++++ Can you trust CIS's estimates for i-485? ++++

e17345

Registered Users (C)
Can you trust dates posted under your profile on CIS’s site?

Here is what it says when I login with my case number:
Your I485 Application to Register Permanent Residence or to Adjust Status was received on May 23, 2005. We mailed you a receipt with information about processing. It is taking between 120 and 180 days for us to process this kind of case. We will mail you a decision as soon as processing is complete.

The question is: how accurate are their estimates? Can I trust them? Or are they really saying it may take around 180 days or ……xxx number of days? I live in Atlanta, GA.
 
I know what you mean, since ATL,GA the dates that shows are for 2003. That message is just an automatic message that they sent to everybody doesn't matter where you are. So is just an estimate, average...whatever you want to call it. It is not finite.

So even you don't trust on it, I mean everybody can count and realize that won't be in 120-180 days (if they are in 2003); I don't think that there is other choice, just to wait and be patience :)

Good luck,
 
e17345 said:
Can you trust dates posted under your profile on CIS’s site?

Here is what it says when I login with my case number:
Your I485 Application to Register Permanent Residence or to Adjust Status was received on May 23, 2005. We mailed you a receipt with information about processing. It is taking between 120 and 180 days for us to process this kind of case. We will mail you a decision as soon as processing is complete.

The question is: how accurate are their estimates? Can I trust them? Or are they really saying it may take around 180 days or ……xxx number of days? I live in Atlanta, GA.

You cannot trust anything CIS says about anything!
 
HOWEVER; here is an interesting twist to it. Even though it says 2003 for Atlanta on the website, a friend of mine just got his green card even though it said Aug 2003 on the website...

CONFUSED!
 
I think it doesn't matter what CIS' website says or what does an individules experience is. The bottomline is, its their game, only thing we can do is wait & pray. It seems like each case is unique and can not relate.
 
e17345 said:
HOWEVER; here is an interesting twist to it. Even though it says 2003 for Atlanta on the website, a friend of mine just got his green card even though it said Aug 2003 on the website...

CONFUSED!

e17345:
Can u be more specific and tell us when your friend in the Atlanta area applied, and give us a general sense of your friends timeline? Thanks.
 
Hey guys/girls, I found this...little bit old but give us an idea that we won't really know when will be our turn. Just wait and be patience :)

What happened to USCIS 'efficiency' efforts?

News From the American Immigration Lawyers Association

In mid-January 2005, the National Benefits Center (NBC) ceased showing a processing time on its reports for I-130 petitions for alien relatives. The report for the NBC had never shown a processing time for I-485s, application for adjustment of status, other than LIFE Act filings. However, attorneys had been referencing the I-130 processing times to gauge the processing times for the accompanying I-485s. Now, no processing times are shown for either filing type.
This raised the question of how attorneys can follow the progress of concurrently filed I-130s/I-485s that are at the NBC either because they were forwarded there from the local USCIS office under the indirect filing program, were filed at the Chicago lock box under the direct filing program that was launched in December 2004, or were forwarded there from a service center.
The AILA NBC Liaison Committee has been advised that the NBC does not actually adjudicate the I-130s or I-485s, but instead only sets them up for local office processing and adjudicates the ancillary benefits (I-131s and I-765s). Therefore, the NBC does not show the processing times for the I-130 and I-485 forms. Instead, for filings under the indirect processing and direct processing programs, it holds the I-130s/I-485s until the local office advises that it is ready to adjudicate them, then forwards them to the local office.
Thus, to follow the processing times for filings under the indirect filing or direct filing programs, you need to reference the processing times for the local office where the indirect filing was initially made or the local office where the direct filing would have been made but for the direct filing program. If the filing is at the NBC, but is outside the normal processing time (i.e., was filed prior to the date noted on the local office's processing time report), an inquiry can be submitted through AILA's NBC Liaison Committee.
There also are still a few filings that were initially made at the Texas Service Center that the TSC then transferred to NBC for processing. Some of these were then further transferred to the local offices, but others may remain at the NBC. AILA's NBC Liaison Committee is looking into the status of these filings. In the meantime, if you have one of these filings, and have not been notified that that it has been transferred to the local USCIS office, you can submit a liaison inquiry to find out its status.
 
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