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2014 DV Australian winners

Thanks mate, good to know you're enjoying it. Don't suppose you're in New Zealand? I've had a solid traffic spike from NZ today haha.

As for journalism, I went straight into a Bachelor of Journalism after high school, but by the end I wasn't really sure whether I wanted to work in the industry or not.

Then I spent over a year not working in the industry, due to not being able to crack the job market, and I pretty much gave up. In early 2007 some fortunate networking landed me an entry-level gig at the ABC and I ended up spending six and a half years there before packing up last August, selling all my worldly possessions and relocating to Denver to wait out the green card process.

Haha yup I live in Auckland. That's sweet man I'm in a similiar industry, did a Bachelor of Arts in Media, Communications and been working an entry level job at the NZ radio/television company Mediaworks. Considered journalism from time to time, I enjoy writing and entry level media work isn't satisfying the soul.

Why'd you chose Maine to move to btw?
 
Considered journalism from time to time, I enjoy writing and entry level media work isn't satisfying the soul.

Why'd you chose Maine to move to btw?

If you choose journalism, prepare to work weird hours and have a bizarre social schedule forever. Until you're a senior staff member, or are so incredibly good that you can wrangle a 9-5 M-F gig.

And I didn't choose Maine, Maine chose me. This was the first place I got a legit job offer, so I took it (in favor of spending countless months unemployed, which would've sucked). I'm still getting rejection emails from applications I made in September, so I'm glad I got this one when I did.
 
Don't suppose you're in New Zealand? I've had a solid traffic spike from NZ today haha.

Actually that could have been me too :)
I've just joined the forum today, but was reading it yesterday & saw you had a blog which I read a lot of - very interesting & useful reading!

I'm from Christchurch, New Zealand, and have a CN of OC13XX, so I'm expecting an interview in probably July I think.

If we (I have a spouse & one 16 yo child) get visas we are unsure of our destination in the US (all 3 of us have favourite towns, but all 3 are different!). I do have family in NA in Tulsa (Uncle who married a local Oklahoma lass) and on Vancouver Island - a brother with 3 young children (which makes the northeast region, particularly Seattle, attractive to me - but I have read there are high taxes & high cost of living there). Choices, choices.

Who knows where we will end up, but one thing is certain - we are very excited at the prospect & have all our fingers & toes crossed!
 
Hi everyone,

I have another medical related question. I am waiting to receive my interview date but it will likely be in june according KCC. My number is in the mid 300's and I sent my forms off a week ago.

My question is… how long before the interview do you need to have your medical? Can it be only like a week before? Did anyone get their medical done in Melbourne? The reason I am asking is because I want the date to be as late as possible for entrance into the US and I know this goes by your medical.

Cheers,
Renee
 
My question is… how long before the interview do you need to have your medical? Can it be only like a week before? Did anyone get their medical done in Melbourne? The reason I am asking is because I want the date to be as late as possible for entrance into the US and I know this goes by your medical.

Cheers,
Renee

Yes. You're technically not supposed to even have your medical until you receive your interview date (I slightly exploited it, but most wouldn't be advised to) for that reason. This is what I posted late last year, between medical and interview:

I was in a similar boat in August mate. I have a case number that *could* have landed me an October interview, but I was scheduled to fly to the US for a holiday on August 28. I missed the October cut by less than 10 spots, and I was disappointed because I wanted to get the medical and police check out of the way before I left for my holiday.

But because I was confident my interview would now be in early November, I rolled the dice and called the medical clinic in Brisbane to see if they'd do the check-up anyway. They said as long as I was confident the interview would be within six months (i.e. the examination expiration date) then they could book me in. I also went to the local police station and did the full fingerprint check - it was about $180 from memory.

I haven't read anything about the medical being done the same day as the interview but that sounds sketchy to me. My results took a week to be ready after my examination, and I picked them up rather than having them forwarded to the consulate. But I'm in Brisbane so I could be totally wrong.

As has been mentioned here quite a bit before, the six-month expiration date on the medical results is a lot less hard and fast for Australians as it is for other, shall we say less developed, countries.
 
So Hubby and my interview is tomorrow. We arrived in Sydney today, checked into our hotel, walked out to find the Consulate office (MAN! That building is HUGE!), had a early dinner so we can crash out and be nicely refreshed for 9am appointment - though we are going to aim to get there just after 8.

Never received an email or letter directly from the Sydney office, but I have all the documents they could possibly ask for (High School and uni certificates, birth/marriage certificate, medical results, police checks, photos, 3kg aust post bag). I knew we had to provide a US address so I have that, and I also have details of our trip to LA in November last year as that wasn't recorded on the original forms sent in May (since it hadn't happened then). I have cash ready to pay the fees, and even a book to read while we are waiting.

Have I forgotten anything?

I'm nervous and the waiting sucks! It's all seemed so far away and now it's HERE!!
 
So Hubby and my interview is tomorrow.

Congratulations and best of luck to you and your hubby, hoping it all goes smooth for you.


and I also have details of our trip to LA in November last year as that wasn't recorded on the original forms sent in May (since it hadn't happened then).

I'm curious to hear back on this, as I have sent KCC an email about it. I have entered the US three times since submitting the forms (August, December, January) and will be over there again next week.
 
So Hubby and my interview is tomorrow. We arrived in Sydney today, checked into our hotel, walked out to find the Consulate office (MAN! That building is HUGE!), had a early dinner so we can crash out and be nicely refreshed for 9am appointment - though we are going to aim to get there just after 8.

Never received an email or letter directly from the Sydney office, but I have all the documents they could possibly ask for (High School and uni certificates, birth/marriage certificate, medical results, police checks, photos, 3kg aust post bag). I knew we had to provide a US address so I have that, and I also have details of our trip to LA in November last year as that wasn't recorded on the original forms sent in May (since it hadn't happened then). I have cash ready to pay the fees, and even a book to read while we are waiting.

Have I forgotten anything?

I'm nervous and the waiting sucks! It's all seemed so far away and now it's HERE!!


Sounds like you are ready. Go and get your GC!
 
London interview (Aus citizen)

Hi everyone,

First of all - this thread is fantastic! I've picked up a lot of useful info here - thanks to everyone that has posted.

I'm an Aussie living in London and have my interview at the London consulate early next month. I now have all my documentation in order and am eagerly awaiting my interview. I'll be sure to share my experiences post interview. Was wondering whether anyone else is being interviewed in London and able to share their experiences?
 
2NL Recieved

Hi All,

Very excited to have received my 2nd NL. Interview for Mid May in Sydney.

I have some questions to the wonderful people on this forum in regards to financials.

I have read most of the areas on this forum and found different answers and wanted to try get something solid. What is the amount if the consulate asks for Sydney they will need to see to be able to show that you won’t become a public charge? I have seen varying amounts ($14K, $10K, $25K) on here from similar questions. My situation is... I’m a single guy, works as a Senior IT engineer, and heading to San Francisco. Did a bad investment recently and lost 99% of my savings. I can pull together the cash but need a figure that the Sydney consulate will accept as a minimum. Can anyone advise?

Thanks in advance.
 
Hi All,

Very excited to have received my 2nd NL. Interview for Mid May in Sydney.

I have some questions to the wonderful people on this forum in regards to financials.

I have read most of the areas on this forum and found different answers and wanted to try get something solid. What is the amount if the consulate asks for Sydney they will need to see to be able to show that you won’t become a public charge? I have seen varying amounts ($14K, $10K, $25K) on here from similar questions. My situation is... I’m a single guy, works as a Senior IT engineer, and heading to San Francisco. Did a bad investment recently and lost 99% of my savings. I can pull together the cash but need a figure that the Sydney consulate will accept as a minimum. Can anyone advise?

Thanks in advance.

They will not Ask to look at your financial statements, and even if you offer to show it to them they will say no, don't need to see it. All you need to prove is that you are educated or experienced enough to get a job that will financially support you while over there. Obviously you will need to have enough finances to get yourself set up initially, but that's a given.
 
Hi everyone, just thought I would provide a quick update on my situation - we entered the US a couple of weeks ago and our visa was activated in a pretty easy process. Arrived on Honolulu, went to a separate counter, not the US/PR entry (we had to ask someone where to go). The officer checked our docs, fingerprinted us and we signed for our green cards. As we were coming back to Australia after two weeks in Hawaii, and relocating permanently to NYC in July, he said to hold onto the X-rays and bring them when we re-enter in New York. And then he said "Congratulations, welcome to America!"

Fast forward 1.5 weeks later and our green cards and SSN have already arrived at my friend's address in Florida. Super fast!! Maybe they don't get as many immigrants into Honolulu so the processing is faster? But I'm very impressed!
 
I can pull together the cash but need a figure that the Sydney consulate will accept as a minimum. Can anyone advise?

Thanks in advance.

There's no "set figure". If you show up and say "oh, I don't have savings and I don't know what I'm going to do for work", then you're in the shit. But providing you make a first impression that you have the skills and means to support yourself, you'll be fine.

Personally I think the smartest thing I did in the interview was tell my consular officer that I was intending to take non-professional work while I looked for career jobs. I believe that showed my intention wasn't to sit around idly waiting for something to drop into my lap, but to get out there and start working and earning (and paying tax - after all, that's the American way).

They will not Ask to look at your financial statements, and even if you offer to show it to them they will say no, don't need to see it.

Well that's not entirely true. I handed bank statements in with the rest of my documentation and they spent an equal amount of time reading over them as they did every other form. They're not going to be fussed if you have them on hand and pass them over, but they're not going to ask for them either. Similarly to the medical/expiry date issue, financials appear to be a bigger problem for applicants from those...less developed countries.

Fast forward 1.5 weeks later and our green cards and SSN have already arrived at my friend's address in Florida. Super fast!! Maybe they don't get as many immigrants into Honolulu so the processing is faster? But I'm very impressed!

Holy shit are you serious?! That's incredible. It took my green card two months to arrive, although the SSN came a little quicker - maybe two and a half weeks.

I'd say your hunch about Hawaii not processing as many DV immigrants could be on the money. Congratulations in any case!
 
Interview over. Visa not approved.... YET!

We had everything we needed, plus a bunch of stuff we didn't. The doctor who did our medicals forgot to fill in a couple of tick boxes on the first page of my forms! The consulate will contact him and get the required form completed. It will take about an extra week of processing, but talk about anti-climatical! Been told to contact the consulate if we haven't received our passports back in 2 weeks.

So, detailed run down. Our appointment was for 9am, we got to the consulate at 8. Went up to the 10th floor, through security, ID checked, names ticked off a list We were staying in a hotel around the corner so we didn't take electronics, bags, etc. It was just the forms in a paper envelope, a book to read, wallet and sunnies. The sunnies had to stay with security. Waited for a couple of minutes at level 10 before we were ushered into the elevator to level 59. Had our ID checked again at the security door, then we went in, took a number and took our seat.

Waited maybe 20 minutes before we were first called up. The lady took all our forms, sent me to pay the fees at another window (TAKE CASH!! - They do accept credit card payments, but not EFTPOS, but they prefer cash), You get 2 receipts - one to go with your forms and one to keep. Handed the first lady the forms receipt (they are marked differently) and we sat back down while she collated all the information.

With regards to our additional trip to the US, I had written the dates/places on a separate piece of paper. She took that too and attached photocopies of it to our application. The paper also had our US address and an additional place we've lived since the May forms. Oh, the US address you give, didn't even think about it, but you have to provide the name of the person who lives there too.

Called up to the same lady about 30 minutes later and were told all was in order, except for the doctor not filling in a section on my medical, so the visa won't be approved today but only because of the extra processing to get that information. Apparently it happens every now and then so she wasn't at all concerned. I was pretty angry, but what can ya do. She took our fingerprints and we sat down again.

Third call up was the actual interview - different window, different employee. We swore an oath to tell the truth, and that all information on the forms we had submitted was true and correct. And then the questions - Why do you want to move to America, Do you know anyone over there (family/friends), How are you related to the woman standing next to you, How did you meet. He went through my hubby's forms, asked if we had the original of our marriage certificate as the first lady had forgotten to stamp the copy. Ask my hubby about a couple of medical conditions he has - how they are control and how easy is the medication to get.

Then my turn - what do you do, was there any problem with your medical. He then told me the doctor had not filled in a section, that it happens and they will follow up with the doctor. It will take an extra week or so for processing, but everything is ok other than that. So, not approved today, but not to worry.

We left about 90 minutes after we arrived.

When we got back to the hotel my husband's phone was ringing - it was the consulate and there was a problem with our fingerprints so could we come back. AGH! Just more to make the story more interesting when we tell our American grandkids! lol. So back we go, through security on the 10th floor. Realised that we'd left our passports at the hotel - we literally grabbed my wallet, his phone and ran! But the security on the 59th floor ushered us straight in - obviously they'd been told we were coming back. The lady on the phone told us to go straight back to our interview window when we got there. We did, waited maybe 10 minutes while our guy finished interviewing someone. He re-took hubby's left hand and my right. And we were out the door again.

Oh, I asked about visa activation time too - our guy told us for DV it's 6 months from the date of your medical.

Pointers for interview - DEFINATELY get there early! A lot of people arrived around 9 and the place heats up with the morning sun. I would hate to imagine what it would be like mid morning.
Take a book
Have your paperwork in order - original then copy, Principle applicants details on top, express post at the bottom
Keep your answers short and be happy. No good can come of being crabby with them
I read on this form about not being able to take plastic folders up with you, but there were a lot of people with those today. Plus one couple with 3 big folders information (but I think they might have been doing a family sponsored visa, not DV).
Yes everyone can hear you because of the screens, but unless you're at the centre windows the waiting people can't hear you.

We had been looking forward to getting that little slip of paper saying you've been approved and to not get that, but still know you're going to get a visa is totally not the same. We both feel very drained and have kinda crashed out for the day.
 
Police Checks

Hi all, I have my interview on May 27th at Sydney. As part of the police check do I need to get finger print testing? Think I read a note from Crawf that he did but couldn't see anything on the DV website to confirm if it's required.
Thanks.
 
Hi all, I have my interview on May 27th at Sydney. As part of the police check do I need to get finger print testing? Think I read a note from Crawf that he did but couldn't see anything on the DV website to confirm if it's required.
Thanks.

Hi Tommy,

I had my interview last week. I went with the name check only and there was no problem. It's been mentioned before on this board that you only need the fingerprint check if you've changed your name at some point in the past.

Good luck!
 
Hey Everyone,

Just to give an update to my experience, I entered the United States on the 25th of January, and I received my Green Card in the mail on the 12th of March. All set up here in LA now with a job, car and apartment. Good luck to the rest of you!
 
Hey Everyone,

Just to give an update to my experience, I entered the United States on the 25th of January, and I received my Green Card in the mail on the 12th of March. All set up here in LA now with a job, car and apartment. Good luck to the rest of you!

Nicely done mate, and welcome!
 
Yes. You're technically not supposed to even have your medical until you receive your interview date (I slightly exploited it, but most wouldn't be advised to) for that reason.

As has been mentioned here quite a bit before, the six-month expiration date on the medical results is a lot less hard and fast for Australians as it is for other, shall we say less developed, countries.

Thanks for your answer Crawf!

Another question…


My partner and I were looking at potentially entering Hawaii either on our way to mainland US (for technically our honeymoon!) or to then come home to Australia before moving permanently to the US. We were thinking of going to Hawaii for 2-3 weeks. Would our green card be processed while we were in Hawaii? Could we have it given to us there or would it need to be sent to an address on the mainland? My partner's aunty lives in California and we could have it sent there…

Thanks!
 
Thanks for your answer Crawf!

Another question…


My partner and I were looking at potentially entering Hawaii either on our way to mainland US (for technically our honeymoon!) or to then come home to Australia before moving permanently to the US. We were thinking of going to Hawaii for 2-3 weeks. Would our green card be processed while we were in Hawaii? Could we have it given to us there or would it need to be sent to an address on the mainland? My partner's aunty lives in California and we could have it sent there…

Thanks!

Yes you would be processed in HI, your temp visa (551) would be stamped and that is recognized as your permission to stay/re-enter for up to one year. Your GC could be sent to CA no problem...
 
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