR1 or a K3, it is a multi-entry visa. If you have to rush to get the visa activated, how about just going to the border to activate the visa and then return to your home country and finish making your travel arrangements.

I realize this advice would mean lots of extra time and money, but if you are in a rush this would work. If your visa is a K-1, remember it's a one-time-only entry.

Good luck, and congrats on getting your waiver sucessfully!

CR1 application

I-130: 03/26/2007-07/02/2007 at NSC

NVC: 07/20/2007-11/08/2007

Interview at Montreal Consulate: 01/18/2008

(2 months' additional security checks)

Received Green Card: 05/12/2008

Removal of Conditions

I-751: 2/25/10-

Posted
What kind of visa is it? If it's a CR1 or a K3, it is a multi-entry visa. If you have to rush to get the visa activated, how about just going to the border to activate the visa and then return to your home country and finish making your travel arrangements.

I realize this advice would mean lots of extra time and money, but if you are in a rush this would work. If your visa is a K-1, remember it's a one-time-only entry.

Good luck, and congrats on getting your waiver sucessfully!

it's a CR-1 visa, so we have Plan B to send him to NY on a cheap flight and turn right around and come back---MAJOR pain in the behind, tho, but we'll have to do that if nothing else can be sorted...

the only thing i can think of is that the waiver process took up the 6 month grace period and they won't change it...but i pray they can give us more time...

lord, it's neverending...

anna

Filed: K-3 Visa Country: United Kingdom
Timeline
Posted

any more word on your visa? we are waiting to book our flight because we are waiting what the visa says!

Baby Boy born on November 24th 2008

Received Visa Feb 10th 2008

Waiting for appointment at Embassy on April 7th for Baby's passport and report of birth abroad!!!

After three long years moving back to America on May 4th 2008

Posted (edited)
any more word on your visa? we are waiting to book our flight because we are waiting what the visa says!

nothing yet; the automated confirmation email i got from the embassy said that they're taking 3-4 days to respond to emails so i'm not expecting an answer until Monday or Tuesday at the earliest...*sigh*

we looked at flights to NYC last night, and we can get Paul on a Virgin flight to NYC, 5 hour layover then back on a plane to London for £445...we're actually thinking it might not be all bad because then when we arrive in the US rogether in May, his social security card should be waiting for us and he can start looking for work immediately---we're trying to find a silver lining here!

one good thing happened yesterday: i won £675 on a radio phone-in competition!!! <LOL> so at least we have a little extra cash to pay for all this to-ing and fro-ing

edit: i just remembered something i thought of last night---Paul's medical exam was on 29 March last year...i wonder if that's the reason...maybe they'll just let us have another medical...just a thought

Edited by annasherwood
Filed: Timeline
Posted

The expiration of the medical only comes into play on the ISSUANCE of the visa, not the validity. It should be valid for 6 MONTHS, ours was. I expect the embassy made a dumb mistake and they can fix it by re-issuing it.

Hopefully when they answer your email they will give you a valid reply and tell you how they will do that.

Support Family Unity- www.americanfamiliesunited.org. Become a member today!

Filed: Timeline
Posted
What kind of visa is it? If it's a CR1 or a K3, it is a multi-entry visa. If you have to rush to get the visa activated, how about just going to the border to activate the visa and then return to your home country and finish making your travel arrangements.

I realize this advice would mean lots of extra time and money, but if you are in a rush this would work. If your visa is a K-1, remember it's a one-time-only entry.

Good luck, and congrats on getting your waiver sucessfully!

it's a CR-1 visa, so we have Plan B to send him to NY on a cheap flight and turn right around and come back---MAJOR pain in the behind, tho, but we'll have to do that if nothing else can be sorted...

the only thing i can think of is that the waiver process took up the 6 month grace period and they won't change it...but i pray they can give us more time...

lord, it's neverending...

anna

Your plan may end up biting your foreign-born in the butt.

Your relative may not enter the United States to take up residence prior to your return to the United States. He or she may travel with you, or follow to join you at a later date
.

"diaddie mermaid"

You can 'catch' me on here and on FBI.

Filed: Timeline
Posted
What kind of visa is it? If it's a CR1 or a K3, it is a multi-entry visa. If you have to rush to get the visa activated, how about just going to the border to activate the visa and then return to your home country and finish making your travel arrangements.

I realize this advice would mean lots of extra time and money, but if you are in a rush this would work. If your visa is a K-1, remember it's a one-time-only entry.

Good luck, and congrats on getting your waiver sucessfully!

it's a CR-1 visa, so we have Plan B to send him to NY on a cheap flight and turn right around and come back---MAJOR pain in the behind, tho, but we'll have to do that if nothing else can be sorted...

the only thing i can think of is that the waiver process took up the 6 month grace period and they won't change it...but i pray they can give us more time...

lord, it's neverending...

anna

Your plan may end up biting your foreign-born in the butt.

Your relative may not enter the United States to take up residence prior to your return to the United States. He or she may travel with you, or follow to join you at a later date
.

I was about to say exactly that. The intending immigrant should enter with you or after you, or at least that's what they told us at MTL.

Posted
can they possibly expect us to be ready to travel in 6 weeks??

anna

DCF... sponsor domiciled in US. Why can't they?

i thought the visas were good for 6 months; we are living in the UK and our sponsor lives in the US, but that doesn't change the fact that we have things to tie up here---we have to give notice for jobs, sell cars, arrange travel for us and 2 dogs, get medical records----none of which we could accomplish before we knew if our waiver was going to be granted

Filed: Timeline
Posted
can they possibly expect us to be ready to travel in 6 weeks??

anna

DCF... sponsor domiciled in US. Why can't they?

i thought the visas were good for 6 months; we are living in the UK and our sponsor lives in the US, but that doesn't change the fact that we have things to tie up here---we have to give notice for jobs, sell cars, arrange travel for us and 2 dogs, get medical records----none of which we could accomplish before we knew if our waiver was going to be granted

You are the sponsor (primary), and having declared that you are domiciled in the USA, is indication that you are *there* for all intents and purposes. The person in the US right now is a "joint sponsor".

"diaddie mermaid"

You can 'catch' me on here and on FBI.

Posted

we aren't domiciled in the US: we direct consular filed because we both live in the UK...our sponsor (or joint sponsor) lives in the US...anyway, that's all semantics----it doesn't change the fact that they expect us to pack up and move our whole lives in 6 weeks, which i think is unreasonable

Filed: Timeline
Posted
we aren't domiciled in the US: we direct consular filed because we both live in the UK...our sponsor (or joint sponsor) lives in the US...anyway, that's all semantics----it doesn't change the fact that they expect us to pack up and move our whole lives in 6 weeks, which i think is unreasonable

Oh brother! :huh: How can someone that appears not to have placed time or effort into learning what is involved in the process complain about something being "unreasonable"?

annasherwood, for your own health and that of those around you, please read up on the process and what you are about to undertake. This is the first step and there are many ahead. You need to be prepared.

DCF requires that the primary sponsor (for newbies the primary sponsor in a marriage-based case is the US citizen spouse) establish domicile. Domicile is evidenced in a number of ways, but for DCF (Direct Consular filing) it must be established. Any "joint sponsor" in the USA is not going to obviate the need for the sponsor/petitioner to show US domicile for the I-684.

"diaddie mermaid"

You can 'catch' me on here and on FBI.

 
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