Did the law has been changed?

eljay

Registered Users (C)
Visit USCIS web site.
Go to FAQ then adjustment of status then Asylee or Refugee seeking LPR.

This is the link
http://www.uscis.gov/graphics/services/RefAdjust/index.htm

Lookat the Asylees Filing for Permanent Resident Status

1. No more G-325 Biographic Information forms required for asylee.
2. Medical forms, I-693, has to be with original application. No need to stay untill they ask.

As some one stated in a differant thread they changed the low too. They approve our green cards from the date of asylum granted.
 
i hope they changed the law

i will love to apply for citizenship as soon as possible

ND : FEB 2001
FP : MAY 2004
BIO: AUG 2005
APPROVED : AUG 16 2005
RESIDENT SINCE : AUG 16 2004
ELEGIBLE FOR CITIZENSHIP : MAY 17 2009....I HATE THAT
 
Guys,

Will this change make a problem for people who were granted Asylum after 1990.

Also it says that Medical should be submitted when filing I485. Do I need to go for a Medical now or wait until I am told. My ND is Jan 06. Bio 3 done on Mar 06.

Thanks

Ed



Sec. 209.2 Adjustment of status of alien granted asylum.



The provisions of this section shall be the sole and exclusive procedure for adjustment of status by an asylee admitted under section 208 of the Act whose application is based on his or her asylee status.



(a) Eligibility.



(1) Except as provided in paragraph (a)(2) of this section, the status of any alien who has been granted asylum in the United States may be adjusted by the director to that of an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence, provided the alien: (Amended effective 7/6/98; 63 FR 30105)



(i) Applies for such adjustment;



(ii) Has been physically present in the United States for at least one year after having been granted asylum;



(iii) Continues to be a refugee within the meaning of section 101(a)(42) of the Act, or is the spouse or child of a refugee;



(iv) Has not been firmly resettled in any foreign country; and



(v) Is admissible to the United States as an immigrant under the Act at the time of examination for adjustment without regard to paragraphs (4), (5)(A), (5)(B), and (7)(A)(i) of section 212(a) of the Act, and (vi) has a refugee number available under section 201(a) of the Act.



If the application for adjustment filed under this part exceeds the refugee numbers available under section 207(a) of the Act for the fiscal year, a waiting list will be established on a priority basis by the date the application was properly filed.



(2) An alien, who was granted asylum in the United States prior to November 29, 1990 (regardless of whether or not such asylum has been terminated under section 208(b) of the Act), and is no longer a refugee due to a change in circumstances in the foreign state where he or she feared persecution, may also have his or her status adjusted by the director to that of an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence even if he or she is no longer able to demonstrate that he or she continues to be a refugee within the meaning of section 101(a)(42) of the Act, or to be a spouse or child of such a refugee or to have been physically present in the United States for at least one year after being granted asylum, so long as he or she is able to meet the requirements noted in paragraphs (a)(1)(i), (iv), and (v) of this section. Such persons are exempt from the numerical limitations of section 209(b) of the Act. However, the number of aliens who are natives of any foreign state who may adjust status pursuant to this paragraph in any fiscal year shall not exceed the difference between the per country limitation established under section 202(a) of the Act and the number of aliens who are chargeable to that foreign state in the fiscal year under section 202 of the Act. Aliens who applied for adjustment of status under section 209(b) of the Act before June 1, 1990, are also exempt from its numerical limitation without any restrictions. (Amended effective 7/6/98; 63 FR 30105)



(b) Inadmissible Alien. An applicant who is inadmissible to the United States under section 212(a) of the Act, may, under section 209(c) of the Act, have the grounds of inadmissibility waived by the director (except for those grounds under paragraphs (27), (29), (33), and so much of (23) as relates to trafficking in narcotics) for humanitarian purposes, to assure family unity, or when it is otherwise in the public interest. An application for the waiver may be filed on Form I - 602 (Application by Refugee for Waiver of Grounds of Excludability) with the application for adjustment. An applicant for adjustment who has had the status of an exchange alien nonimmigrant under section 101(a)(15)(J) of the Act, and who is subject to the foreign resident requirement of section 212(e) of the Act, shall be eligible for adjustment without regard to the foreign residence requirement. (Amended 7/6/98; 63 FR 30105)



(c) Application. An application for the benefits of section 209(b) of the Act may be filed on Form I-485, with the correct fee, with the director of the appropriate Service office identified in the instructions to the Form I-485. A separate application must be filed by each alien. Every applicant who is 14 years of age or older must submit a completed Form G-325A (Biographic Information) with the Form I-485 application. Following submission of the Form I-485 application, every applicant who is 14 years of age or older will be required to execute a Form FD-258 (Applicant Fingerprint Card) at such time and place as the Service will designate. Except as provided in paragraph (a)(2) of this section, the application must also be supported by evidence that the applicant has been physically present in the United States for at least 1 year. If an alien has been placed in deportation or exclusion proceedings, the application can be filed and considered only in proceedings under section 240 of the Act. (Amended effective 4/1/97; 62 FR 10312) (Amended effective 3/29/98; 63 FR 12979) (Revised effective 7/6/98; 63 FR 30105)



(d) Medical Examination. An alien seeking adjustment of status under section 209(b) of the Act 1 year following the grant of asylum under section 208 of the Act shall submit the results of a medical examination to determine whether any grounds of inadmissibility described under section 212(a)(1)(A) of the Act apply. Form I-693, Medical Examination of Aliens Seeking Adjustment of Status, and a vaccination supplement to determine compliance with the vaccination requirements described under section 212(a)(1)(A)(ii) of the Act must be completed by a designed civil surgeon in the United States and submitted at the time of application for adjustment of status. (Revised effective 7/6/98; 63 FR 30105)



(e) Interview. Each applicant for adjustment of status under this part shall be interviewed by an immigration officer. The interview may be waived for a child under 14 years of age. The Service director having jurisdiction over the application will determine, on a case-by-case basis, whether an interview by an immigration officer is necessary to determine the applicant's admissibility for permanent resident status under this part. (Amended effective 7/6/98; 63 FR 30105)



(f) Decision. The applicant shall be notified of the decision, and if the application is denied, of the reasons for denial. No appeal shall lie from the denial of an application by the director but such denial will be without prejudice to the alien's right to renew the application in proceedings under part 240 of this chapter. If the application is approved, the director shall record the alien's admission for lawful permanent residence as of the date one year before the date of the approval of the application, but not earlier than the date of the approval for asylum in the case of an applicant approved under paragraph (a)(2) of this section. (Amended effective 7/6/98; 63 FR 30105)
 
eddie_240 said:
Guys,

Will this change make a problem for people who were granted Asylum after 1990.

Also it says that Medical should be submitted when filing I485. Do I need to go for a Medical now or wait until I am told. My ND is Jan 06. Bio 3 done on Mar 06.

Thanks

Ed

If you have not sent your medical with your application. I think you should just wait until they ask you to do so.
 
f) Decision. The applicant shall be notified of the decision, and if the application is denied, of the reasons for denial. No appeal shall lie from the denial of an application by the director but such denial will be without prejudice to the alien's right to renew the application in proceedings under part 240 of this chapter. If the application is approved, the director shall record the alien's admission for lawful permanent residence as of the date one year before the date of the approval of the application, but not earlier than the date of the approval for asylum in the case of an applicant approved under paragraph (a)(2) of this section. (Amended effective 7/6/98; 63 FR 30105)

I think there is little misunderstanding here..The highlighted sentence clearly says one year backdated from the date of the approval of the GC.
 
free100 said:
f) Decision. The applicant shall be notified of the decision, and if the application is denied, of the reasons for denial. No appeal shall lie from the denial of an application by the director but such denial will be without prejudice to the alien's right to renew the application in proceedings under part 240 of this chapter. If the application is approved, the director shall record the alien's admission for lawful permanent residence as of the date one year before the date of the approval of the application, but not earlier than the date of the approval for asylum in the case of an applicant approved under paragraph (a)(2) of this section. (Amended effective 7/6/98; 63 FR 30105)

I think there is little misunderstanding here..The highlighted sentence clearly says one year backdated from the date of the approval of the GC.


What is paragraph a(2)?
 
free100 said:
f) Decision. The applicant shall be notified of the decision, and if the application is denied, of the reasons for denial. No appeal shall lie from the denial of an application by the director but such denial will be without prejudice to the alien's right to renew the application in proceedings under part 240 of this chapter. If the application is approved, the director shall record the alien's admission for lawful permanent residence as of the date one year before the date of the approval of the application, but not earlier than the date of the approval for asylum in the case of an applicant approved under paragraph (a)(2) of this section. (Amended effective 7/6/98; 63 FR 30105)

I think there is little misunderstanding here..The highlighted sentence clearly says one year backdated from the date of the approval of the GC.

Dude,

USCIS do have the flexibility of determining when it was approved.

As I was exploring the possibility of suing them, I came across with a number of occasions that the Court compelled them to adjudicate people's cases retroactively.

For instance:
USCIS retroactively approved one derivative asylees AOS application the same day as his father's AOS approval.
USCIS retroactively approved a large number of DV applicants as if (that is as if) the visa is still available.

If the Court can compel them to do so, there is no law barring them from retroactively approving cases by themselves. :D
 
I am sorry rdmo and others.

I thought the law has been changed. Now I feel it is a misunderstanding.

Me and my wife still waiting.

I thought we got a chance to bring my mom hear for a visit befor she die.

I am wrong.

By the way, after becoming a citizen, is it possible to them (Visa Officer in home country) to know that we are asylee and reject our invitations to our mom?

and We are from Tsunami effected country and those days we so USCIS approved some types of adjestment applications and visa extensions etc.

are we eligible to apeal for expidite process under that catagory.
Thanks.
 
ernorman said:
Dude,

USCIS do have the flexibility of determining when it was approved.

As I was exploring the possibility of suing them, I came across with a number of occasions that the Court compelled them to adjudicate people's cases retroactively.

For instance:
USCIS retroactively approved one derivative asylees AOS application the same day as his father's AOS approval.
USCIS retroactively approved a large number of DV applicants as if (that is as if) the visa is still available.

If the Court can compel them to do so, there is no law barring them from retroactively approving cases by themselves. :D

Maybe the decisions vary because of the court orders and also depending on individual cases, but the so-called "Set rules" as laid down by USCIS are unchanged. Ofcourse dont take my word for it. I am no expert in the field. (Nice way to wash my hands off! :) )
 
free100 said:
Maybe the decisions vary because of the court orders and also depending on individual cases, but the so-called "Set rules" as laid down by USCIS are unchanged. Ofcourse dont take my word for it. I am no expert in the field. (Nice way to wash my hands off! :) )

Take a look at your welcome notice and approval notice, they all say: "Your application has been approved." not was approved on YYMMDD.
 
I-K-A-K-O said:
I am so glad they do not need G-325A anymore, because i sent them a wrong one G-325 instead G-325A. So i should not worry about this. COOL ;)
Hi I-K-A-K-O

Nice to hear from you! You have not posted in a long time, and I thought you somehow went to Russia or something!

They still need G-325A, but they don't ask you to submit it with your inital application anymore. They will ask for it later. Since you have sent the wrong one, I think you should call them and ask them how you can send the correct one. You don't want to wait until they ask for it through RFE. Maybe you will save a little bit of time by doing it this way!

Good luck!
 
I-K-A-K-O said:
Hello MGTgrl ! Nice to hear from you too :) What i did recently was, i sent certified mail (and someone actually signed it) G-325A to the address shown on the initial ND receipt and asked them to attach it to my case but i think they did not do it because i did not see any LUD update since. I am going to send it to them couple more times and also i will call too.
Good! At least, you did your part!
 
MGTgrl said:
If you have not sent your medical with your application. I think you should just wait until they ask you to do so.

I disagree. The instructions say that you need to file the Medical with you I-485. They no longer notify you so I say one needs to go on their own to do the exam.
 
vdostoi1 said:
I disagree. The instructions say that you need to file the Medical with you I-485. They no longer notify you so I say one needs to go on their own to do the exam.
He had already submitted his application without his medical. I felt it would get lost if he just sends it without being requested. I had not sent my medical when I submitted my application, but they send me a letter requesting it. The letter had a bar code and everything and they ask me to mail it back with the medical. With the bar coded letter, you are 99.9% sure they won't misplace it. I just didn't want him to pay additional medical fees to redo it just in case they misplace it. That's all.
 
MGTgrl said:
He had already submitted his application without his medical. I felt it would get lost if he just sends it without being requested. I had not sent my medical when I submitted my application, but they send me a letter requesting it. The letter had a bar code and everything and they ask me to mail it back with the medical. With the bar coded letter, you are 99.9% sure they won't misplace it. I just didn't want him to pay additional medical fees to redo it just in case they misplace it. That's all.

That probably makes a lot of sense. I was in the same situation as yours - I filed my I-485 and then they sent me a letter requesting my medical. I guess they have changed the rules since they will be approving people in 6 months (we will see about that!) but I think you are right if that is the case. I would agree with you.
 
All right. This is getting confusing. Can anybody say if you are required to submit the medical exam now and if so do I need to get a form form USICS or does the doctor's office provide that? Anybody help!
Thanks a lot
 
surferpal said:
All right. This is getting confusing. Can anybody say if you are required to submit the medical exam now and if so do I need to get a form form USICS or does the doctor's office provide that? Anybody help!
Thanks a lot
Sorry for the confusion :)
Yes go ahead and submit your medical with your application. Most doctor's offices have the form there, but when you call to make your appointement, ask them if they have the RECENT forms just to be on the safe side. If they say they don't, you can request the form on the CIS website and they will mail it to you. It can take up to 2 weeks to get to you. Good luck!
 
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