I was thinking that maybe the folks that have been waiting for 1 year or more congregate in a separate thread so that we can bounce ideas off of each other and generally console ourselves. Most of the threads now talk about folks that have applied this year (newbies ! , and usually pertain to questions that we asked and got our answers to early on in the cycle. Now we have bigger questions or no questions at all. Maybe questions on how to stay patient.
The way I see it, the issues facing the folks that submitted their application after March 2006 but have been waiting for a year or longer are:
- It is a foregone conclusion that we all are stuck in the FBI name check process
- Since we were not interviewed, we cannot file WOM
- Over a year has gone by, and we should be fingerprinted again as the fingerprints are valid only for 12 or 15 months?
- The elections are nearing and we obviously cannot participate, even though in some instances, we have been in the country for more than 15 years and have opinions about the elections and would like to participate
- There is really NO recourse for us. We just have to wait. (others may feel differently, in which case I'd love to hear what our options are)
- We have filed FOIPA requests and they all have come back negative
- Letters to congressmen, senators, first lady have not really yielded anything. All of them want to help us, but their hands are tied
One of the other things that I thought would be helpful (or maybe even a little bit of fun is speculation on the causes of the delay by the FBI. If it is taking more than 1 year to do a background check on me, there's probably something in my background that is causing that. And I probably should know about what that is. What could the cause of this prolonged delay be? Can we try and figure out some trends? Things such as:
- How long have we been in the country? Are the people who're stuck in this for the long haul ones that have been in the country for longer than 10 years, for example?
- What's the average wait time - for people that have been stuck over 1 year? Do majority of the cases get resolved in 2 years, or is there a trend that shows that if a case's stuck in the queue for longer than 1.5/2 years, chances are that it will take 5 years or more to resolve?
- Has anyone with a net worth of more than $1 Million ever been stuck in this process?
- What do most of us do for a living?
- Any women stuck in this process for longer than 1 year?
- This may be a sensitive one - and I totally understand that this probably is not the case - but just to get an understanding of this whole thing - ethnicity probably does play an important role here. Any stats on how many of us are from what region of the world?
This may lead into:
- Start a list of "things to do or not to do" after your boat has docked in the country and if you want to avoid getting stuck in name check process later. Of course that would defeat the whole purpose of the process. But looks like a lot of innocent people who probably have never even cursed all their lives are getting stuck in this - so there's got to be something pretty basic that could be fixed.
- If the government's automated system (or hopefully by now - a year later - some human) has flagged me as investigation-worthy, I really would like to know what it is. Especially if you've led a pretty uneventful and boring life like mine, it doesn't make sense - what could I have done? They probably don't need our help, but clearly a better algorithm would benefit everyone. How can we help?
Just trying to get some trends to make sense out of this name check delay.
P.S. - I have been waiting since applying in Apr '06
The way I see it, the issues facing the folks that submitted their application after March 2006 but have been waiting for a year or longer are:
- It is a foregone conclusion that we all are stuck in the FBI name check process
- Since we were not interviewed, we cannot file WOM
- Over a year has gone by, and we should be fingerprinted again as the fingerprints are valid only for 12 or 15 months?
- The elections are nearing and we obviously cannot participate, even though in some instances, we have been in the country for more than 15 years and have opinions about the elections and would like to participate
- There is really NO recourse for us. We just have to wait. (others may feel differently, in which case I'd love to hear what our options are)
- We have filed FOIPA requests and they all have come back negative
- Letters to congressmen, senators, first lady have not really yielded anything. All of them want to help us, but their hands are tied
One of the other things that I thought would be helpful (or maybe even a little bit of fun is speculation on the causes of the delay by the FBI. If it is taking more than 1 year to do a background check on me, there's probably something in my background that is causing that. And I probably should know about what that is. What could the cause of this prolonged delay be? Can we try and figure out some trends? Things such as:
- How long have we been in the country? Are the people who're stuck in this for the long haul ones that have been in the country for longer than 10 years, for example?
- What's the average wait time - for people that have been stuck over 1 year? Do majority of the cases get resolved in 2 years, or is there a trend that shows that if a case's stuck in the queue for longer than 1.5/2 years, chances are that it will take 5 years or more to resolve?
- Has anyone with a net worth of more than $1 Million ever been stuck in this process?
- What do most of us do for a living?
- Any women stuck in this process for longer than 1 year?
- This may be a sensitive one - and I totally understand that this probably is not the case - but just to get an understanding of this whole thing - ethnicity probably does play an important role here. Any stats on how many of us are from what region of the world?
This may lead into:
- Start a list of "things to do or not to do" after your boat has docked in the country and if you want to avoid getting stuck in name check process later. Of course that would defeat the whole purpose of the process. But looks like a lot of innocent people who probably have never even cursed all their lives are getting stuck in this - so there's got to be something pretty basic that could be fixed.
- If the government's automated system (or hopefully by now - a year later - some human) has flagged me as investigation-worthy, I really would like to know what it is. Especially if you've led a pretty uneventful and boring life like mine, it doesn't make sense - what could I have done? They probably don't need our help, but clearly a better algorithm would benefit everyone. How can we help?
Just trying to get some trends to make sense out of this name check delay.
P.S. - I have been waiting since applying in Apr '06
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