Jump to content

DV Winner

Members
  • Posts

    4
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by DV Winner

  1. It would be far simpler for your father to get his visa at the same time as your mother, travel to the US, then return periodically to home country, and back to the US, in order to maintain his LPR status. Should he need to stay outside the US for a lengthy period of time (1 year+) he can request a 're entry' permit which would allow this without jeopardizing his green card. :blush:

    Thank you and thanks to all other for other comments. We thought the same, what if he gets green card and then visits US regularly but continues to work for another 1-2 years. But we are worried that he will spend most of the time in his country of origin and it can create problems for him and potentially even for both of them. Could he be blocked from re-entering US and even get into some sort of black list based on 2 years of history of travel. My mom will definitely live in US more than 50% of the time from the very beginning. So we also thought it could be ideal but we are worried would not it look like we try to cheat the system if he lives in US for only 1-2 months in first 1-2 years? Well, he has old parents in original country and they requite a lot of his attention. So even if he tried to go to US from day one for 100% of the time he could not because he need to arrange care for them, etc. So I wonder will it be risk of loosing green card if we try to do it? We certainly don't want to risk it after winning it and been so lucky. Thanks again for your help!

  2. Thank you for your advice. However, I think there is also another option. Where you don't have to wait in a queue. It is mentioned in the application for DV visa when you win and I also found this information on this forum:

    Following to Join Benefits for Spouse

    Important: This section is only applicable to lawful permanent residents who did not gain their LPR status as an immediate

    relative (parent, spouse, or unmarried child under 21 years of age) of a U.S. citizen.

    If you were married before you became a lawful permanent resident, and your spouse did not physically accompany you to

    the U.S., your spouse may be eligible for following-to-join benefits. This means that you do not have to submit a separate

    Form I-130, Petition for Alien Relative, for your spouse, and your spouse will not have to wait any extra time for a visa

    number to become available. In this case, you may simply notify a U.S. Consulate that you are a lawful permanent resident

    so that your spouse can apply for an immigrant visa.

    Your spouse may be eligible for following-to-join benefits if your relationship still exists and if one of the following is

    applicable:

    You immigrated on diversity lottery[1]

    You immigrated through employment based immigration[2]

    You immigrated based on your relationship to your U.S. citizen sibling

    You immigrated based on your relationship to your U.S. citizen parent when you were already married

    I wanted to find out more about this route. I know it exists, but it is very hard to find more information about it. If anyone know how it works (what I asked in my questions), please let me know.

  3. Dear forum members

    Thank you very much in advance for all your great help. It's really appreciated!

    My parents are very lucky. My mother won green card lottery. I know that his is big luck. I myself lived in UK for 9 years and will be eligible for permanent residency visa only next year. And some people have to wait even longer.

    However, my parents are not very young and my father earns quite decent money in their original country. They really want to move to USA but they don't want to loose all his income. Unfortunately his profession (medical) is hard to transfer to USA because he will need to study again for 5-6 years and at his age it's probably not worth it. We heard there is "follow to join" visa. When spouse want to join later. We thought it is maybe a good idea if he will go to USA in 1-2 years time after my mother goes. But we are worried because we don't have enough information and not sure how does it work exactly.

    Some questions we have:

    1. Will he be able to get green card quickly if he uses this visa?

    2. Won't there be any long queues?

    3. Is it 100% reliable or can it be changed or revoked somehow?

    4. For how long can it be given? Like 6 months or 1 year or 2 years or longer?

    5. Can it somehow reduce chances of getting green card by main applicant if they want to use it and mention it on the interview?

    Thank you!

×
×
  • Create New...