Pathetic, but I would be surprised if the processing time is not updated by Saturday.
I wonder if they simply forgot to update the processing times?
More to it than that, I think. They haven't updated their monthly statistical report for February yet either. I'm tending to the view that all this has to do with the report to congress.
Perhaps the person or team who crunches the numbers for the report followed Gonzalez and resigned.
As evidenced by the pattern that emerged over the past couple of months, NYC applicants have been receiving their ILs between the 17th and the 23rd days of the month. I think mine will be in the next month's rounds.
If they post a bunch of random dates (i.e., past processing updates) onto the website just to give us something to chew on, and later find out that there are significant discrepancies between the "goals" and ACTUAL times, it can come back to bite them in the ass at the Congress hearings.
what is "Congress hearing"? is there an article about it?
Feliz - I think Vorpal is referring to this hearing:
The request for numbers by three of the committee members in advance of the hearing is discussed here:
http://immigrationportal.com/showthread.php?t=276476
The wording seems to have changed a little bit, didn't it? I don't remember seeing this before
"The processing times shown below are for applications that have just been completed"
And this might explain why processing dates for some DOs went back.
The wording seems to have changed a little bit, didn't it? I don't remember seeing this before
"The processing times shown below are for applications that have just been completed"
Actually, that wording has always been there.
This is true. And it also says "when applications and petitions are completed within our target timeframes, that goal will be shown in the data display" -- which is a completely different standard than "applications that have just been completed." To add to the mess, a third standard is added to the wording, the official 14-16 month estimate -- which corresponds neither to the target timeframe nor the real time processing. And the new processing timelines, cooked up for congress, don't correspond to any of these. So the officially posted processing dates, along with their explanatory text, offer at least 4 different and conflicting standards by which to measure them.