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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Japan
Timeline
Posted (edited)

Supposedly USCIS plans on hiring some 4400 new members(See here). I am curious how much do you guys think it would speed up applications for us?

 

Some considerations:

1. They want to get to 95% capacity by December.

2. If just 50 of those adjudicate on K1 Visas, we could see an extra 50-200  touched cases a day(with 50 being a veryyyy low estimate)

3. Of course some people will have left uscis in that time as well.

Edited by gooblue
Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Taiwan
Timeline
Posted

There still remains the problem of backlogged consulates and NVC

"The US immigration process requires a great deal of knowledge, planning, time, patience, and a significant amount of money.  It is quite a journey!"

- Some old child of the 50's & 60's on his laptop 

 

Senior Master Sergeant, US Air Force- Retired (after 20+ years)- Missile Systems Maintenance & Titan 2 ICBM Launch Crew Duty (200+ Alert tours)

Registered Nurse- Retired- I practiced in the areas of Labor & Delivery, Home Health, Adolescent Psych, & Adult Psych.

IT Professional- Retired- Web Site Design, Hardware Maintenance, Compound Pharmacy Software Trainer, On-site go live support, Database Manager, App Designer.

______________________________________

In summary, it took 13 months for approval of the CR-1.  It took 44 months for approval of the I-751.  It took 4 months for approval of the N-400.   It took 172 days from N-400 application to Oath Ceremony.   It took 6 weeks for Passport, then 7 additional weeks for return of wife's Naturalization Certificate.. 
 

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Wales
Timeline
Posted

Far too many variables, when Title 42 goes for example they are talking about processing 18,000 a day. That is just one thing. Employ more people and nothing else changes seems unrealistic.

“If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles. If you know yourself but not the enemy, for every victory gained you will also suffer a defeat. If you know neither the enemy nor yourself, you will succumb in every battle.”

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Japan
Timeline
Posted

I guess in the spirit of that, it's why I'm curious what people think.

 

1. Let's say there's an average of 3500 I-129f(k1) cases a month.

2. lets say the 50 or so adjudicators plus the previous adjudicators can pump out 300 cases a day

3. Let's say 20 days of are productive(case adjudication happens)

 

So in a year you have (3500 * 12) 42,000 cases.

In a month (300 * 20) 6,000 cases are done.

In 7 months, 12 months worth of cases would be done/sped up. so we it's possible that IF(heavy if) they train up enough employees in next month or two, that by December they could be processing this year's 2022 May cases

 

I'm aware a lot of us(me included) are cynical about USCIS but was hoping to inject some hopium based on something at least possible

Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Taiwan
Timeline
Posted
1 minute ago, gooblue said:

I guess in the spirit of that, it's why I'm curious what people think.

 

1. Let's say there's an average of 3500 I-129f(k1) cases a month.

2. lets say the 50 or so adjudicators plus the previous adjudicators can pump out 300 cases a day

3. Let's say 20 days of are productive(case adjudication happens)

 

So in a year you have (3500 * 12) 42,000 cases.

In a month (300 * 20) 6,000 cases are done.

In 7 months, 12 months worth of cases would be done/sped up. so we it's possible that IF(heavy if) they train up enough employees in next month or two, that by December they could be processing this year's 2022 May cases

 

I'm aware a lot of us(me included) are cynical about USCIS but was hoping to inject some hopium based on something at least possible

It will continue to be a waiting game at either USCIS, NVC, or the consulate.......without increased production at all three, there is not much hope in sight.

"The US immigration process requires a great deal of knowledge, planning, time, patience, and a significant amount of money.  It is quite a journey!"

- Some old child of the 50's & 60's on his laptop 

 

Senior Master Sergeant, US Air Force- Retired (after 20+ years)- Missile Systems Maintenance & Titan 2 ICBM Launch Crew Duty (200+ Alert tours)

Registered Nurse- Retired- I practiced in the areas of Labor & Delivery, Home Health, Adolescent Psych, & Adult Psych.

IT Professional- Retired- Web Site Design, Hardware Maintenance, Compound Pharmacy Software Trainer, On-site go live support, Database Manager, App Designer.

______________________________________

In summary, it took 13 months for approval of the CR-1.  It took 44 months for approval of the I-751.  It took 4 months for approval of the N-400.   It took 172 days from N-400 application to Oath Ceremony.   It took 6 weeks for Passport, then 7 additional weeks for return of wife's Naturalization Certificate.. 
 

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Japan
Timeline
Posted (edited)
2 minutes ago, Mike E said:

Given the back logs at DoS, the 4400 extra employees should focus on things other than I-129F. For example:

 

* I-130/I-485 packages 

* I-765, I-131

* I-90

* I-751

* N-400

 

Applications between 2019-2021 have fallen into a deep hole and need a rescue mission. 

 

 

No I get the need to spread the load, I was just saying what if you another 50 adjudicators out of the 4400, that's less than 2% to work on the i129fs

Edited by gooblue
Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Myanmar
Timeline
Posted (edited)
6 minutes ago, gooblue said:

No I get the need to spread the load, I was just saying what if you another 50 adjudicators out of the 4400, that's less than 2% to work on the i129fs

Q: And after the I-129Fs approved, then what? 
 

A: A plethora of posts asking if there is a way to extended expired yet approved I-129Fs because NVC hasn’t forwarded them to the embassy or the embassy hasn’t scheduled interviews.
 

It consular I-130s are getting priority then that’s a signal to get married and go CR-1.  

 

 

Edited by Mike E
Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Japan
Timeline
Posted
7 minutes ago, Mike E said:

Q: And after the I-129Fs approved, then what? 
 

A: A plethora of posts asking if there is a way to extended expired yet approved I-129Fs because NVC hasn’t forwarded them to the embassy or the embassy hasn’t scheduled interviews.
 

It consular I-130s are getting priority then that’s a signal to get married and go CR-1.  

 

 

Well not everyone can just go the CR1 route for life circumstance reasons.

Although I see what you are saying, so maybe they adjudicate specifically on the cases where embassies aren't backlogged? I don't even know if they have a way to tell that though.

Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Myanmar
Timeline
Posted
6 minutes ago, gooblue said:

Well not everyone can just go the CR1 route for life circumstance reasons

True if the alien fiancé(e) has children aged 18-20, K-1 is the better route.  If would be good if USCIS and DoS could prioritize those cases.  

Posted (edited)
1 hour ago, gooblue said:

No I get the need to spread the load, I was just saying what if you another 50 adjudicators out of the 4400, that's less than 2% to work on the i129fs

Unfortunately... everyone waiting on an immigration petition thinks only about their case forgetting about all the other petitions. 

I-129Fs are no longer a priority to USCIS/NVC and Consulates. 

Even if they hire 4400 people this does not mean I-129Fs will be looked at sooner. They might decide to focus their manpower on Afghanistan, Ukraine and immediate relatives... probably certain work visas for that sweet tax money ;) 

And you have to remember the consulates are now deciding who to prioritize for interview. In Nigeria or Uganda all interviews are at a standstill while they focus on AP cases.... 

You could get your K1 approved in 3-6 months but that means nothing if the embassy isn't scheduling interviews  (making enough interviews available) for K1... 

Edited by ROK2USA
Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Argentina
Timeline
Posted
3 hours ago, gooblue said:

lets say the 50 or so adjudicators plus the previous adjudicators

I don't think that ALL that workforce just for I-129s is fair.. How about I485s, N400s, I751s, I-131, I-765 etc

FROM F1 TO AOS

October 17, 2019 AOS receipt date 

December 09, 2019: Biometric appointment

January 15, 2020 RFE received

January 30, 2020  RFE response sent

Feb 7: EAD approved and interview scheduled

March 18, 2020 Interview cancelled

April 14th 2020: RFE received

April 29, 2020 Approved without interview

May 1, 2020 Card in hand

 

REMOVAL OF CONDITIONS

February 1, 2022 package sent

March 28, 2022 Fingerprints reused

July 18, 2023 approval

July 20, 2023 Card in hand

 

N400 

January 30,2023: Online filing

February 4th, 2023: Biometric appointment

June 15th, 2023: Case actively being reviewed

July 11th, 2023: Interview scheduled.

August 30th, 2023: Interview!

August 31st, 2023: Oath ceremony scheduled.

Sept 19th, 2023: Officially a US citizen!

 


 

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Japan
Timeline
Posted (edited)
14 minutes ago, Rocio0010 said:

I don't think that ALL that workforce just for I-129s is fair.. How about I485s, N400s, I751s, I-131, I-765 etc

There are some 35 different forms (going by this) processed by uscis.

 

Now I DONT what ratio of hr to logistics to managing to adjudicator exists so I'm just throwing out number here. 

Imagine 1/3(33%) of them did adjudication. (I'm probably stretching this but as mentioned I have no idea what true numbers would be).

 

approximately 1500 peoples to work on cases.

 

1500/35 = 42 ish. Considering some forms are used more or less than others, is it really that crazy to posit 50/1500(3.3%) people to just work on i129fs??? 

 

OBVIOUSLY the true number of adjudicators could end up being something else like 500 or idk what but I'm just doing speculation

Edited by gooblue
Posted
2 minutes ago, gooblue said:

There are some 35 different forms (going by this) processed by uscis.

 

Now I DONT what ratio of hr to logistics to managing to adjudicator exists so I'm just throwing out number here. 

Imagine 1/3(33%) of them did adjudication. (I'm probably stretching this but as mentioned I have no idea what true numbers would be).

 

approximately 1500 peoples to work on cases.

 

1500/35 = 42 ish. Considering some forms are used more or less than others, is it really that crazy to posit 50/1500(3.3%) people to just work on i129fs??? 

 

OBVIOUSLY the true number of adjudicators could end up being something else like 500 or idk what but I'm just doing speculation

Check out this PDF

36,842 pending K1 cases at the end of December 31, 2021

1,585,539 pending I-130s

89,068 pending I-129s (work visas)

354,751 pending adjustment cases

252,775 pending I-751s...

 

K1s are doing just fine compared to the backlogs in other categories... (still a problem) but better than others~ 

 

 

 

 

 
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