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Kirsty

What happens if I return to work in UK before removing conditions?

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My 2 yr conditional visa will run out in Aug 2011. I have not been able to find work in US for some time now and have the opportunity of a job back in the UK. Does anyone know if there is a maximum amount of time I can go back to UK without it affecting my visa? when the time comes could i send in the removing condition forms without living in US? My husband would still be here in US. i realize i would have to fly back to US for biometric test. I would only take this job as a temporary measure for income and as I intend to come back to US permanently to be with my husband so wouldnt be able to do it if it jeapordises my US visa situation. This wasn't our plan at all but unfortunately the economic situation here is meaning we have to think of other options ;(

If i went back to UK and did not remove conditions,what happens, would we have to start the whole perm. residency thing from scratch again upon my return to US?

Thank you for any help!

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My 2 yr conditional visa will run out in Aug 2011. I have not been able to find work in US for some time now and have the opportunity of a job back in the UK. Does anyone know if there is a maximum amount of time I can go back to UK without it affecting my visa? when the time comes could i send in the removing condition forms without living in US? My husband would still be here in US. i realize i would have to fly back to US for biometric test. I would only take this job as a temporary measure for income and as I intend to come back to US permanently to be with my husband so wouldnt be able to do it if it jeapordises my US visa situation. This wasn't our plan at all but unfortunately the economic situation here is meaning we have to think of other options ;(

If i went back to UK and did not remove conditions,what happens, would we have to start the whole perm. residency thing from scratch again upon my return to US?

Thank you for any help!

I have read in a few places (http://britishexpats.com/wiki/Green_Card_Abandonment, for example) that the limit is 6 months off of US soil. Also, "The same will apply if you have made multiple trips outside the United States, returning only for short periods every 6 months."

Also worth a read: http://globalnation.inquirer.net/viewpoints/viewpoints/view/20100704-279100/How-to-maintain-your-green-card-while-outside-the-US

If you have a permanent job in a country outside the US, your desire to be a US resident may be questionable by immigration.

K1 Filed: 4-1-2009 * Interview (approved): 10-21-2009 * POE: 11-1-2009 * Married: 11-29-2009

http://www.visajourn...009-k-1-filers/

-------------------

AOS Filed: 12-7-2009

AOS APPROVED! 2-27-2010 (no interview)

Greencard in hand: 3-4-2010

http://www.visajourn...ead/page__st__0

--------------------

ROC mailed to CSC 11-22-2011

Check cleared the bank 11-29-2011 (our 2nd anniversary) :)

Greencard received 6/15/2012 :)

November 2011 ROC Filers

N400 Filing (Citizenship for Ian) - Here we go!

Mailed 12-03-2012

Arrived at Phoenix SC 12-6-2012

Check cashed 12-11-2012

12-11-2012 NOA

12-26-2012 Biometrics

1-25-2013 Notice - Interview Scheduled for 3-4-2013

Oath 3-4-2013 Omaha Field Office

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Filed: Other Timeline

Your visa became invalid the moment you adjusted status to resident. Theoretically, you can stay out of the country until your Green Card expires (August 2011) BUT . . . for the ROC petition you will need to prove that you live together with your husband in martial bliss, at the same address. How do you propose to do this if you live and work on another continent?

Edited by Just Bob

There is no room in this country for hyphenated Americanism. When I refer to hyphenated Americans, I do not refer to naturalized Americans. Some of the very best Americans I have ever known were naturalized Americans, Americans born abroad. But a hyphenated American is not an American at all . . . . The one absolutely certain way of bringing this nation to ruin, of preventing all possibility of its continuing to be a nation at all, would be to permit it to become a tangle of squabbling nationalities, an intricate knot of German-Americans, Irish-Americans, English-Americans, French-Americans, Scandinavian-Americans or Italian-Americans, each preserving its separate nationality, each at heart feeling more sympathy with Europeans of that nationality, than with the other citizens of the American Republic . . . . There is no such thing as a hyphenated American who is a good American. The only man who is a good American is the man who is an American and nothing else.

President Teddy Roosevelt on Columbus Day 1915

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