If you've actually activated your green card, then you have a green card. It doesn’t make a difference legally if it’s the temporary one via a stamped immigrant visa or the plastic one.Does this effect people who already activated their green cards but haven't yet physically received the green card?
If you've actually activated your green card, then you have a green card. It doesn’t make a difference legally if it’s the temporary one via a stamped immigrant visa or the plastic one.
Are we talking about 60 business days or 60 days with weekends?
If with weekends ban will end on 21st June...
It means april/may interviews needs to be rescheduled for July-August...
I’m EU35k, I don’t think there are big chances for me, maybe September but lets wait and see.
No, or such little difference for it not to be deemed a matter of much importance, to the USA generallyYou mean no difference to the whole DV experience or no difference to the USA?
I'm mostly confused about those of us who have visas but have not yet activated...If you've actually activated your green card, then you have a green card.
Yep. That’s our situation too. Waiting to hear about that one. Ours expires July 17th.No, or such little difference for it not to be deemed a matter of much importance, to the USA generally
I'm mostly confused about those of us who have visas but have not yet activated...
From NYT:
"About 50,000 permanent resident slots a year, issued in a lottery aimed at diversifying the immigrant population, would also be blocked under the new policy."
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/21/us/trump-immigration-ban-covid.html
If I’m reading it correctly, the wording of the order indicates you’d be ok, it falls outside the scope of the ban:No, or such little difference for it not to be deemed a matter of much importance, to the USA generally
I'm mostly confused about those of us who have visas but have not yet activated...
Unfortunately I don’t have yet a visa, so...If I’m reading it correctly, the wording of the order indicates you’d be ok, it falls outside the scope of the ban:
Sec. 2. Scope of Suspension and Limitation on Entry. (a) The suspension and limitation on entry pursuant to section 1 of this proclamation shall apply only to aliens who:
(i) are outside the United States on the effective date of this proclamation;
(ii) do not have an immigrant visa that is valid on the effective date of this proclamation; and .....
https://www.whitehouse.gov/presiden...conomic-recovery-following-covid-19-outbreak/
It seems it will affect us and no many others
Unfortunately I don’t have yet a visa, so...
actually, it affects many more than DV. The other obvious exclusions of significant categories are:
- families of LPRs (spouses and unmarried children are they ones they can sponsor)
- family of USC other than spouses and under 21 children (remember USCs can also sponsor parents, married children and their families, and siblings and their families. these categories alone account for many more than DV every year)
- non- health based employment based immigrant visas
@SusieQQQ does the order effect only those out of the us? I am in the us, i still have a chance?in case anyone is interested in numbers
https://travel.state.gov/content/da...2019AnnualReport/FY19AnnualReport-TableII.pdf
In FY2019, for the classes of immigrants affected by this, the annual totals (including derivatives in these categories) were
- over 21 child of USC, 21k
- spouses and under 21 children of LPRs, 64k
- over 21 child of LPR, 22k
- married child of USC, 23k
- siblings of USC, 61k
- employment based 28k, no idea how many of these would be health related
- parents of USC, 63k
- DV, 45k
oh ok, you did ask “I'm mostly confused about those of us who have visas but have not yet activated...”
So an immigrant lawyer would be appropriate since how things are developing?That is my reading of it for both these cases ...