Originally posted by gc999999999
From
http://www.immigration-law.com
They intepreted the benifit of this memo as --------
....Obviously, the concurrent adjudication appears to start with the new I-140/I-485 concurrent filing cases which are received on or after April 30, 2004, even though the concurrent adjudication may reach old cases in the "unknown future." It is thus evident that those who wish to benefit from the new concurrent I-140/I-485 adjudication may hold off filing of the concurrent I-140/I-485 package until after April 29, 2004 such that they pay the new filing fees and file the cases on or after April 30, 2004. The increased fees are minimal considering the enormous benefit they will receive from the "concurrent adjudication" of I-140/I-485 filing. You'd betcha, it will be worth the money!!!
Under the concurrent adjudication rule, I-140 and I-485 are required to stay together within the Service Centers. Currently, the concurrently filed I-140 and I-485 are split into the two different teams for separate adjudications. When it comes to the "processing times," each Service Center is required to process within their I-140 processing schedule and time. For this processing times to work, it appears that the Service Centers may initiate fingerprinting and name check clearance procedure immediately upon receiving the concurrent I-140/I-485 package.
Under the Memorandum, actual adjudication will commence with a given file which received fingerprint and name check clearance completed. In other words, those cases which received such clearance will be stacked on adjudication-ready shelves which will then be assigned to the adjudicators for adjudication.
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It is a question of simple Math..
i) The backlog is going to increase if the number of cases adjudicated is less than the number of new cases filed...
2) So, to increase the number of cases adjudicated than the number of new cases filed, then there are two options;
a) either increase the man power
b) improve the process so that time to adjudicate a case decreases...Assume that for adjudication of each petition, it takes 5 hrs... now with the new process it is going to take 4 hrs...the backlog is going to reduce...otherwise.. the backlog is going to increase...
Now lets take what happened with concurrent filing of I-140/485
Previously it use to take two to eight months for I-140 and with concurrent filing, the over all processing time has increased because of multiple EAD's and AP's and what not, ....
However, looking from candidate perspective, say previously it use to take 6 months for I-140 and after that it use to take 2-3 months to file I-485( our own delays, company delays and finally attorney delays) and he has to wait 6 months to use AC-21. So, the total time was definitely more than 1 year and upto 18 months to use AC 21... Now, it is taking 10 months for some one to use AC 21 and so still this is OK despite increase in the backlogs because of increased processing time.
Now, tell me without any guarantee on the increase in staff and without any sufficient indication that the processing time per application is going to drastically reduce , how this is going to help the new concurrent filers...again, it might turn out to be another "lotto" where you will feel elated if your case is adjudicated else "curse" the God for not getting the lottery.
Hope you got my logic...
-rajum