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TiffAndMike

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Everything posted by TiffAndMike

  1. He will definitely try to. He's challenging the 14th amendment due to the wording of it. It will be up to the courts at that point. Another option which he has already talked about doing is ending "chain migration". He has specifically mentioned ending IR-1s for parents of USC's and LPR's. Making IR-1's only available to spouses and minor children of USC's and LPR's would would drastically cut down on "anchor babies" as it would eliminate the opportunity for them to ever sponser their illegal parents. For the life of me, I can not figure out why we allow women to come into this country when you can obviously tell that they are going to give birth at any moment.
  2. The paralegal at my attorneys office told me that typically the service center closest to your residence typically handles your petition 😳
  3. I honestly think that his primary focus upon entering office is going to be on closing the border and getting all these violent criminals, cartels and gang members out of this country. He will implement the "Remain in Mexico" policy again. All of Biden's "Parole in Place" policies will cease to exists. He will either try to get countries that refuse to let us deport their citizens to take them back or he will just flat out deny their visas. He eventually will attempt to end family chain migration, abolish certain types of visas and change the law on "birthright citizenship" by requiring at least one parent to be either a USC or LPR. Most countries actually do require at least one parent to be a naturalized citizen in order for their child to be granted citizenship of that country. I don't believe that those of us who have immediate family or fiance cases will be affected negatively. They just raised the fees on those this year so I doubt they will raise them again. I think if anything, our cases will actually speed up drastically since they won't be in a rush to issue work permits to everyone under the sun with false asylum claims. USCIS is primarily fee funded by those of us who go through the legal channels. There are currently quite a few "fee waivers" right now. I'm pretty sure that most of them will go away as they should. The current backlog that we have is due to a lot of the immigration policies Biden put into place and not requiring fees for them. Think about it, if USCIS isn't getting money from certain petitions, then they have no money to hire more staff to process those petitions. As a result, USCIS has to allocate the bulk of their staff to process those petitions while the backlog of paid petitions keeps growing longer and longer. When I first applied for my husband to come to the states in December 2023, the current wait time was 11 months. If the wait time would of stayed consistent, I'd be getting my approval any day now if I didn't already have it. Evey single time Biden created a new parole in place scheme, I saw my wait time continue to climb up. It is now sitting at 15.5 months! 6 1/2 extra months than it was when I filed. I actually voted for Trump as I saw him as my only hope to get my husband here with me sometime in the next year. With Kamala, I'd probably be waiting another 4 or 5 years.
  4. I'd talk to an immigration attorney about it. There are plenty of them out there that give free consultations. My attorney only specializes in fiance and spouse visas and he gives free consultations. I could give you his name if you want. If an attorney says it will be an issue, then it would probably be smart to hire one in the event that you have to apply for a waiver. Most attorneys will not touch an immigration case unless they are the one who filed it in the first place. If I remember correctly, if you only have one CIMT and it wasn't super serious then you should be okay. I'd double check that though as it has been over a year since I looked into it. Also, I'd go ahead and have them get a copy of their court and police records ahead of time so they know exactly what appears on it. I had my husband do this as we were worried about stuff he did when he was a minor coming back to haunt us.
  5. Potomac...the slowest service center there is. Idk why it was sent there considering I live in Texas and less than an hour away from the Texas Service Center. Have you been on USCIS site recently? If so, how long does it say on yours? Mine said 9 months. 🤬
  6. We can definitely do that! Which service center has your petition?
  7. I'm a fellow December 2023 filer as well. If you need to vent about how frustrating this whole process is, feel free to PM me. 

     

     

  8. It's not 2 months longer. It is 5 to 6 months longer. According to when I applied, my case was supposed to of been adjudicated next month and now the estimate is the end of February. I even have an email from USCIS that states it is now taking 15.5 months. And you can go look for yourself on the USCIS website, it clearly shows how some petitions have speed up while others had drastically slowed down. https://egov.uscis.gov/processing-times/historic-pt
  9. Go to USCIS's website and you will see it for yourself. You will see how certain petitions have drastically speed up while others have drastically slowed down. Sign up for emails from USCIS and you will recieve all kinds of emails about what they are now implementing. And look on government websites pertaining to Homeland Security. You will see where it clearly states that USCIS decides where to allocate it's own staff. It isn't because of the application fee going up. They have been giving priority to cranking out new voters, granting work permits and dealing with all of Biden's immigration executive orders. Have you not noticed that every single time there is a new executive order by Biden pertaining to immigration that our wait times go further up? Those are the absolute reasons why they are taking so long. They don't care about us.
  10. For those who might benefit from this: My husband has a pending I-130 and his ESTA expires this month. When he came to visit me last month, we applied to renew his ESTA and it was approved within 4 hours. Yes, you can renew a ESTA with a pending I-130.
  11. If you've been waiting for 10 months now, I'd assume that you are a November or December filer then? I'm a December filer myself (priority date Dec 7) and I too have been waiting 10 months. So trust me, I'm just as flusterated as you are. I hate being separated from my husband who happens to be German. I know when we both filed, it was only taking 11 months at the time. Unfortunately, USCIS has decided to prioritize other petition types over I-130's. It sucks but there is nothing we can do about it. I can tell you from personal experience that even if you put in an expidited request, USCIS will not look at it anytime soon nor will they approve it. I tried for an expidited request for medical reasons back in March and they denied it MONTHS later. And I BARELY did not qualify for it. Your situation will definitely not qualify for it. You and I are getting closer to our approvals and eventually they will happen. Believe me, I know this waiting is awful.
  12. On the I-130 petition, you do list the beneficiaries employment history.
  13. Give it a little time and the estimate will jump back down. I constantly upload evidence to them and it does the same to me. Their estimates are a joke and don't mean anything.
  14. Right now, USCIS is taking up to 16 months to process the majority of petitions. It seems like most people on here are getting approved in about 14.5 months. You will be filing after everyone else on here has done so don't automatically expect the same time frame for yours to be processed. USCIS may finally speed up or they might get further backlogged. I petitioned in the beginning of December 2023. When I submitted mine, USCIS was only taking 11 months. Since then, they have drastically slowed down and now I'm sitting at 14.5 months, despite what the time frame was at the time I petitioned. USCIS can allocate their staff any time at their own discretion. In other words, they can speed up one type of petition while allowing a different type to continue to get backlogged. That is what has been happening with the I-130'S. USCIS is just the first step of the entire process. The rest of the process seems to go quite a bit faster. With the NVC, how fast they work depends on how fast you get them all the documents they need. I'd say probably around 2 months, if you are prepared with all the required documents. For the part of the world your fiance is in, the consular interview typically takes about a month to 3 months from the time NVC finishes with your case. Being that your fiance is in Finland, she will probably either attend her interview in the UK or in Frankfurt, Germany.
  15. I forgot to add, he and I have been together for slightly over 2 years, married for 1 now. We see each other twice a year
  16. If you haven't seen each other in person and you are legally married, then that would be a super huge red flag. You are expected to of consumated your marriage. That is stated in USCIS documents. That's kinda of hard to do without seeing each other. I am 19 years older than my husband but that's my only red flag. I am not worried about it though as we have plenty of proof that our marriage is 110% legit and we are both in it for the right reasons. We have both met each other's family as well. Before he and I ever got engaged, he came here on the visa waiver and spent almost 3 months with me. On his 2nd visit, we got married in Vegas. Since then, I've been to visit him once and he has been to visit me once. my thoughts to you would be to consider a K1 visa instead of a IR1/CR1 visa. You only have to meet in person once and once she arrives, you have 90 days to marry or not. Besides, the wait time for an IR1/CR1 is significantly longer these days compared to a K1. While someone might be great over the phone or on paper, doesn't mean they will be that way in person. You need to spend an extended period of time living with someone to see their true self. You don't want to just jump being marrid and living with someone for it not to truly work out. Divorcing if it don't work out is the least of what you'd have to worry about. You actually have to sign a 10 year contract with the government which you agree to be financially liable for her. If you divorce and she goes on food stamps, section 8, ect., YOU have to pay the government back for the support she receives from them. Before my husband and I ever got engaged, I researched everything and I made 110% sure that our relationship was worth the risk.
  17. I'm a December 2023 filer and I'm still waiting on my approval as well. Last time I checked, it's taking 15.5 months to process I-130s. My husband is a German citizen, so we will going through Frankfurt as well. As far as cases filed after ours getting approved first, I think that it really depends on which service center ended up with your I-130 and if they have enough sense to transfer it to a more efficient service center when they get so backed up. Potomac has mine and they are beyond slow. Hopefully they end up transferring it. And hopefully as soon as the election is over, they speed up the processing times for I-130s.
  18. And THIS is exactly why I will never vote Democrat. I'm a swing voter who was actually going to vote for Kennedy before he suspended his campaign and took his name off the ballot in Texas. After the utter misery of the LEGAL immigration experience, Trump is getting my vote now, despite the fact that it was Harris' office that forwarded my email complaint to USCIS about the never ending processing times for I-130's.
  19. Good news for all of you May 2023 filers who have your petitions at Potomac Service Center. They are currently processing May 14,2023 and earlier I-130's. After emailing President Biden, VP Harris and the CIS Ombudsman, I got an email back from Kimberley Coleman-Bearden, Chief USCIS Contact Center stating this.
  20. N-400 is for becoming an American Citizen. The reason why those are being approved at rapid pace is because the Biden/Harris administration has been trying to crank out as many new voters for the Democratic party as possible before the November election. And yes, I am pretty sure all USCIS made all of it's employees focus on that and all the other abuse of power executive actions that Biden/Harris put into place when it pertains to anything related to immigration. This is why all of our petitions keep taking longer and longer to process.
  21. The USCIS just needs to be sued. Everyone needs to just ban together and sue them in a class action lawsuit. They are getting beyond ridiculous with their processing times and putting all other petitions first. 16 Republican lead states just filed a law suit on the Biden administration and the head of homeland security over their latest "parole in place" program for illegal spouses of citizens scheme. I actually just got off the phone with my states attorney general's office, talking to them about how every time a new "parole in place" scheme comes into play, our processing times go up even further. The funny and sad thing about this is I wasn't the first person to call them today saying the exact same thing. I asked to see if my state can sue USCIS on behalf of us because of the way they keep doing us, cause at this point, it's gonna take 5 years to get any of our petitions approved. They aren't allowed to disclose what lawsuits they intend to file, so they couldn't tell me a yes or a no on this. If you live in one of those 16 states that likes to sue the federal government, contact your attorney generals office and be very vocal about this.
  22. Pretty sad it's costing you 6k to get USCIS to do a job you paid them to do.
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