Jump to content

mymarriagejourney

Members
  • Posts

    484
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Female
  • City
    Columbus
  • State
    Ohio

Immigration Info

  • Immigration Status
    Naturalization (approved)
  • Place benefits filed at
    Phoenix AZ Lockbox
  • Local Office
    Columbus OH
  • Country
    Jordan

mymarriagejourney's Achievements

Community Regular

Community Regular (8/14)

  • First Post
  • Collaborator
  • Conversation Starter
  • Reacting Well
  • Very Popular Rare

Recent Badges

112

Reputation

Recent Profile Visitors

7,778 profile views
  1. The first place we contacted said that his was not the type of case they usually take. We contacted another firm with a money-back guarantee and they were more positive about his case but asked him to complete a couple of things before they could evaluate further. It will be a bit of a process as he takes care of those items.
  2. This is the firm where he submitted his details for an assessment this morning. A wait is fine.
  3. Thanks. He submitted an evaluation with an attorney today and expects to hear their opinion within 24 hours. He only has a masters and not a PhD, so maybe they will find that he is not suitably qualified, but it is worth having them take a look. Nothing to lose.
  4. I read a statistic that the visa has a 77-85% approval rate. Maybe those are mostly super qualified people, but what I read stated that it's easier to get than an EB1 or a regular EB2. Obviously, we would not want him to pursue this visa if we thought he couldn't be successful in finding employment, because his wife and two kids will be in our house until he gets on his feet, and my husband really likes having his own space. And we both consider his kids to be pains in the neck. But, we do want family nearby.
  5. This is why I was interested in this NIW option. He has been told by several that "we don't do those" but if he had a work visa without them having to do it, they would hire him.
  6. He would easily find a job if he was in the US and already had work eligibility. There seems to be a shortage of computer science professionals. He has a lot of experience. I can direct him to ask an attorney to ask if they think he qualifies if this is not a DIY process like my husband's immigration.
  7. It's nearly impossible to find an employer willing to sponsor a EB2. I've literally never found one, especially since he does not live in the US already.
  8. No, he is not in the medical field. As I listed, he is in the computer science field. I replied that he does have some publications that come up on google.
  9. I can't believe I just found out about this visa. My US citizen husband petitioned for his brother for F4 visa in 2015. As we all know, there are many more years of waiting for that. His brother has a master's degree (computer science), and has a PMP certification (project management professional) and is doing well in his career. There are many jobs here in the US for which he has the experience and qualifications, however, very few employers are willing to sponsor. Could this EB-2 NIW could be the answer for him?
  10. Maybe you can request DNA testing. https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/legal/travel-legal-considerations/us-citizenship/US-Citizenship-DNA-Testing.html
  11. Thank you. Yes, I'm well aware of the normal timelines. We were just attempting to assist with a humanitarian issue, and it appears we cannot.
  12. Yes, they participate in the diversity lottery each year. This wasn't a random "I'm feeling anxious and want this process to hurry up." and is actually a specific situation that falls under the humanitarian umbrella, but it seems that we cannot help.
×
×
  • Create New...