Sm1smom
Super Moderator
Thanks for the updates regarding what you’ve done so far.Hi Mom, just wanted to provide an update on what I did since my last post.
I went to the Philadelphia USCIS office on Friday, August 29. The guard at the front desk listened to my request and connected me to someone working upstairs. I’m not sure who exactly it was, but she understood my concern and said I’m not the only person with a DV case at the Philly office. She mentioned that they are aware of the DV deadlines and the limitations surrounding the process, which was somewhat reassuring.
I asked if there was any way to meet the officer handling my case, but she told me they’re not present in the building and, even if they were, it wouldn’t be possible to meet them. She suggested submitting an inquiry, so I filed a congressional inquiry as soon as I got home (August 29).
I received an update from the congressman’s office on September 3rd. They told me they submitted the request to USCIS and that the USCIS liaison has until October 3rd to respond (I had made it clear in my inquiry that my case needs to be adjudicated by September 30th, so I am assuming 30 days is the standard wait time for congressional inquiries?). I immediately emailed back to thank them and pointed out that DV cases must be approved by September 30th, otherwise I lose eligibility. I haven’t heard anything back yet.
There have been no updates on the USCIS portal either. At this point, I’m not really sure what else to do, but I feel like there isn’t much left in my control, other than wait and see. Do you recommend trying to call a USCIS Tier 2 officer, or reaching out to USCIS in any other way?
1. Yes, that is the average turn around time. The congressman/woman has no control over when a response is received, they can possibly raise a ruckus if no response is received to their congressional inquiry after the standard response time.
2. No harm in trying to reach a Tier 2 officer.
Hang in there and remain positive!