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Hardship waiver

J1 Hardship Waiver 2021-2022 Timeline

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12 minutes ago, neonatal2023 said:

I have also applied for Temporary Protected status (TPS) so my hope is that application gets approved soon and I could potentially start working with that while my hardship gets approved. Anyone else is on the same boat? 

Do you belong to a country to which TPS is already given?  

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17 hours ago, ErinK said:

Many in this group have applied with US citizen spouse and child. Mine has been with DoS for the past 10 months and still nothing. Before that it was with USCIS for 8 months including an RFE. You can't stay legally just because your case is pending. Start looking into another J-1 or changing to O-1. O-1 package preparation takes a long time so start early and hire a lawyer that specializes in  O-1/EB1/NIW. Chen is really good. 

Mine is similar. Currently, my J1 has expired but it is still pending in DOS. The response from DOS is always "copy and paste". My US kid has medical problems. But they don't care. We have to leave the US this month.

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1 minute ago, PeterW said:

Mine is similar. Currently, my J1 has expired but it is still pending in DOS. The response from DOS is always "copy and paste". My US kid has medical problems. But they don't care. We have to leave the US this month.

really sorry to hear that. When the waiver is approved (if you are outside), can't you continue the process with consular processing? 

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19 minutes ago, neonatal2023 said:

I have also applied for Temporary Protected status (TPS) so my hope is that application gets approved soon and I could potentially start working with that while my hardship gets approved. Anyone else is on the same boat? 

I never know TPS before. It seems that it a way to solve a problem. How can I apply for it? My grace period has only 2 weeks left? Could you recommend me your attorney? Thanks

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2 hours ago, Hardship_waiver said:

If you have a U.S.C spouse and you stay here illegibly (after expiry of your J-1) waiting for the waiver, this illegal time will automatically be forgiven at the time you file for the green card. As you will not have any status during this illegal time, you cannot apply for work authorization. Also you can get into trouble if you caught by police in some case etc. Before expiry of your DS-2019, apply for O-1 or B1/B2 whose processing (pending) will give you legal status to stay. 

With DOS hardship processing almost at halt, more and more people are getting out of status. It was never like that before. We are unfortunate ones. 

According to all 3 lawyers I spoke with, including Chen who specializes in O-1s, applying for O-1 does not give you legal status. You still fall out of status. Not sure about B1/B2 or automatic forgiveness in case of spouses of US citizens. My lawyer said it's not automatic but it's pretty easily forgiven 

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1 minute ago, ErinK said:

According to all 3 lawyers I spoke with, including Chen who specializes in O-1s, applying for O-1 does not give you legal status. You still fall out of status. Not sure about B1/B2 or automatic forgiveness in case of spouses of US citizens. My lawyer said it's not automatic but it's pretty easily forgiven 

If you apply for O-1 you have to keep your legal status until it's decided. If you stay even one day in the States illegally the consular officer has a reason to deny your O-1 visa even after your O-1 case is approved in USCIS. At least that's what my lawyer told me. USCIS only decides if you are eligible for O-1, it's still up to the officer who interviews you in U.S. embassy to issue you a visa and overstaying your previous status is a major red flag.  

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47 minutes ago, ErinK said:

If you apply for O-1 you have to keep your legal status until it's decided. If you stay even one day in the States illegally the consular officer has a reason to deny your O-1 visa even after your O-1 case is approved in USCIS. At least that's what my lawyer told me. USCIS only decides if you are eligible for O-1, it's still up to the officer who interviews you in U.S. embassy to issue you a visa and overstaying your previous status is a major red flag.  

I agree overstaying is never a good option and consular officer has full authority to deny your application, but in worst scenarios you have to take risks. Even applying B1/B2 without a waiver will lead to ultimate denial if waiver isn't approved at time of adjudication. But what if waiver gets approved before that and you file your green card and all gets settled. It's a risk that you can take if you have no other option. Like to avoid risk to someone's life. 

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