Keep Your Old Labor Cert. with a New Employer
All,
I read this on the other web site.
http://www.eimmigration.org/1index.html
I do not believe it could be true although I hope. Does anybody out there can verify this? If this is true it is great news for many of us. Thanks.
Subject: Keeping your old Labor Cert. with a new Employer
Author: Brian LernerDate: 8/12/2003 11:43 am PDT
Question: I have spent the last four years waiting for my Labor Certification to be certified. Finally, this has happened. I’m not sure if my employer will still keep sponsoring me after waiting all this time. Is there anything I can do to better protect myself?
Answer: Yes. There is a law known as AC21 which stand for the American Competitiveness Act in the twenty-first century. There is a provision in this particular law that might be able to help you. Normally, after the Labor Certification is approved, you would apply for what is known as the I-140 or employment based petition. In the past this would take from three months to over one year to adjudicate. Afterwards, you would then be able to apply for the Adjustment of Status or the final part of the Green Card processing. Under AC21 you are now able to file the I-140 and the Adjustment application at exactly the same time. You do not need to wait for the I-140 to be approved.
Question: Why would I want to file them at the same time and how would that help me if my employer decides at a later point to stop helping me?
Answer: There is a provision in this law that might be very beneficial to you. If the Adjustment of Status application has been pending for more than 180 days since it was filed and the BCIS has not made a decision on that application, you can move to another employer as long as the employment is a similar type of position.
Question: What about the I-140 petition? What if I move to another employer and the I-140 petition is still pending?
Answer: That is the key. If the Adjustment Petition has been pending for more than 180 days, then the I-140 petition will also transfer to the new employer. Even if the employer revokes or withdraws the petition after 180 days, it will not matter. You will still be able to work at the new employer. The critical time-frame here is the 180 days after the Adjustment package was filed. Thus, it would be in your benefit to get both the I-140 and the Adjustment filed at exactly the same time so that the 180 days begins to start running. In this way, you will not have to lose all of the years you have waited for your immigration papers to go through.
All,
I read this on the other web site.
http://www.eimmigration.org/1index.html
I do not believe it could be true although I hope. Does anybody out there can verify this? If this is true it is great news for many of us. Thanks.
Subject: Keeping your old Labor Cert. with a new Employer
Author: Brian LernerDate: 8/12/2003 11:43 am PDT
Question: I have spent the last four years waiting for my Labor Certification to be certified. Finally, this has happened. I’m not sure if my employer will still keep sponsoring me after waiting all this time. Is there anything I can do to better protect myself?
Answer: Yes. There is a law known as AC21 which stand for the American Competitiveness Act in the twenty-first century. There is a provision in this particular law that might be able to help you. Normally, after the Labor Certification is approved, you would apply for what is known as the I-140 or employment based petition. In the past this would take from three months to over one year to adjudicate. Afterwards, you would then be able to apply for the Adjustment of Status or the final part of the Green Card processing. Under AC21 you are now able to file the I-140 and the Adjustment application at exactly the same time. You do not need to wait for the I-140 to be approved.
Question: Why would I want to file them at the same time and how would that help me if my employer decides at a later point to stop helping me?
Answer: There is a provision in this law that might be very beneficial to you. If the Adjustment of Status application has been pending for more than 180 days since it was filed and the BCIS has not made a decision on that application, you can move to another employer as long as the employment is a similar type of position.
Question: What about the I-140 petition? What if I move to another employer and the I-140 petition is still pending?
Answer: That is the key. If the Adjustment Petition has been pending for more than 180 days, then the I-140 petition will also transfer to the new employer. Even if the employer revokes or withdraws the petition after 180 days, it will not matter. You will still be able to work at the new employer. The critical time-frame here is the 180 days after the Adjustment package was filed. Thus, it would be in your benefit to get both the I-140 and the Adjustment filed at exactly the same time so that the 180 days begins to start running. In this way, you will not have to lose all of the years you have waited for your immigration papers to go through.
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