Help, please!!!!!

blessus

New Member
I greatly appreciate anyone could give input for the following questions.

1) Is EB1(Outstanding researcher)eligible for changing job after 180 days of I-485? My understanding is that EB1 must be of Permenant Job, whereas, the new law indicates employment-based I485 applicant may change job after 180 days. Dose any EB1 applicant with experience of job change get approved?

2) My I485 application is in NSC now, and I am currently living and working in the area of VSC. I just get RFE for a current employment letter. My question is, after I reply the RFE, will my case be approved by NSC, or be transferredd to VSC.

3) This is a very wired question, how dose INS know your current changed address even though you have not send the letter to informing INS of the address change?
 
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blessus, let me preface my response by a specific suggestion: I am not usually in favor of spending money on lawers, but in your case the level of confusion in your question clearly indicates that you need to talk to one.

1) EB1 OR applicants can use 180 days rule, same as all other EB applicants. Your "understanding" was wrong: all EB-based applications are for a permanent job. The AC-21 180 days rule just allows you to subsittute one future permanent job for another, in a similar category. So if you applied under EB-1 OR rubric as a university professor, your new job would have to also be a university professor, presumably in the same discipline (rather than say, a hotel or a fast food worker).

2) Your application will not be transferred to another service center
even if your RFE response indicates that you moved to a VSC area or that your current job is there.
(However, if you get a local transfer for an interview at a local INS office, it may well be in a VCS area)

3) INS certainly will not know your new address unless you tell them to. It is usually in your interests to do that. First, because you are required by law to inform INS of any address change. Second, you do not want INS correspondence to get lost or misdirected or to be returned as undeliverable. You need to call an NSC number, talk to an IIO and give him/her your new address. You could also fill out a general INS change-of-address form AR-11, but this seems a less reliable way than calling an IIO.
 
thank you very mcuh

I grealy appreciate your very infomative reply. Thank you so much, Baikal.
God bless you.
--Tau
 
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