mlily1224
Member
Absolutely. There's plenty of OCers who have done just that.
Thank you Just waiting for the passport now.
Absolutely. There's plenty of OCers who have done just that.
Looks like I'm current guys! Mrs Space and I are getting interviewed!
Looks like I'm current guys! Mrs Space and I are getting interviewed!
And about time too.Looks like I'm current guys! Mrs Space and I are getting interviewed!
Okay thanks. So it should be okay to stay in the US on the activation trip right?
Woohoo - it's about damn time! I think you've had the longest wait out of all of us in OC 2016!
And about time too.
Looks like I'm current guys! Mrs Space and I are getting interviewed!
At long long last... congrats!
(edit for simon: I am referring to the wait through DV2015 too...)
Thanks, guys! I'd better not stuff it up
And yes, OC is wide open this year. Hope it's just as good for the 2017 crowd!
We had our interview in Sydney this morning and we were approved! We're very happy indeed!! However, things didn't go as smoothly as I would have hoped...
As I was born in the UK (as were my parents) I was obviously not eligible for the DV Lottery by myself, however, I have an Aussie wife. The officer started by asking me questions about where I was born, and then where my parents were born and each time I answered 'England' he started typing furiously. With every new question about England, I started to get a sinking feeling and then he then looked at me and said 'I'm sorry but you are ineligible for the DV Lottery and thus your application is denied'.
My heart beating at about 200bpm I answered 'WHAT!! Huh, I don't understand!!?? Through my wife I get 'cross chargeability'. I'm sure that's correct.' He looked at me puzzled and then walked off for a min or two and came back and told me that I was right and he had never heard of such a situation...
Luckily it was very straightforward from there and he informed us we were approved.
Is 'cross chargeability' such a rare situation? I thought it was fairly standard. It certainly wasn't his first day either. Luckily, though, I had done my research and knew the rules otherwise I could easily have been denied incorrectly.
She had just completed an MBA from Oxford, so I guess it is a little funny that if she wanted to live in the US she would need to apply via the DV Lottery.
Ben
We had our interview in Sydney this morning and we were approved! We're very happy indeed!! However, things didn't go as smoothly as I would have hoped...
As I was born in the UK (as were my parents) I was obviously not eligible for the DV Lottery by myself, however, I have an Aussie wife. The officer started by asking me questions about where I was born, and then where my parents were born and each time I answered 'England' he started typing furiously. With every new question about England, I started to get a sinking feeling and then he then looked at me and said 'I'm sorry but you are ineligible for the DV Lottery and thus your application is denied'.
My heart beating at about 200bpm I answered 'WHAT!! Huh, I don't understand!!?? Through my wife I get 'cross chargeability'. I'm sure that's correct.' He looked at me puzzled and then walked off for a min or two and came back and told me that I was right and he had never heard of such a situation...
Luckily it was very straightforward from there and he informed us we were approved.
Is 'cross chargeability' such a rare situation? I thought it was fairly standard. It certainly wasn't his first day either. Luckily, though, I had done my research and knew the rules otherwise I could easily have been denied incorrectly.
We were also surprised as nobody else was approved whilst we were there. The first person we saw was a woman who had been rejected for some reason and was screaming and crying (not sure why she was rejected but she was yelling about her passport).
The other four or five people there were all put on AP as they were missing heaps of documents. Some didn't have police checks, others were missing education certs etc. I was surprised as I would have thought they would be better prepared for the interview.
Another woman was being interviewed at the same time as us, and judging by the tone, I do not believe it would have ended well for here. I heard her say she was in jail during 2015 and prior to that had been rejected admission into the US (she was turned back at the border). So I don't know for sure if she was approved or rejected, however, I would be surprised if she was approved.
Actually, as I type this, I can remember that one other woman was approved. She had just completed an MBA from Oxford, so I guess it is a little funny that if she wanted to live in the US she would need to apply via the DV Lottery.
Ben