It may be the light at the end of tunnel for many of the victims of name checks. Its hard to believe but lets see what it brings.
http://www.ilw.com/immigdaily/#comment
http://www.ilw.com/immigdaily/#comment
You should say " I hope it is true .... and starts tomorrow not 5 years from now"
any other source?
It may be the light at the end of tunnel for many of the victims of name checks. Its hard to believe but lets see what it brings.
http://www.ilw.com/immigdaily/#comment
public safety?
That *dangerous* person whose name has been awaiting clearance for 3 years had more than enough time to do whatever he wanted to do..
I can understand it for Green Card a bit but for Naturalization? We already went through the process. It should be different process due to the fact that naturalization applicants are already in the US legally and will mainatain their status anyways during the delay. SO if they are dangerous, they are having enough time to do bad things..
Pleaaseeeeee...makese no sense..
http://www.ilw.com/immigdaily/news/2007,1204-FBI.shtm
November 30, 2007
Immigration Daily's 1/30/07 comment, "FBI Delays to End," is not telling the entire story. USCIS and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) are working together to process name checks as quickly as possible without compromising security or public safety. To this end, we have examined the existing name check system and acted to address the problem through two strategies:
First, USCIS and the FBI conducted a joint risk assessment which resulted in process improvements that permit us to focus on cases of concern.
Second, USCIS and FBI have allocated additional resources to the process. Over the next year, USCIS is planning to commit a total of $15.5 million to address the backlog of FBI name checks.
Please note, however, USCIS continues to require FBI name checks for the same categories of applications and no case will be approved without a cleared name check. We will continue to work with the FBI to reduce waiting times; but, not at the expense of national security and public safety.
Best regards,
Bill Wright, spokesman
USCIS Office of Communications
(202) 272-1299