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pushbrk

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Everything posted by pushbrk

  1. No. The visa decision will be made at the interview, as will the pubic charge issue. It depends on the date of the interview. You do not know if that will be the same year you submit your I-864. The correct answer is the correct answer on its own. It's not about holding a vote.
  2. Yes, they will know everything, every time. If you haven't fixed the problem, don't expect a different result.
  3. Of course not. The notary would be committing fraud to do so. What is the Notary saying they did? They didn't see the original being photocopied. Forget all this nonsense of getting a Notary to lie for you. It will either work or it won't. If it doesn't, then you obtain a new Certified Copy that isn't laminated.
  4. "State Rep" means a politician at the State level. That won't help. You need your US Congressman, or preferably the Senior US Senator from your State.
  5. Not sure I'm making sense of your question. First, you posted in the spouse visa forum but your profile indicates K1 visa. Second, USCIS is not involved with evaluating affidavits of support in any visa cases. NVC and Consular Officers will see what you show on the affidavit of support and probably notice the difference. You add and explanation that you no longer have those dependents, and say why.
  6. I take it you made a copy of the laminated certificate. That's meaningless. You may be ok, but if not, you'll need the correct unaltered (not laminated) document. Birth Certificates Available: For persons born after April 1, 1970, birth certificates are available. For persons born prior to April 1, 1970, birth certificates are considered unavailable. Fees: Fees vary from each Municipal authority, or any office authorized to issue birth and death certificates by the Registrar of Births & Deaths. Document Name: Birth Certificate Issuing Authority: Municipal Authority, or any office authorized to issue birth and death certificates by the Registrar of Births & Deaths. Special Seal(s) / Color / Format: Varies substantially from state to state. Issuing Authority Personnel Title: There is no issuing authority personnel title. Registration Criteria: The registration criteria varies Procedure for Obtaining: Procedures vary from each authority. Certified Copies Available: There are no certified copies available. Alternate Documents: If an individual is born after April 1, 1970 and is unable to obtain a birth certificate, the individual must obtain a certificate of non-availability from the local authorities with jurisdiction over their place of birth. In addition to a non-availability certificate, the following documents can be accepted as secondary evidence: School-leaving Certificate (document provided to students when they cease attending a particular school, be it public or private), Matriculation Certificate, Certificate of Recognized Boards from the school last attended by the applicant (Boards are exams) A notarized affidavit executed by either a parent, if living, or another close relative older than the applicant. This affidavit should clearly state the relationship between the deponent and the applicant, how well the deponent knows the applicant, the date and place of the applicant's birth, the names of both parents, and any other related facts. If the applicant has no living relatives that witnessed their birth, a self-attested affidavit detailing their knowledge of the facts of their birth may be accepted. Exceptions: None Comments: For all births after April 1, 1970. It is mandatory under the law (as per the Registration of Births & Deaths Act, 1969) to register every birth with the concerned state or union territory.
  7. NVC will use the guidelines in effect when they have the case. The Consular Officer will use the ones current on the interview date. Those may or may not be the same, but in this case they will most likely be different. Either way, if you meet one and not the other, that's too close for comfort.
  8. The poverty guideline that applies is the one current on the date of the interview.
  9. Yes, you can change the passport to match the I-130, or just use the passport name from NVC stage forward. Your choice.
  10. The paper form has extra pages for that. The online form should also be able to handle extra information at the end.
  11. No interview will be scheduled until after NVC has an approvable affidavit of support. If your husband is an employee, and his employer will transfer him to work in the USA, then a letter offering that job with the same company in the USA, will suffice. If he is self employed, and the income will continue from the same source, that's fine too. If neither, then the best solution without a joint sponsor, is for him to find a job in the USA as soon as possible, and go back to work there. Separation is far more common in this process, than not.
  12. What they need from you is evidence you intend to re-establish US domicile, not just that you lived there most of your life and still have driver license, bank accounts etc. For example, I currently have all those things AND have no intention to re-establish US Domicile. That your parents are willing to house you, says something about their willingness and nothing at all about your intentions. A lease agreement with family looks contrived. How about getting some estimates on actual relocation with a relocation company, then choose one and make a deposit with an open ended date. Are either of you looking for work in the USA?
  13. If you were authorized to live in a place, not just visitors, yes. Note that any country the non US Citizen lived for more than six months will require a police clearance.
  14. The OP specifically asked if "visiting them" counts. It is not "living with". It counts as relationship evidence, not living together.
  15. I just want to add that the idea of your wife's continued employment in China as a CCP member, is not going to work. In order to get a spouse visa, she'll need to resign from the party anyway. If that means losing her job too, then it comes with the territory. This is an issue to look into carefully as part of your research. It's not something I'm up to date on. Maybe you can get answers in the China regional forum. I'm suspecting (not recommending) the attorney is thinking her leaving her job and the party, and seeking to adjust status through USCIS from within the USA, instead of a visa through Guangzhou Consulate, will solve this problem. Again, suspecting, not agreeing or recommending.
  16. Visitors in another country are not living together, as they are not authorized to "reside". Not having lived together (the correct answer) is not a problem. You will be providing evidence of time spent together in person in addition to the form.
  17. Please clarify. No such thing as an NVC interview. Did she have a spouse visa interview in Cairo 7 months ago?
  18. If the attorney actually wrote "whoch" and "USICE" instead of "which" and "USCIS" then I withdraw my recommendation to listen to them. If those are your errors, carry on.
  19. Yes, but do read the USCIS instructions on the translator's certification as part of the translation. No apostille or notarization, with the exception Chinese documents which must be translated by the Chinese Government's Notarial Office.
  20. The State Department is not involved in adjusting status cases. That's all USCIS. Based on Visa Journey terms of service, my only advice is that you hired an attorney for a reason.
  21. Any past medical records would only be needed if there's some kind of problem the panel physician needs explained. Surely, your vaccination other than COVID 19 related would have been before you were 21. You WILL need the verification of your COVID 19 vaccination though.
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