March 20th oath letters went out yesterday? Wow...
Now I am rather skeptical I will make this March oath. My interview was 2 days ago.
The March 20th oath assignments may have been completed, but I doubt the letters have been mailed out to applicants. I guess it will be more like Feb 18-29 when applicants receive oath letters. Of course, it is possible they will go out much sooner, but not very probable. I will be happy if the letters have been mailed, but we shouldn't ignore trends.
Fabolos, I trust you heard the IO correctly, but it is possible the IO didn't say the correct thing. In terms of your oath being delayed, I agree with Huracan. FYI, I received my oath letter 3.5 months after my interview (almost 18 weeks between interview date and oath date). I really hope yours does not take that long.
Just to share a few things I have learned during my wait: Contact a US Senator if USCIS does not respond after about 40 days from the interview. The Senator's office usually takes 10-15 days to call USCIS, and USCIS usually takes 2-3 weeks before responding (at the speed of government
). This step might not produce immediate results, but it compels USCIS to take notice.
If USCIS has not responded 90 days after the interview, and if the current date is more than 30 days after the normal processing time, you can file a
service request with the national customer service. (Nothing stops one from trying to file a request sooner.) A service request forces USCIS to respond within 45 days of the request. An InfoPass is called for, in the unlikely event USCIS does not respond in time.
A USCIS response to service request will say that the oath has been scheduled and will give the oath date, if oath has been scheduled. This way you might learn of your oath date ahead of time, even if oath letters haven't been sent out. I learned of my Feb. 21st oath date on Jan. 11th (about 14 days before the oath letter arrived) in this manner.
Most importantly, I have learned that patience is the key ingredient in this process. I know it is easier to counsel patience than to show it, but as Huracan says, the whole thing comes to pass, after you hear something (anything). Of course, the best remedy is to not have to wait long, but USCIS sometimes forgets to dispense this remedy
.