Letter for Contacting Senator

Oct1RD01

Registered Users (C)
Hi Gurus,

Can some one please shed some light on the following:

1. Any sample letter to be sent to the Senator and Congressman for a case pening more than 540 days?

2. Should I also send a copy of my receipt or jsut mentioning my receipt number on the letter would be enough?

3. I and my spouse applied for AOS together, I being the primary. Should I also mention my spouse's case and receipt number as well?

4. Any thing else that I might be missing.

I appreciate all your help.

Thanks in advance.
Oct01RD01
 
My experience in pittsburgh is -

you do not need a letter to contact a senator's office. Just find the number of your local senator in the yellow pages and call teh office and tell them you need help with the green card process .
they will tell you who the person is in the office who deals with these issues.
then they can give you an appointment or ask you the details over the phone.

For me I just walked into their office and they asked me to fill in a form and then give the receipt numbers and explain the issue.

The form is to authorize them to obtain information about you from the INS.

yes you should give both your's and your wife's numbers.

Hope this helps!
 
unfortunately my case is not approved as they have some problem with the Fbi check.
but alteast we figured out what the deal is. but the senators office did get my Ead approved. But i know a few people who contacted this same senator office and got their case approved within 2 weeks.
I know for sure it works but mine is a diiferent issue. We have even talked to the FBI person and hope something will work.

But bottom line I know contacting the senator helps.
my details

RD Aug 9 2001
ND Sep 28 2001
Fp Feb 01 2002
no Rfe
 
Originally posted by Gonecase
Did you go to the State Senator or US Sentor's office?

Do not waste your time or theirs by going to a state Senator. Immigration is part of the federal government, so you want to deal with one of three offices:

1) Your US Representative.
2) Your two US Senators.

This may be a little confusing to some people, since all states (except Nebraska - remember that for your citizenship exam!) have both a House of Representatives and a Senate, as does the US Congress. It's the one in Washington you need to deal with.
 
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