Jump to content

OldUser

Members
  • Posts

    8,218
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    45

Everything posted by OldUser

  1. As long as you're OK with a risk of GC getting lost in transit. I vote for leaving the US with GC in hand.
  2. To add: OP can go to SSA office anytime and file SS-5 form to replace SS card. The new card should not have restrictions.
  3. 1.5 was the norm for late 2021 filers. It may be shorter / longer for current filers. I didn't have an interview.
  4. Yes, you likely will have more scrutiny based on the past. USCIS still has your file. They'll likely research it when dealing with your case. You may have stokes etc. I wouldn't be surprised. At the same time, nobody knows for sure what would happen.
  5. Whose account you're trying to add I-751 to? If it's a US citizen's account (with approved I-130 petition in it) it probably won't work. The code to use also comes in USCIS physical mail, not email.
  6. Ok, I think the website asks whether you've been out of the US in the last 5 years. If you answer "yes", and then "yes" to question whether it was more than 6 months, you get a question whether the USC spouse was in the army, working for the US government etc. If you answer "no" to that, then the website thinks you're not eligible. So... Maybe filing on paper is a better option or you wait for 5 years then online system will be happy 😃 So here is the thing, IO may also think you're ineligible because you broke continuous residence in the last 5 years. You should be OK, and the lookback should be 3 years if applying under 3 year rule, but I'm not a lawyer. @PJMERK did you have a reentry permit when you left? Did you keep assets (property, bank accounts) in the US while you were away? If no ties were maintained, with no reentry permit technically, USCIS can conclude that you abandoned your residency and attempt to strip you of your LPR status. It won't be fast and the likelihood of this is miniscule, but there's still a chance.
  7. Either it's because you had break in residency and website is not smart enough or you answered something incorrectly.
  8. It's not a problem. I'd hold off changing names until N-400 in several years (if you still need it then). It would make immigration things much easier for you.
  9. It depends on two factors: - When you filed - Where I-751 is pending You can see processing times here: https://egov.uscis.gov/processing-times/ My case started with estimated 7 months, then jumped to over 14. It got adjudicated in 20 months.
  10. Probably incompetent HRs at some companies don't know what they're doing... Those are the same HRs who would freak out about extension letter and think LPR is no longer authorized to work while I-751 is pending. That's why I always show unrestricted SS card and DL for verification.
  11. No. Do you have valid DL / ID and unrestricted SS card? That's all you need for I-9 verification.
  12. I wouldn't personally apply under 3 year rule, it's a harder route compared to 5 year rule one. - When exactly were you back in the US in 2020? - Is your spouse a US citizen? - Has your spouse been a citizen for over 3 years? - Are you married to your spouse for over 3 years? - Did you live together for 3+ years without breaks?
  13. You can be unhappy with that, but as you can see, in reality it is what is. Good luck with the search! US medical system is very expensive.
  14. That's a fair price to be honest. I did my exam in 2019 and it was around this price. It's great you can still find somebody willing to do the exam for this price, considering inflation in the last 5 years. Just do it. Whoever does it for $150 is a rarity. They may not do it correctly, which will cost you more in the end (delays, RFEs and potentially another exam).
  15. That's strange. I never heard of this requirement. And never faced it. Not every year. When switching jobs - yes. When document expires - yes.
  16. @ilikepotatoes you can absolutely switch jobs during I-751. I switched mine without any issue. Just use DL + unrestricted SS card as @D-R-J suggested.
  17. If he told you to ignore I-751 then I agree with @SalishSea
  18. What's 1-90? From OP's message it's not clear whether attorney gave advice not to file I-751. Likely they said something along the lines "Don't worry about 10 year GC incorrectly issued. Just file I-90". But nothing got mentioned about I-751 and OP neglected it.
  19. I don't believe so. Even if you somehow could verify it's valid it doesn't guarantee an entry.
×
×
  • Create New...