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trump won, what next?

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1 hour ago, JeanneAdil said:

the cost of sending 11 million illegals home is something we can not afford  so that Trump statement is rediculous

If the government enforces random checks of employers and start  penalizing employers and people who employ illegals, this can be implemented without spending a dime. When the income source dries up, most will leave voluntarily. 

1 hour ago, JeanneAdil said:

 

Edited by Aluvaboy
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2 hours ago, JeanneAdil said:

No,

Melania Trump obtained US citizenship on a visa reserved for immigrants with "extraordinary ability" and "sustained national and international acclaim", according to a report in the Washington Post.

 

he bought most of his hotel workers here on a work visa

he bought ? were they on sale in mexico ?

Edited by igoyougoduke

duh

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9 hours ago, steve-phuket said:

my predication is he'll massively cut funding for USCIS resulting in waiting times going from months and years, to decades. what do you all think?

1) Expect delays as checks will get extended

2) Illegal immigration will be priority 

3) More Scrutiny on applicants for immigrant visas 

 

All of this will take time ?

duh

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11 hours ago, steve-phuket said:

my predication is he'll massively cut funding for USCIS resulting in waiting times going from months and years, to decades. what do you all think?

Last time Trump was in power he would use USCIS staff to get sent to disaster areas within the U.S. to help with rebuilding which resulted in slow case processing for some field offices. The USCIS officer who had my Greencard application at the San Diego field office was sent to Texas to help with the rebuild after hurricane Harvey. My application was essentially locked in his desk and wasn’t processed. I scheduled an appointment at my field office to check in why my case was taking so long and another officer told me my case was with his co-worker who belonged to the staff that was sent to Texas. He ended up breaking into the desk to get my application (and apparently a couple others) out so someone else could take care of it. My case had been locked in there for a while. The person who originally had my case apparently was for 60+ days in Texas to help out there. 


Now that I am reading here that USCIS is fee based though, I wonder how the Trump administration could just decide to take USCIS resources away and decide that the staff needs to help with disaster areas. I swear I’m not making this up though. When I was talking to the USCIS officer that told me all of this, I was speechless and mad (that immigration is the first thing they will take staff from… something that affects people’s life tremendously).
 

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16 minutes ago, Californiansunset said:

Last time Trump was in power he would use USCIS staff to get sent to disaster areas within the U.S. to help with rebuilding which resulted in slow case processing for some field offices. The USCIS officer who had my Greencard application at the San Diego field office was sent to Texas to help with the rebuild after hurricane Harvey. My application was essentially locked in his desk and wasn’t processed. I scheduled an appointment at my field office to check in why my case was taking so long and another officer told me my case was with his co-worker who belonged to the staff that was sent to Texas. He ended up breaking into the desk to get my application (and apparently a couple others) out so someone else could take care of it. My case had been locked in there for a while. The person who originally had my case apparently was for 60+ days in Texas to help out there. 


Now that I am reading here that USCIS is fee based though, I wonder how the Trump administration could just decide to take USCIS resources away and decide that the staff needs to help with disaster areas. I swear I’m not making this up though. When I was talking to the USCIS officer that told me all of this, I was speechless and mad (that immigration is the first thing they will take staff from… something that affects people’s life tremendously).
 

that's crazy. i think we can all guess where USCIS staff will be redeployed this time around

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3 hours ago, Californiansunset said:

Last time Trump was in power he would use USCIS staff to get sent to disaster areas within the U.S. to help with rebuilding which resulted in slow case processing for some field offices. The USCIS officer who had my Greencard application at the San Diego field office was sent to Texas to help with the rebuild after hurricane Harvey. My application was essentially locked in his desk and wasn’t processed. I scheduled an appointment at my field office to check in why my case was taking so long and another officer told me my case was with his co-worker who belonged to the staff that was sent to Texas. He ended up breaking into the desk to get my application (and apparently a couple others) out so someone else could take care of it. My case had been locked in there for a while. The person who originally had my case apparently was for 60+ days in Texas to help out there. 


Now that I am reading here that USCIS is fee based though, I wonder how the Trump administration could just decide to take USCIS resources away and decide that the staff needs to help with disaster areas. I swear I’m not making this up though. When I was talking to the USCIS officer that told me all of this, I was speechless and mad (that immigration is the first thing they will take staff from… something that affects people’s life tremendously).
 

 

I would rather my case take longer if it meant possibly saving American lives. 

:us_outlying_islands:    qVrwoIS.gif    :us_outlying_islands:

 

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I think that notorious form I-944, Declaration of Self-Sufficiency, that caused so much grief was a Trump brain child. I'd look for that or something like that again! I think once things get put into place it's not going to be a cake walk for folks submitting forms for immigration benefits (unless of course you got big business or big money). Just my thoughts considering the last Trump administration. As what was said by another VJer, better get it in now whatever you are going to file before all this starts, as it is better to already have it in than to submit it when these programs start!


4 years, 11 months, 2 weeks and 3 days

Citizenship Complete!

USCIS is like a box of chocolates, you never know what kind of answer you are going to get!!!!

 

 

                                    

 

 

 

 


                                                             

 

 

 

 

 

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10 hours ago, MDP said:

Didn't Trump have to file an I-130 to get Melania here? Just saying....

Nope. She got the EB1A. 

03/04/2016 AOS (EB2-NIW concurrent with I-485) mailed to Lewisville TX Lockbox
03/07/2016 AOS delivered to USCIS and signed
03/12/2016 Case received by Nebraska Service Center (NSC)
03/14/2016 Text notification received for I-140/I-485/I-765/I-131.
04/08/2016 Biometrics notice received for 04/21
04/13/2016 Biometrics early walk-in completed.
04/15/2016 EAD/AP combo card received in mail.

 

Long wait begins...

 

11/04/2016 I-140/485 cases transferred from Nebraska to TCS
12/01/2016 Prepared package for EAD/AP renewal (expires 04/09/2017)
12/23/2016 USCIS suddenly changes several forms, invalidating my EAD/AP renewal package (not yet sent)
12/27/2016 USCIS suddenly reforms the entire NIW criteria system, replacing a 20 years old one. Uncharted waters. 
01/07/2017 (Saturday!) EAD/AP renewal package with new forms received in Phoenix "reception desk"
01/17/2017 EAD/AP renewal case accepted; text/email with receipt numbers was received
01/30/2017 Law firm finally confirms that USCIS has suspended processing all EB2-NIW cases due to new criteria. 
02/23/2017 USCIS slowly starts adjudicating NIW cases again.
04/21/2017 Extended EAD/AP received in mail. Valid for 2 years. 
05/06/2017 Received a massive RFE on I-140 NIW case.
07/20/2017 RFE response received by USCIS (a very long response with 30 pages of docs)
09/14/2017 I-140 NIW approved!!! 
11/28/2017 RFE for new medical issued (plus another request re Supp J for employment which is clearly issued in error)
12/04/2017 RFE received in mail
12/07/2017 repeated medical exam for I-485
12/08/2017 Attorney receives documents for responding to I-485 RFE
12/21/2017 Response to RFE received by USCIS 
02/09/2018 I-485 approval (text, email) :)
02/08/2018 I-485 approval notice issued (the "welcome letter") - I'm LPR now
02/16/2018 Green card received
 
11/14/2022 Filed N-400 online; receipt and biometrics reuse form received online
03/07/2023 N-400 Interview scheduled 
04/xx/2023 N-400 approved, same-day Oath ceremony completed. I'm a US citizen.
05/xx/2023 US passport in hand

 

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1 hour ago, Sarge2155 said:

I think that notorious form I-944, Declaration of Self-Sufficiency, that caused so much grief was a Trump brain child. I'd look for that or something like that again!

Good grief, I forgot about that form. I got fortunate that it was discontinued right before I came to the US. But the I-485 form under him went from like 6 pages to 20 so that was fun…

Edited by powerpuff

 

 

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Russia
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16 hours ago, JeanneAdil said:

the cost of sending 11 million illegals home is something we can not afford  so that Trump statement is rediculous

There is a lot of stuff the federal government does that it cannot afford, and yet they still do it.

Visa Received : 2014-04-04 (K1 - see timeline for details)

US Entry : 2014-09-12

POE: Detroit

Marriage : 2014-09-27

I-765 Approved: 2015-01-09

I-485 Interview: 2015-03-11

I-485 Approved: 2015-03-13

Green Card Received: 2015-03-24 Yeah!!!

I-751 ROC Submitted: 2016-12-20

I-751 NOA Received:  2016-12-29

I-751 Biometrics Appt.:  2017-01-26

I-751 Interview:  2018-04-10

I-751 Approved:  2018-05-04

N400 Filed:  2018-01-13

N400 Biometrics:  2018-02-22

N400 Interview:  2018-04-10

N400 Approved:  2018-04-10

Oath Ceremony:  2018-06-11 - DONE!!!!!!!

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Russia
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10 hours ago, Californiansunset said:

Last time Trump was in power he would use USCIS staff to get sent to disaster areas within the U.S. to help with rebuilding which resulted in slow case processing for some field offices. The USCIS officer who had my Greencard application at the San Diego field office was sent to Texas to help with the rebuild after hurricane Harvey. My application was essentially locked in his desk and wasn’t processed. I scheduled an appointment at my field office to check in why my case was taking so long and another officer told me my case was with his co-worker who belonged to the staff that was sent to Texas. He ended up breaking into the desk to get my application (and apparently a couple others) out so someone else could take care of it. My case had been locked in there for a while. The person who originally had my case apparently was for 60+ days in Texas to help out there. 


Now that I am reading here that USCIS is fee based though, I wonder how the Trump administration could just decide to take USCIS resources away and decide that the staff needs to help with disaster areas. I swear I’m not making this up though. When I was talking to the USCIS officer that told me all of this, I was speechless and mad (that immigration is the first thing they will take staff from… something that affects people’s life tremendously).
 

More than likely it is a volunteer opportunity offered to USCIS employees.  Maybe the employee that had your case actually wanted to go and help with disaster relief rather than push paper in an office.  You make it sound  like Trump came into the office and personally selected people to go do something else.  We have similar volunteer opportunities in my office, and many take up the call.  Of course in the private sector we still have to get our regular jobs done, but that does not appear to be the case for government employees.

9 hours ago, steve-phuket said:

that's crazy. i think we can all guess where USCIS staff will be redeployed this time around

Aren't a lot of them already being re-deployed to handle all the asylum cases with our open border?

Visa Received : 2014-04-04 (K1 - see timeline for details)

US Entry : 2014-09-12

POE: Detroit

Marriage : 2014-09-27

I-765 Approved: 2015-01-09

I-485 Interview: 2015-03-11

I-485 Approved: 2015-03-13

Green Card Received: 2015-03-24 Yeah!!!

I-751 ROC Submitted: 2016-12-20

I-751 NOA Received:  2016-12-29

I-751 Biometrics Appt.:  2017-01-26

I-751 Interview:  2018-04-10

I-751 Approved:  2018-05-04

N400 Filed:  2018-01-13

N400 Biometrics:  2018-02-22

N400 Interview:  2018-04-10

N400 Approved:  2018-04-10

Oath Ceremony:  2018-06-11 - DONE!!!!!!!

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15 hours ago, Aluvaboy said:

If the government enforces random checks of employers and start  penalizing employers and people who employ illegals, this can be implemented without spending a dime.

That sounds like government work, and government work costs money. 
 

As for the more general theme of this thread, it’s reasonable to assume that timelines are going to shift with the shifting priorities of the new administration. Guessing which parts are going to be most impacted is tricky, though I’d expect people coming into the country to be more affected, in general, than those already here. And those here under less established/executive programs will be more affected than than those here on the more traditional work/marriage programs. But honestly, my gut tells me that it is unlikely to become any easier for anybody.

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Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Honduras
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12 hours ago, Californiansunset said:

Last time Trump was in power he would use USCIS staff to get sent to disaster areas within the U.S. to help with rebuilding which resulted in slow case processing for some field offices. The USCIS officer who had my Greencard application at the San Diego field office was sent to Texas to help with the rebuild after hurricane Harvey. My application was essentially locked in his desk and wasn’t processed. I scheduled an appointment at my field office to check in why my case was taking so long and another officer told me my case was with his co-worker who belonged to the staff that was sent to Texas. He ended up breaking into the desk to get my application (and apparently a couple others) out so someone else could take care of it. My case had been locked in there for a while. The person who originally had my case apparently was for 60+ days in Texas to help out there. 


Now that I am reading here that USCIS is fee based though, I wonder how the Trump administration could just decide to take USCIS resources away and decide that the staff needs to help with disaster areas. I swear I’m not making this up though. When I was talking to the USCIS officer that told me all of this, I was speechless and mad (that immigration is the first thing they will take staff from… something that affects people’s life tremendously).
 

I would blame this more on the USCIS officer than Trump.  He should have informed his supervisor and coworkers that pending cases needed to be finalized.  You don't just leave your office responsibilities with no plan for completion.  I am a teacher and a substitute can walk into my classroom and know what needs to be done.

Edited by KMG
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Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Vietnam
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I'm assuming none of this affects LPRs/green card holders when they file N-400 for naturalization and getting their citizenships? Maybe minor delays due to staffing?

 

Asking because my wife is coming up on 3 years the summer of 2025, when she'll be eligible to file.

Edited by Bill Hamze
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Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Peru
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OMG, everybody needs to turn off MSNBC or whatever propaganda media you're watching and take a deep breath. 

 

First, I've been watching/using this site for a long, long time and what I noticed over the years is that when Trump was President, with many people going through this process during that time, if their process was like one day late, they were all like "Trump this!" or "Trump that!" During the Biden Administration, I never heard any of that same sentiment; complaints about the delays sure but never direct blame to Biden even when the process was taking not days longer but months longer. 

 

My personal experience: we applied in the last year of Trump's presidency and the initial process for us was super fast. Thereafter, Biden came in and the remainder of the process seemed to slow to a snail's pace. Biden's fault? I can't say; however, it seems to me when you open the borders to a flood of people who claim "asylum," suddenly all of those agents who were working on a regular flow of activity (ie, the cases of the people on this very site) are dealing with an unprecedented amount of asylum applications.   

 

Just my personal opinion for what it's worth. 

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