K
Kashmora
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Eb2?
Hey Pandu04,
You owe a public apology for giving us false hopes.
Hey Pandu04,
You owe a public apology for giving us false hopes.
InderPaul said:Can anyone one tell me, what's the Visa # and why would i need a Visa # to associate with approved GC A#.
InderPaul said:Can anyone one tell me, what's the Visa # and why would i need a Visa # to associate with approved GC A#.
I should also mention that the monthly reordering of lists by priority date (so that the cutoff date can be determined) is not related to the order in which immigrant visa cases are processed. The general rule is that cases are processed in the order in which the applicant becomes documentarily qualified, so that it is first-come, first-served. (Remember that once a visa number is issued, it is allocated to a specific person until used, returned, or recaptured, or until the fiscal year ends. So there is no need for a constant reshuffling of interview dates to accommodate aliens with earlier priority dates who became documentarily qualified later than aliens with later priority dates.)InderPaul said:Can anyone one tell me, what's the Visa # and why would i need a Visa # to associate with approved GC A#.
Billtoo said:Because the monthly waiting lists submitted by posts are ordered within each classification by priority date of documentarily qualified applicant, a heavy influx of applicants for the new month can result in a case where the priority date of the highest applicant on the list for whom a visa number is not available is actually earlier than the priority date of the corresponding applicant on the previous month's list. The result is a "retrogression" of the cutoff dates in the Visa Bulletin.
What happens when an alien has filed an I-485 with a then-current priority date, and while waiting for processing, the cutoff date retrogresses or becomes unavailable? (This could happen for a variety of reasons: the file has been waiting to be assigned to an officer; the alien has requested transfer of the file to another Service office before I-181 could be sent to the Visa Control Office; the alien changes preference classifications.) Service Operations Instruction 245.4 governs this situation.OI 245.4 instructs the officer to send Form I-181 to the State Department, with a stamp notated "HOLD FOR VISA NUMBER" in the upper right hand corner of the box allocated to the Visa Office. When the Visa Control Office receives these, they are sorted by country and preference category, then integrated into the master waiting list so that when visa numbers become available for that country and category, they can be allocated to those cases in the proper order.
In the meantime, the I-485 is "suspensed" until the visa number is assigned. The OI does not specifically state whether the other processing such as interviews and security and file checks, is also held in suspense or whether it is pursued during this time. Consequently, the procedures vary by local office depending on how their particular examinations unit is structured, and subject to any procedures issued by the Central Office to address specific systemic situations.
When numbers become available, the State Department returns Form I-181 to the Service notifying the Service that a visa number will be allocated to the case in the month _following_ notification. The purpose of this mechanism is to allow the Service to complete any unfinished processing before the first of the month, so that in the event processing cannot be completed by that time, the number can be re-allocated to other cases that may have been affected by the retrogression. The practical result is that aliens whose cases are suspensed as a result of cutoff date retrogression can, if they have completed all processing, expect their cases to be approved during the month following the month in which numbers have become available for their preference category and country. Depending how efficient the correspondence unit of the local office is, notification may be received then or some time later.
Postscript: I have, in this post, referred to Form I-181, which is the form used to communicate to the Visa Control Office. The rule is that only one visa number may be granted for each Form I-181 completed. Therefore, in cases where dependents are accompanying the principal alien and adjusting in the United States, Form I-181 is completed for each alien and sent to the Visa Control Office to request a visa number.
In cases where the principal alien is adjusting alone and dependents are following to join, Service OIs instruct that a Form I-181 should be completed for each dependent and sent directly to the consular post with jurisdiction over the dependents. There is no provision in the OIs for charging a fee for this function. Nevertheless, some local offices require that Form I-824 be filed and the $30 fee paid to have this done. Aliens who have dependents who will be following to join should check with their local offices for procedures, but in any event, the officer should be requested at the time of interview to forward Form I-181 to post for dependents before terminal processing of the file.
-- Above intended as general commentary, not specific legal advice.
Your mileage may vary.
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