waiting4oath
Registered Users (C)
Also, it is common that the Oath is held for huge number people. Who knows, they might have huge oath ceremony for Philly and DE people at once.
From my experience so far, I believe the origin of country do matter. Although I don't mind telling, I do mind telling it on the board or stranger(s). Certain things, I would like to keep it simple. Let's just say I'm from Europe.
I certainly hope not. The whole citizenship process shouldn't take more than 120 days. I thought it would take maybe 3 months. oh boy, Was I in surprise! I can not believe that it's already taking me more than 120 days from the day I filed N400. It has been a month since the interview for me. We should get the letter in no time!
I certainly hope not. The whole citizenship process shouldn't take more than 120 days. I thought it would take maybe 3 months. oh boy, Was I in surprise! I can not believe that it's already taking me more than 120 days from the day I filed N400. It has been a month since the interview for me. We should get the letter in no time!
FYI:
I was walking by 1600 Callowhill (USCIS Philly office) today and there was a long line in front of the building. When I asked they told me that there is an Oath Ceremony.
I thought Thursdays were the oath days in Philly. May be they increased the frequency to accommodate the backlog???
I just got interviewed at Philly this morning. Here's my inputs to some of those frequently asked questions:
1. Speeding tickets - I had 2. I briefly mentioned them to the IO during the interview when he went through the relevant section in the N-400. He dismissed it, didn't ask for any records or proof of payment.
2. Taxes - I misplaced the original set of transcripts I had requested but was able to get another set of federal transcripts in time for the interview. I could not get state tax transcripts in time. In any event, the IO only wanted Federal transcripts and didn't ask for anything else.
3. Tests - I wasn't given a choice of test. The IO handed me a sheet of 10 questions which could have come from either version and asked me to fill it out. Very basic questions - name of the anthem, current VP, what's celebrated on July 4th, name of first president, what's the constitution, etc. I wasn't given an English language test.
4. Overseas trips - I didn't really have that many but was pretty diligent in calculating the days to assess eligibility.
Other than a fairly long wait time, it was pretty smooth. I've been asked to wait for the OL. Interestingly, the IO did mention that they prioritize name changes over regular applications. So, you're more likely to get an oath date sooner if you change your name.
He mentioned the standard 30-60 days timeframe for the OL for Penna residents like me. How long have you been waiting for your OL? Did you ask for a name change?
That's quite a long wait for the oath! Did you try escalating to a supervisor during your infopass appointment to see what the issue might be?
I just got interviewed at Philly this morning. Here's my inputs to some of those frequently asked questions:
<snip>
3. Tests - I wasn't given a choice of test. The IO handed me a sheet of 10 questions which could have come from either version and asked me to fill it out. Very basic questions - name of the anthem, current VP, what's celebrated on July 4th, name of first president, what's the constitution, etc. I wasn't given an English language test.
<snip>
I just got interviewed at Philly this morning. Here's my inputs to some of those frequently asked questions:
1. Speeding tickets - I had 2. I briefly mentioned them to the IO during the interview when he went through the relevant section in the N-400. He dismissed it, didn't ask for any records or proof of payment.
2. Taxes - I misplaced the original set of transcripts I had requested but was able to get another set of federal transcripts in time for the interview. I could not get state tax transcripts in time. In any event, the IO only wanted Federal transcripts and didn't ask for anything else.
3. Tests - I wasn't given a choice of test. The IO handed me a sheet of 10 questions which could have come from either version and asked me to fill it out. Very basic questions - name of the anthem, current VP, what's celebrated on July 4th, name of first president, what's the constitution, etc. I wasn't given an English language test.
4. Overseas trips - I didn't really have that many but was pretty diligent in calculating the days to assess eligibility.
Other than a fairly long wait time, it was pretty smooth. I've been asked to wait for the OL. Interestingly, the IO did mention that they prioritize name changes over regular applications. So, you're more likely to get an oath date sooner if you change your name.
Is the civics test a multiple choice test?