Question asked by BCIS

orazone

Registered Users (C)
6 Months ago when my lawyer filed my case , by mistake, he specified my designation which does not exist in the list of BCIS's classifed designations. Now they have asked my lawyer to provide details regarding my role/responsibilities and also to explain why this profession requires a graduate degree to perform the job successfully. We are working on response, but in your opinion what could be the worse case scenario ?

Thanks in advance.
 
All I can tell for sure from your post is that your attorney made an error. I have no idea what you mean by your lawyer specified a "designation which does not exist in the list of BCIS's classifed designations."

Does that mean that your attorney applied for an H6-R visa (a designation that clearly does not exist)? If so, I would say that you have an absolutely zero chance of obtaining an H6-R visa, if that is your question.

Obviously, your worse case scenario is a denial.
 
Thanks for the prompt reply.
No its an H1B Transfer case. My designation is "Analyst Programmer" but by mistake lawyer presented me as a "Software Developer", because its a very general purpose term i guess BCIS needs more clarification and they also needs to know why a person needs have a college degree to perform the duties of a software developer.
Lawyer has obtained letter from employer which talks about my role/responsibilities in detail. Is that enough to satisfy BCIS requirments?

Approx. how long BCIS can take to make the decision once we submit the response.. Is that worth upgrading application to premium processing.
 
Top