Jump to content

appleblossom

Members
  • Posts

    4,220
  • Joined

  • Days Won

    22

Everything posted by appleblossom

  1. That's not good. Does your CEAC status say that the case was returned to NVC?
  2. Yes, because your case may have been moved. And if you've never had any acknowledgement of the divorce decree I'd question if it was ever received or not. Have you phoned to check?
  3. It means somebody has done something. It could mean they're about to issue your visa, but could also mean somebody has just added your SAR to the file and it's still waiting to be looked at. No way of knowing unfortunately, just keep an eye on your status and keep fingers crossed for the magic words of 'approved' or 'issued' to pop up. Good luck.
  4. That’s perfectly normal. As per the USCIS processing times page “USCIS Service Centers prioritize the adjudication of Form I-130, Petition for Alien Relative, preference petitions when the Department of State Visa Bulletin shows an immigrant visa is available or will soon become available.” You can check your enquiry date though on the same page (I.e. the first day you’ll allowed to chase it up). I suspect for F3 category that’s still many years away but if you think you should have been moved to F1 then you can probably do that now. Put your PD in (at the bottom of the page) and see what it says). https://egov.uscis.gov/processing-times/ Just checking, but how did your mother inform USCIS of your change in marital status? Have you submitted the divorce degree in your online account?
  5. Please take the time to read the responses you’ve been given previously when you’ve asked this question. You need to check the Visa Bulletin regularly, but there’s still many years to go
  6. If your PD is 2016 then there’s no visa available to you now anyway. What category does your online case status show?
  7. Hi, you've replied to two really old posts so the people you've quoted aren't likely to see your comment. Did you have any questions anybody can help with? When did you pay your green card fee? And what does your online status say?
  8. So you just take the updated ones to the interview, no need to upload them.
  9. Definitely file for FOIA to find out what's going on, but as said above, she absolutely can work, or study. If an employer isn't prepared to hire her without a green card then they're breaking the law. They have to accept her EAD as evidence of her right to work so you just need to educate them.
  10. What documents do you want to update? You'd normally just take them to the interview, NVC has nothing to do with it once the case has been transferred to the consulate.
  11. What is your home country? Where are you now?
  12. If a doctor really says she is unable to travel (although I'd question why if she's just pregnant, and doesn't have any pregnancy related medical issues?), then she could file to adjust status as that would give you a perfectly good reason to. But it would have to be spontaneous and not a pre-conceived plan, so I wouldn't research it too much as that could come back to bite you. Make sure she doesn't give anything up and keeps all her UK ties when she comes to visit.
  13. In return, please fill in your timeline. The more EB applicant timelines we have to add to the body of knowledge on VJ for us employment based applicants, the better. Thx.
  14. It will delay things a bit unfortunately, she should have picked London if she’s in the UK rather than Ireland. Timing will depend on the type of case.
  15. Mine was 4 working days from interview to receiving the passport with visa in. That seems to be fairly standard, they say to allow 10 days but it never seems to take that long. But AP could take a lot longer, so it will depend on when your status changes to ‘issued’. Good luck.
  16. That's tougher than mine was - two questions, one was what I was going to do in the US, and the other I don't even remember! I did share my questions and answers somewhere after my interview though.
  17. This is where the confusion has arisen, lots of talk from the OP of a 'visa', but I think he means ESTA/VWP. But either way the Singaporean friend isn't going to get a new 90 days by going to Mexico, and is risking being refused entry if he tries to come straight back to the US wherever he goes.
  18. There's no visa available to you as your PD isn't current, so no interview can be scheduled. https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/legal/visa-law0/visa-bulletin/2024/visa-bulletin-for-september-2024.html
  19. It's a contiguous territory though, so doesn't reset anything.
  20. Is this her first visit to the US since her child was born? If so, she should expect to be questioned upon entry about why she was out of the US for so long and how she's maintained her LPR status - so make sure she takes plenty of proof of ties to the US, tax returns filed, bills being paid, an address being maintained there, etc.
  21. That's perfectly normal, everybody goes through Administrative Processing. For most people it's approved very quickly (my online status only said Admin Processing for a couple of hours before changing to Approved), but for others it can take longer. No way of knowing how long yours will take, just keep an eye on your status and fingers crossed it will change soon. Good luck.
  22. Seems about right to me, a year is pretty standard.
  23. Wise for you ‘to do his signature’?! No, that would be fraud. There’s already his bigamy and immigration fraud, don’t add any more problems or commit your own crime. I can’t imagine why on earth he wouldn’t want to withdraw the petition. He’s at risk of losing his US citizenship and going to jail if what he’s done comes to light. Frankly, this is a mess.
  24. Oh jeez. Then yes, problems for both of you. That’s not a can of worms I’d want to open, I’m amazed he even agreed to petition for you.
×
×
  • Create New...