Lets post for a news Item at KRON4.com

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One letter that you can refer to is What Gettingclosenow wrote to KRON4: (please not to just copy the letter, try to add some your own story in it)



The deathly slow processing speed for Work Based Green Cards at the California Service Center of the BCIS (formerly INS)


No one would argue, in light of the terrorist threats, the need to more fully vet potential immigrants into the United States. And if the additional checks required some additional time, so be it, the benefits far outweigh the small price in waiting.

However, when the average waiting time for a relatively simple approval process has gone from 6 months to approximately 20-24 months, there is something sinisterly wrong with BCIS operating procedures. And for INS to cloak themselves under the guise of performing additional security checks is deliberately misleading.

In a post 9/11 environment, in spite of INS past embarrassments of approving terrorists post humously, the President has given a mandate to the organization to ensure I485 approvals be completed within 6 months with all neccessary security checks. Yet, in practice the complete opposite has happened, stretching approvals to an average of 20 months. In addition, INS (BCIS) has frozen processing from Nov.15 to Feb. 15, first denying there was a freeze then later acknowledging there was a freeze when they upgraded their computer systems. After an initial blip of approvals (lasting 2 weeks), the process has virtually grinded to a halt. In the face of a mountain of backlogged unapproved 485 applications, BCIS is plodding along approving 5-20 applications a day, while 125-200 new applications come in every day.

Being forced to wait extraordinary lengths of time, the would be immigrant is forced to reapply/renew his EAD (Employment Authorization document).With this huge problem, what does BCIS do? Do they focus their resources on approving the green cards? No, they put the resources on clearing the backlog of EAD's, which are a temporary solution for the people waiting for the 485 (GC) approvals. If they would approve the 485, they would get rid of the backlog on EAD's at the same time. But this logic escapes BCIS.

In addition, as part of the 485 process, each applicant submits to a fingerprint exercise, which gets sent to FBI to check their background. BCIS has a policy of expiring the fingerprints after 15 months. (which seems like a reasonable policy as the president himself has indicated that the process should take no longer than 6 months). Now because BCIS is now taking between 20-24 months to approve, they are reissuing fingerprint notices to applicants who must go through the process again. It begs the question, with their system of tracking dates, instead of focusing extra resources on clearing the EAD backlog, why wouldn't they focus their resources on approving cases that the fingerprints are due to expire?

To understand how tenuous the process is for an immigrant you need to understand the Employment Based Green Card Process. The first step is to have a company sponsor you on a work related visa, usually an H1B. The approval for that could have taken upwards to 1 year. Then for the fortunate ones their sponsoring company immediately began the Green Card Process (this is not the norm, some time would ususally have transpired before this). The company then would need to advertise the position for approximately 6 months, reviewing all potential candidates for a better one, if there were no better ones, they could lodge a Labor Certification with the Department of Labor. This process even with the reduction in recruitment option is currently taking 1-2 years. Once LC is approved, you file an I140 with INS, which currently takes approximately 6 - 12 months. Once approved, then you can make your I485 application and wait the current 20-24 months.

While you are waiting some 2-5 years, at your peril, under certain circumstances, you may change your employment. I say, "may", however, you run a serious risk of being denied your green card for numerous reasons. In addition to being tied to one employer for 5 years or more, and there are employers who take advantage of this situation, the immigrant, because he is "temporary" in nature, may not qualify to purchase a home among other things.

The immigrant lives a precarious life waiting and hoping for his approval, and in these uncertain times, hopes he isn't laid off of his current employment. They meet on immigrant discussion boards for any scrap of information out of BCIS, which is miserly with their statements. Immigration Officers often give contradictory, inacurate and general information. BCIS issues a "Just In Time" report which shows the current date they are adjudicating, for the last 6 months this date has not changed for the 485 applications.

In their frustration and feeling of powerlessness with the lack of progress and responsiveness from the CSC of the BCIS, they have organized a petition which you can find the text of the letter here:

http://www.immigration.com/common/r...california.html

You can find the signatures of the petition here:
http://www1.immigration.com/ins-tra...tion_california

What is a worthwhile read is the comments box in the petition, where you can get a very real sense of how this drawn out process is affecting the lives of these would be immigrants.


It would be great if you can somehow focus a story on this problem and "creatively" bring some pressure to bear on CSC and get them to actively commit to addressing the problem.

Thanks for any help you can give.
 
I just wrote to Kron4 requesting them to do a news story on how the long and unpredictable delay in green card application processing by the BCIS is affecting the applicant's lives.

I also sent a similar request to

-- KQED's forum (forum@kqed.org)

-- CBS's 60 minutes (Go to the feedback section at the bottom of http://www.cbsnews.com/sections/60minutes/main3415.shtml )
 
What we are doing here, is probably the only help we can get .. I say .. put wheels on our efforts, and adrenaline to our actions..
 
Guys..

Let us collect all email adresses first and let us mail them at the same time fixed by us. So that they get swamped by our mails on a single day instead of trickling mails. We need cooperation from all our fellow board members for this effort.
My 2 cents...
 
Don't worry about it. If enough people write, it will be noticed, just don't copy and paste any message. It has to be a personal story. And there is no need to make it a long post, a simple smaller post, explaining the situation in a couple of paragraphs might in some cases be better. Who has the time to read long winded emails these days?
 
Originally posted by Silly Man
ND022202, <..> Anyway, to cheer u guys up, here's a George Bush joke.
<...>

HAHAHAHA :D :D :D

LOL, :D
SM, you're the author, aren't you?

BTW, I'm immensely grateful to Pres. Clinton for what he'd done for folks like us, H1B caps, AC-21, et., etc.
 
While sending this emails should we post our concerns
1. 485 delays
2. No way to find out whats going on
3. JIT doesn't move.

Anything else????
 
No way

I think one important issue is there is not communication
tools between CSC and applicant.

(1) If you send a letter, never get reply,

If you send a Fax, you can send the second one after
15 bus. day, my lawyer, sent three, 45 bus. days, more than
three months.

(2) If you call, you should wait for hours and got nonsense
answer,

(3) If you go to CSC. They issue 75 numbers only for a day,
you should get there before 6:00 a.m., and wait for several
hours, and you still can not get a real situation of your case.

(4) Online is convenient, however, every case has the same
information, saying your case will process between 160-180
days, but we have waited for 20 months.
 
Re: posted

Originally posted by abtoaajaa

a) Legal immigrant applications should not be clubbed together with the ones belonging to illegal immigrants that have been granted general amnesty
My(and I guess a lot of us on this board) LC was delayed by a year. This continues to add load on BCIS.

Yes, abtoaajaa, you're right. I think it's not fair AT ALL for legal workers to stay in line with illegals. My husband's LC has also been delayed for 14 months because of "our friend" 245(i). It's very frustrating.
 
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