Please advise

sun77377

Registered Users (C)
I am a Canadian citizen and a green card holder currently working in the US.
If I would like to work in Detroit and my wife lives in Windsor Ontario, border town in Canada, can I go back and forth every day to visit my wife and not jeopardize my US legal status? Can this become an issue when I file to become US citizen?

thank you very much, I look forward to your suggestions so I can see my wife on regular basis.
 
how can i check my status in usa?

sun77377 said:
I am a Canadian citizen and a green card holder currently working in the US.
If I would like to work in Detroit and my wife lives in Windsor Ontario, border town in Canada, can I go back and forth every day to visit my wife and not jeopardize my US legal status? Can this become an issue when I file to become US citizen?

thank you very much, I look forward to your suggestions so I can see my wife on regular basis.
do you know how can i check my status in usa without goint through imigration?i'm on h2-b visa and i',m not sure i'm still legal in usa?>
thx so much
 
GotPR? said:
One can even live in Canada and commute to the US every day with GC.


Yes, that is true but you must put in account your short trips even trips to Canada or Mexico, and they sum when is time to come for the time for phisycal presence in the US when you apply for Citizenship. Check out the requierements for US citizenship, there is a table about it. Normally it does not make any burden unless is enough to count against you by the time of your application.

Good luck,
 
If that’s the case then how do I fulfill 5 months in a US residency requirement? How do I provide proof of being in the US for required time when filling for US citizenship? Your feedback is highly appreciated.

Thanks
 
justy_1974 said:
do you know how can i check my status in usa without goint through imigration?i'm on h2-b visa and i',m not sure i'm still legal in usa?>
thx so much

In your passport you should have the visa expiration date, check that out.
 
i know.but....

in my passport my visa is still running till december,but i left my place where i supposed to work,so they told they might give illegal on border ,cause i didn't respect my contract.thx
 
sun77377 said:
If that’s the case then how do I fulfill 5 months in a US residency requirement? How do I provide proof of being in the US for required time when filling for US citizenship? Your feedback is highly appreciated.

Thanks


That is why you must make a list with dates in and out of the US everytime that you travel so then you can have a good account of your short trips. So then you can count how many months out of the 5 years you have been in the US. The residency requirement is not too much problem if you don't make trips over 6 months but can be an issue on the "physical presence".

"Residence and Physicial Presence Requirements

Residence is not the same thing as physical presence. The term "residence" is defined under INA §101(a)(33) as the place of general abode which means one's principal actual dwelling place in fact, without regard to intent.

The period of continuous residence in the United States must be subsequent to lawful admission as a permanent resident and must be for a period of at least five years (or three years where the applicant's permanent residence was derived from marriage to a U.S. citizen) preceding the filing of the application for naturalization. Residency in the United States must also be maintained from the time of filing of the application until the time that the alien acquires U.S. citizenship.

In the case of absences from the United States of six months or less, there is no break in the continuity of residence for naturalization purposes. An absence of more than six months but less than one year raises a rebuttable presumption that the continuity of residence has been broken for naturalization purposes. An absence of one year conclusively breaks the continuity of residence. However, under INA §316(b), §316(c) and §317, there is an exception for persons serving abroad in the United States Armed Forces, certain U.S. government agencies and U.S. companies, religious workers and international groups of which the United States is a member, provided that:

The alien has at least one year of physical presence in the United States as a lawful permanent resident; and

The individual files an application to preserve residence before he or she has spent one year abroad.
A person must be physically present in the United States for at least half of the required residence time preceding the date of filing the application (30 months out of the five years, or 18 months out of three years if permanent residence was derived from marriage to a U.S. citizen)." from:
http://www.americanlaw.com/citnat.html
That is found at the guide at www.uscis.gov as well
 
cherr1980 said:
In your passport you should have the visa expiration date, check that out.

It is the date on I-94 that determines if someone's legal stay has expired.
 
sun77377 said:
If that’s the case then how do I fulfill 5 months in a US residency requirement? How do I provide proof of being in the US for required time when filling for US citizenship? Your feedback is highly appreciated.

Thanks

Everytime you leave or enter US, your passport will be stamped with an entry/exit date. You must use those dates to calculate.
 
This is not always true. The OP should tell us the type of visa he/she is currently holding (and the info regarding the I-94 and time frame regarding leaving the company) in order to determine whether his/her status is current.

ari4u said:
It is the date on I-94 that determines if someone's legal stay has expired.
 
ari4u said:
Everytime you leave or enter US, your passport will be stamped with an entry/exit date. You must use those dates to calculate.


Be sure that you check the time that is stamp and that is correct. That is very important, including the year.
 
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