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AussieAmy

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    AussieAmy got a reaction from midsummer in Australians Waiting For Interview at US Consulate Sydney   
    Hey there,
    I was in the military so I had most done through work already. However I did go to the GP and he sorted it all out for me like what I had and what I needed the blood test everything. 
    I ended up only needing a booster and blood test.
    Some immunisations are one needle and cover  multiple diseases.
    Do not stress the medical is easy peasy they can give you whatever you need on the spot as long as your happy to pay for it.
    It’s like a medical for when your going in to have surgery standard questions... do you drink? How often? Do you smoke? How many? Do you have asthma? Diabetes? Mental health questions Ect ect they read a preset list off the screen they make you duck walk in your underwear, touch your toes, reflexes, check your joint movements, your blood pressure your lungs and your out of there.
    I stressed out really really bad prior and it was just a waste of emotions because it was honest to God just a chat with a doctor. 
     
     
     
  2. Like
    AussieAmy reacted to RM1664 in Australians Waiting For Interview at US Consulate Sydney   
    Hi Visa Journey adventurers.

    First time posting here, and I thought I would share my experience as a way to say thank you and give back to the community, as I found it very helpful.
    Apologies in Advance for the long winded post.

    I met my wife on a plane, I sat next to her from Tokyo to Brissie, and the rest they say is history. It was 1st of April 2018.
    We got engaged in Vietnam in March of 2019. While travelling the USA for 2.5 months with her in summer of 2019 (us summer), we were discussing 
    where to live and the arrangements regarding that, and we decided I would move to the USA. Due to the Gov websites not being very friendly in regards to getting clear and simple advice.
    We decided to go see a lawyer in Denver to discuss the visa options. It was a free 30 min consultation.

    First question I was asked by the lawyer was why am I leaving the USA? My response was because I was there on a ESTA and had to leave before 90 days was up.
    He advised to not return to Australia, but to overstay, get married in the USA and apply for adjustment of status. because the other options of Fiancée visa being restrictive and not giving you much time to organize things, and apply for spouse visa can take up to 2 years outside of the USA. 

    We thought this sounded like bad advice, so we decided to go see another lawyer this time. He basically said the same thing.
    We were astounded at this advice.

    What we decided to do, was get married before I left the USA (July 2019) and go back to Australia and Apply for the CR-1/IR-1 Visa and do it the slow but right way for us.
    As I didn't like the idea of breaking of the law and asking for forgiveness after during the adjustment of status. As painful as we knew it would be to wait upwards of 2 years, vs 6 months if we broke the law.

     So we got married in July 2019 and I flew home to Australia and engaged a lawyer in Denver, Colorado to help with Filing.
    Life got in the way a little, my wife went travelling overseas for 6 weeks with one of her best friends and didn't get to finish submitting her side of the first forms until late september with our attorney, we got a priority date of the 8th of Oct 2019.

    I am not 100% sure of the exact requirements, and the lawyer didn't help at all with it, but with the criminal record checks, (as I have lived in a few countries before), I ended up over the last 18months applying for them 3 bloody times, as they expire ( which makes no sense, as I have not lived in some of those countries for 8 years and have not returned to them at any stage since I left). Make sure that you get an Australian Federal Police check and not a state based one. Also, I cant remember the exact option, but my first police check was denied as not valid because I chose the police check required for moving overseas, and the US Consulate wants the police check to be a "Complete Disclosure" for people moving to canberra and not a standard disclosure.
    The option was either 35 or 33 from memory. If you are unsure which is the right one to apply for, call the afp number on the criminal records page and ask (thats what I ended up doing) and they will tell you the right option to apply for the USA visa for the complete disclosure option. I have both criminal record checks and the only difference between them is the words Complete and Standard, everything else is identical.

    Also something else to note, that is lost in translation between British/Aussie English and American English is "certified copy".
    To me a certified copy is getting a photocopy of a document and having it signed as a certified true copy by the Justice of the Peace JP), this is what the UK, Canada and Australia have always accepted as a certified copy. But in America, a certified copy is the original document, or a reprinted original from the direct source of the document, think of it like as asking for a replacement of a birth certificate or degree etc. that is what they mean. At my interview an Irish guy had JP certified docs and they got denied. so note, whenever you see certified copy, get the original.

    Basically after applying we had heard nothing from the DOS CEAC or whatever they are called until early Nov, 2020, we they said my case would soon be moving to my local consulate for processing, it was a long painful wait of over a year with not hearing from them at all, the lawyer was pretty much "be patient". within 3 days of the message, I got note that they would soon be in contact to  schedule an interview, then a couple days after that I got a date saying my interview would be in Sydney on the 5th Jan and gave me a list of options whether to cancel completely, delay de to covid, or accept. I accepted it. Then arranged for a medical in Brisbane on the 16th Dec.

    The medical is nothing to worry about, its expensive about $600 or so, took me 2 hours to do. In Brisbane upon arrival, they give you a cup to wizz in and tell you to go upstairs into the hotel above and use their toilets, and then come back down and give it to them. The doctor then test your urine for a certain STD right there on the spot, and also sends it off to a pathologist to get tested(you bring it with you to the pathologist) for another STD), the medical itself was mostly a family and personal medical history quiz, do you have a history of xxxxx disease or problem etc... then takes height and weight, blood pressure and reflexes. If you can walk into the medical without dying I think you will pass with flying colours. There was no alien butt or pee hole probing or getting naked, only took off my shirt and shorts, had underwear on still. after this, I had to walk to the other side of the CBD and go to the pathology place. They took my wizz cup, and took my blood to go get tested for Syphilis and other STD that are communicable etc. It doesn't hurt, its just a tiny bit of blood, and really fast. Then I had to walk into the queen street mall and get a TB Xray for my chest to show that I don't have it. They are just checking to make sure you don't have something that other people can catch like aids/hiv, syphilis, TB etc...  I didnt need any vacinations, as I already had them all from serving in the Royal Marines in the UK. I just brought my medical docs with me to medical and also to the consulate to show proof.

    The Pathologist and Radiologist gather the results, send them to the doctor, and the doctor emails them to the consulate directly, but gives you a sheet saying you have completed your medical. I spent more time waiting for the medical stuff than actually doing it.

    My wife took a massive redundancy from work in late 2017 and was enjoying travelling around the world and not working, our lawyer advised us, it would be better for our application if she returned to work to meet the financial sponsor requirements, so she packed up from Denver and moved to Provo Utah for a job she kept getting headhunted for there.
    At the interview(Visa),  the officer said she had not been in the job long enough for it to count (4 months) and because she was enjoying her time off from work, she recorded no income for 2018 and 2019 on her tax returns, and that's what they base the financial sponsorship off, I was told I would have to get a joint sponsor at the interview, and it would delay the visa.
    I asked if there was any other way without having to ask her family to sponsor us etc...They said she has to have easily liquid assets or savings, that are 3 times the minimum wage.
    So basically, if she worked in 2019, she would have needed to earn approx. 23k USD, but the assets needed would have to be 3 times that amount or approx. 70k USD, my wife is an accountant and quite squared away financially, and easily had that in Investments and savings. So the consular officer accepted that instead of her job and salary of $70USD.
    This was good and bad news. Good because I didn't need to go find another financial sponsor and it didn't delay my application, bad because my wife didn't want to return to work and she only took the job to help with visa, now she is stuck there for the next 2-3 years. Its a great job, and lovely people etc., but she wasn't ready to return to work. So if you are in a similar situation, they can financially assess you based of your sponsors savings and investments vs only having a job. Check with your layer about this, honestly our lawyer was a tax accountant and immigration attorney, and he dropped the ball on this one, and luckily we were prepared with a copy of all her personal finances at my interview.

    The interview itself.

    I went to Officeworks and bought a clear file case to put all my documents in. My lawyer gave me a document check list that was virtually the same as the US gov one they give, but just elaborated on the types of evidence in each section a little bit more. I arranged the documents in order of the checklist,  used paper clips to bundle and keep sections clear, and added a yellow post on the first page of each bundle for easy sorting.

    Due to Sydney being in a covid hotspot, and I was coming from Brissie, I had 3 choices, cancel/postpone the interview, go to the interview and then return to Brisbane but get forced into mandatory hotel quarantine for $3k, or fly one way to Sydney, do the interview and wait in NSW for VISA and fly to America. I chose to fly to Sydney the day before interview, I stayed in the Travel Lodge on 165 Phillip Road martin Place  ( I booked through go snap travel for a discount through my WhatsApp I found it through travago travel website (https://www.snaptravel.com/) and it was $138 for the night). Its literally 200m from the Martin Place Train Station, and 300m from the US consulate, I left the hotel at 830, waited at 2 sets of lights to cross and was in the lifts at 835am). Honestly, I was so stressed out, arriving to Sydney the day before the interview, and being so close to the station and the consulate was such a relief. Then after the interview I am staying with some friends in Newcastle for the 3 weeks and I intend on flying out to USA at the end of January.

    There are no obvious signs for the consulate, the building is undergoing construction. I entered basically a food court (it has super IGA and a bunch of takeaway shops).
    Found the elevator and went to the top floor(8), you then exit the elevators walk around to the right a little bit, through  of a maze and into another set of elevators (about 30m walking around 2 corners from memory)
     the next elevator has a digital pad, has a bunch of floor numbers then a box that says US Consulate, press that to get to level 10.

    When you leave the elevators, you basically walk a long curving hall way, and you will see the diplomatic Security teams there. They are very blunt and direct, don't be offended its their job. They asked did I have an appointment, was a citizen or visa applicant, then directed me to walkdown the stairs to a bathroom and wash my hands and return.

    They made me pull out my phone, and they watched me closely to see it be switched off, then they made me put it in a security case and directed through the door into a line.

    There was a Lebanese/Australia dual national in front of me. After a short wait of 5 mins, I was next, the lady asked me my name, appointment time and for more documents.
    She sorted through them in about 30 seconds due to the way I organized everything, unlike the other guy who was a bit disorganized, and put some of my documents back into my case, and some into a new case she gave me to hold on to. Then comically told me to follow the markings on the floor around some velvet ropes for the lines, and directed me back literally 2ft away from where I was standing with her, to go through security (I could have taken 1 step to my right, but I had to go through the line.... hahahaha). Note, I was told by my lawyer, not to bring any electronic devices except for my phone, use a clear case, and not bring any bags etc.... I placed my shoes, folders, and wallet and phone in separate tubs, then went through a metal detector. at the other end I collected my shoes and the folders, but they kept my phone and gave me a receipt for it. So don't rely on having your phone with you, you cant have it. have all your info and docs printed in your folder.

    After this, disinfected my hands again, was directed to another elevator where they control it and took me to the 26th floor. I exited and had to Disinfect my hands again, go through a door and then take a ticket number like you do at the motor registry and sit and wait to be called. In the section I was sitting in and could see, there was a visa section and US Citizen section. the Visa Section had about 8 booths (standing), the officers behind are all behind class, like in a prison movie or an old fashion bank talking to you through the glass with a microphone. Some of the booths are louder than others. So far this took about 20 mins, my appointment was for 9am, I arrived at 835, and my ticket says 857am when I sat down.

    There was an older Chinese lady in her late 50's with her American husband, I could hear him, but not her or the officer, so I dont know what happened but they were there for 50 mins at least. There was a dual Irish/Australia citizen, the officers microphone was super loud, I could hear everything that was asked of him, he got denied his visa and has to follow up with the originals as he used a JP certified copy, and not the original copies (like I explained above), he was also asked questions for a solid 30 mins and copped a grilling. his medical was also expiring, so he would have to pay another $600 on top of waiting for original docs to arrive from Ireland. After he left, the dual Lebanese/Aussie guy (his English was not great) got grilled for 30 mins, he got denied, because he couldn't show enough evidence of the relationship. The officer wanted, plane tickets to see each other(itinerarys etc), social media proof, letters of support from friends and family who has seen you together. Everything, plus, he also had some JP certified stuff and not originals, and some stuff in Lebanese/Arabic that wasn't translated etc. his took about 30 mins as well and left with a Denied visa awaiting the suggested corrections. All of their problems were fixable, but might take another month of delay for them. At this stage I was not feeling confident, thinking maybe the officers were just hitting everyone with the Ban Hammer hahaha....

    I was called up next, handed over the folder the clarke had arranged downstairs, he went through it quickly, said my wife's Job was not good enough and I need to show her income for 2019 (she was living off her redundancy money travelling around the world as she never took a gap year after uni, so decided her early 30's she would have some adventures). He then said I need her parents etc. to be a joint sponsor. I said is there any other way, and he said yes if you have 3x the amount required in liquid assets, so I handed over my wife's investment portfolio, tax stuff, and her banking info. They wouldn't even look at her Job (Accountant), Salary ($70k USD) or her pay slips etc. they didn't care and said she had enough liquid assets that the job was irrelevant, so that was our good and bad news. Good I didn't need to find another sponsor, bad because my wife took on a job she didn't want to help ensure I get over there. I feel tremendously guilty, but she is such a wonderful person, Ill do my best to make it up to her somehow. The officer noted, I had everything in order and what he wanted and he would process my visa this week and mail it back to me. He did not ask me any questions, and I was lucky if I was standing there for 5 mins with him, and said I was done, I didn't pay any more money, Didn't sign anything, wasn't handed anything to take home with me, that was it, and I left. I was surprised I wasn't grilled, but I suppose I was very organized and had everything ready for him, so I was not a pain in the #######, so no need to give me a hard time.

    You need to make sure you bring a return envelope with you. This can be confusing as there are three different recommendations between the DOS  CEAC  website, the US Consul Website in Australia and the email they send you. They are all wrong adn have not been updated in a while. You have to use a return envelope that has signature required upon delivery. don't use a standard envelope, and the email advise is to get a Platinum Express Post  Envelope Medium.  All these are incorrect and they don't make platinum post anymore. Just go to Australia post, buy a 3kg Express Post Satchel bag (its yellow and white and made from plastic) its massive in size, but they are sending you more than your passport in return.. they have one pinned on the wall as you meet the first clarke downstairs who sorts your docs out. It cost me $23 for it. I put my name on it and used my friends address in Newcastle as the return address, I made sure to tell the officer upstairs that I couldn't return to Brissie without doing hotel Quarantine, and would be staying in Newcastle until I flew out. He said that was fine and he didn't care, as long as it was the right address. He said my passport and an immigration pack would be mailed to me inside. and I was not to open the immigration pack, only the express post envelope to get my passport.

    that's it, I waited 15 months for the interview, 1hr 25 mins in the building going through security and sitting down staring at the others being interview, you are not even eavesdropping, the speakers are so loud everyone will hear everything you say and what the officer says, did a 5 min document exchange with the officer who was really cool, and had just arrived to Australia after a few years in Mexico as a consul officer there. All that waiting for 5 mins... It was over what a relief. 

    I was so stressed out the few weeks before all of this, that I started breaking out in hives from stress, for the first time ever in my life, I had to go to the doctors and I was given steroids to calm them down. After all this, it was done in 5 mins, no questions, no grilling..... Just handed over docs, and they scanned my finger prints digitally at the counter. that was it.

    Because we have been married less than two years, I will get a CR-1 visa which is a conditional relative, after apprx 18 months in the USA I apply for change of status to IR-1 and pay another fee ( I am not sure how much it is) then I don't have to fill out anymore silly forms etc.

    We had digitally uploaded (or the lawyer did anyway) everything, from my MBA degree, to bank accounts, to digital passport photos from the post office, to references, to all of my wife's banking, taxes, house leases, investments etc... The officer within 20 seconds handed back every document of mine and said it wasn't needed, the only thing In the fat stack of paperwork he kept was our marriage certificate, everyone else was my wife's personal documents. I would recommend over preparing like we did and bringing everything. My document case from office works was a4 size and about 5cm thick, it was completely full of all my old passports, and all our documents and evidence. We made sure it was all uploaded digitally ontot he ceac application page ( or our lawyer did) and as well as me bring the actual docs in to the interview. Better safe than sorry.

    I feel like we over prepared and because we had everything digital and in person, it made his life easier.

    But we printed every plane itinerary for every flight we have ever taken together, then we also created a word doc that I printed, which was basically a plane ticket to Vietnam for both of us, then photos of every major city in Vietnam we went to together and took a couples selfie so saigon, Dalat, Hoi An, Hue, Danang, hanoi, Ha long ba, and added the dates of each of these places we took them in. then we did that process for Singapore, Malaysia all the places we went, vancouver, USA from Denver, to seattle right down to San Diego, to Australia from Brisbane to Newcastle, and then we took screen shots of shared/tagged facebook and instagrams posts they showed our relationship together or experieces we shared together like concerts, baseball games etc.
    And then a few personal private WhatsApp's (this is our preferred way to call and message while we have been in separate countries.) and then receipts for things like hotels, engagements rings and Airbnb's during our travels together. In total I had 42 pages (double sided so 84 pages) printed off at office works, as our evidence of our relationship.

    In the end the over preparation I think made it all easier for officer to assess, that is why I assume he asked no questions, because we were really squared away.

    The moment I hit the 6th floor food court where I got off, I couldn't wait to call my wife in Provo, Utah and tell her the good news, but Sydney has laws about wearing masks indoors etc, so it was a painfully long 50m walk until i was outside and mask free to call her. We were really happy, she was quite overwhelmed and was at work when I called and started crying in relief, I think she was a little embarrassed and didn't want to make a scene, but its been a hard year for her, moving interstate by herself, he 15yr old dog/best mate passing away and starting a new job, but we got through it in the end. I called her at 1005 am, as it took about 5 mins to live the Consulate and get outside catching 2 elevators and walking.

    Note again, no laptops, no bags are to be brought in at all, you cant leave them either. your phone or tablet will be confiscated too and given back when you leave.
    You must wear a facemask the entire time. no exceptions. Wait as long as possible to get your police checks from all the countries you have lived more than 12 months in.
    And make sure you get a complete disclosure from the Federal police and not a standard one. I have never had so much as a speeding ticket before and it was knocked back about 3 months ago, and I had to reapply for it. All that is different is one word its stupid, but rules are rules for bureaucrats...  The UK police check took about 3.5 weeks to arrive, and you can pay extra to get it done faster too.

    It was hard to get an appointment so close to Christmas in Brisbane for my medical, and I got lucky with the last available slot. I recommended as soon as you get your interview date, schedule your Doctors medical asap. The receptionist was the hardest person to deal with in this whole process, it took 25 mins on the phone to book an appointment... ridiculous, he was just really obtuse, she kept telling me I needed to do my medical after my visa interview etc. She is wrong! get it done before if you want to be approved on the day of your interview. if you don't, you go into administrative processing until the medical is done, wasting a few more weeks. She also wanted my CEAC number, I said I don't know what that is but I have a case file number from the consulate. state dep that I use to login into their system. She said that wasn't it and she wouldn't schedule my appointment until I had it. I had to email my lawyer and ask for it, he said the CEAC number is the Case file number... So it delayed me a day there getting the medical done.

    Make sure you go to Australia Post before your interview, get a 3kg express post satchel and ask the postal worker to make it a sign upon delivery parcel. It needs a Signature, I heard another officer tell a client that it needs to be signed for as the documents are sensitive that they are mailing back.
    Take a photo of the sender tracking code for yourself, fill it out before you arrive at the embassy with your details, don't worry about the sender details the officer will sort that out and bring it with you, if you forget it, it would be a massive pain in the butt to go through all the security and floor changes run to the post office and back again...
     
    The aussie fed poilce check, I think I checked the box for visa for moving overseas, but they want you to check the box for foreigners moving to Canberra basically, so that you end up with a Complete and not a standard disclosure. Call the AFP record number on the AFP criminal records page to check. it took me 5 mins to get through and the guy says he gets about 20 calls a month about being denied and needing the right one. Fed Police number to find out exactly which option is the complete disclosure you need. Ph: (02) 6140 6502 and it cost me $42 I think. https://www.afp.gov.au/what-we-do/services/criminal-records/national-police-checks

    Also, for the medical in Brisbane at least, they wanted 2 Australian size passport photos, but the US Consulate on interview day requires to US Size passport photos. They are different. I think I had to wait to sign the passport photos in front of the medical receptionist, but I signed the US Size photos with my name CEAC number/cfn before the interview. I only need two for the interview. But I brought 4 just in case.
    Basically ours are portrait rectangles and smaller than the yanks, and the yanks use square photos. If you use the wrong photos, it will just delay you and you'll have to wait a little longer.
     
    UK police checks this is what I used and was accepted, but I made a mistake and did this 15 months ago, it expired twice on me. So I ended up paying for the UK check 3 times in total, and 2 times for the aussie one due to the mix up between Complete and Standard. The checks are only valid for 6 months and my last ran out end of Oct, and I had the new UK one end of Nov. It was a waste of money applying so early for them. https://www.acro.police.uk/police_certificates.aspx

    Before they set my interview date, I got about 4 messages on their DOS CEAC page saying my appointments had all been cancelled, when I never received any notice of an interview being made. My lawyer told me, that basically their system is so old and bad, to set an appointment that have to check a box clearls any appointments that automatically sends an email saying its been cancelled, even if you never had one. I got a few of these for 2-3 days in a row, before I received the email saying interview on the 5th of Jan and do I wish to accept it.

    I have now applied for a permit to leave Australia due to covid travel restrictions, I am uncertain if need one or not, as I wont be returning anytime soon to Australia, and I now have PR in the USA, Ill see if that gets approved or not, no one at border force on the phone was very helpful at all regarding if I needed it or not... I intend to fly out on the 26th of Jan.

    I hope this helps anyone reading it regarding the how long it took us from Submission being accepted in Oct 2019, me applying for all of this from Australia, getting approved Jan 2021. and what happens when you arrive at the building etc.

    Any questions Ill do my best to help with.

    Lastly, we chose to pay for a lawyer, it was super expensive, we thought it would give us piece of mind. But honestly he just treated us like another number, took forever to respond to our emails etc, and didn't inspire a lot of confidence through it all. Finding this website about 4 months ago, was the best thing to happen during this entire process, lots of little nuggets of gold were dug in in searches, and reading about other peoples stories etc... 

    Thank you to all who contributed and helped to make me feel more relaxed about what to expect.
    Many apologies about a super long post!

    Thanks for reading and good luck in your visa journey!!





     
  3. Sad
    AussieAmy reacted to John0990 in Australians Waiting For Interview at US Consulate Sydney   
    Hi Erin, wasnt asked for a fingerprint one just a Full disclosure one mine was a Standard and had been DQ'd without issue. You really have to ask questions once there as they are not very forthcoming with info otherwise.
     
    A further update this evening I have received an email letter advising me that I am officially denied a visa due to a minor court issue 40 years ago, that involved only minor fully suspended ruling, even though the paperwork for that too had been lodged, checked and DQ'd. I apparently can apply for a waiver to the decision by filing out a whole new lot of paperwork and paying the relevant $930 US fee to lodge it via mail only and with no guarantee it will change their decision.
     
    So back to square one and certainly no Christmas together for us. We our both feeling quite gutted after a long three years of jumping through hoops.
    Stay Safe people.
  4. Sad
    AussieAmy reacted to John0990 in Australians Waiting For Interview at US Consulate Sydney   
    Hi All, an update. Ok so as for the medical all went well, Dr Rappaport and the crew were great to deal with and made the whole process as easy as possible. The usual Urine test, blood test, check of vaccination records, questions in relation to medical history etc. Basic mobility test nothing major.
     
    Now for today's Embassy visit, thsi was where I was hoping to sya YES it's done...... Not so. Over all the process was rather quick once admitted, documents are checked, you then go through security check and scan are then sent upstairs.
    You take a ticket, and sit and wait. You number is called this didnt take long at all. At this window you hand over all of your documents that are checked one by one again, the copies are returned to you, the originals come back after your interview. This process was interesting, your number is called up and you stand at a window where you answer all the questions of how, where, when you met etc. Your history etc (be prepared to do this in front of others) as anyone else waiting is seated behind you (no secrets in this room.)
     
    One note PLEASE make sure you have the Document Cover sheet they send you with you interview date email NOT the one from the website.
     
    I had no way of printing mine and so missed an important fact. On the older on in the list is you AFP clearance certificate.
     
    HOWEVER the new cover sheet specifies it must be a Full Disclosure AFP check and NOT a standard check. (this has now put everything on hold for me even after the whole hotel quarantine saga as I now need to get a new AFP check.
     
    A new one can take anywhere form 48 hours to a couple of weeks.
     
    My case is now gone to Administrative Processing awaiting my new AFP check, so any chances of making to the US to be with my wife for Christmas after nine months apart looks extremely slim to say the least.
     
    Please check and recheck your documents.
     
    Regards
    John.
  5. Like
    AussieAmy got a reaction from Sharni in Australians Waiting For Interview at US Consulate Sydney   
    Visa Issued and I’m done.
     
    To anyone reading this thread who is still going through the process I strongly advise expediting even just to hold your place! We didn’t feel our reasoning was strong BUT after seeing the amount of people pushing in front of us with similar reasoning (no offence) we decided to give it a go worst they can say is no right?
     
    It was all over from expedite to Visa Issuance in 3 weeks. Congrats to those who have received a Visa Good Luck to those that are still in the process. 

    I apologise to any who take offence but this I’m calling as I see it. 
  6. Like
    AussieAmy got a reaction from aus2tx in Australians Waiting For Interview at US Consulate Sydney   
    Visa Issued and I’m done.
     
    To anyone reading this thread who is still going through the process I strongly advise expediting even just to hold your place! We didn’t feel our reasoning was strong BUT after seeing the amount of people pushing in front of us with similar reasoning (no offence) we decided to give it a go worst they can say is no right?
     
    It was all over from expedite to Visa Issuance in 3 weeks. Congrats to those who have received a Visa Good Luck to those that are still in the process. 

    I apologise to any who take offence but this I’m calling as I see it. 
  7. Like
    AussieAmy got a reaction from Jem.G in Australians Waiting For Interview at US Consulate Sydney   
    Visa Issued and I’m done.
     
    To anyone reading this thread who is still going through the process I strongly advise expediting even just to hold your place! We didn’t feel our reasoning was strong BUT after seeing the amount of people pushing in front of us with similar reasoning (no offence) we decided to give it a go worst they can say is no right?
     
    It was all over from expedite to Visa Issuance in 3 weeks. Congrats to those who have received a Visa Good Luck to those that are still in the process. 

    I apologise to any who take offence but this I’m calling as I see it. 
  8. Like
    AussieAmy reacted to John0990 in Australians Waiting For Interview at US Consulate Sydney   
    Great news, congrats hope the future goes well for y'all.
     
    I took advice from this site and applied for expedite, (came through in a couple of weeks from application to granted.  Backing Aussie Amy comments recommend going for the expedite. I am off the Sydney Friday, 14 days lock down and then an Embassy visit so excited.
     
    Cheers.
  9. Like
    AussieAmy reacted to Adrian6584 in Australians Waiting For Interview at US Consulate Sydney   
    I know this process is stressful and frustrating for everyone. The lack of transparency on the Expedited Interview process is so annoying so hopefully my timeline is useful. I applied for IR-1 Spouse Green Card
     
    Sep 4th: Applied for Expedited Interview based on Death in Family, Job Offer for US Citizen, Job Offer for Beneficiary.
     
    Sep 17th: Expedited Interview Approved. They say the Consulate will be in touch shortly.
     
    Sep 28th: Consulate gets in touch. You get the following 3 options. "1 – Please schedule the next available appointment. 2 – I am unable to attend an interview due to COVID-19 restrictions in my State or Territory. I will contact you for an appointment as soon as I can attend. 3 – I am not yet ready to attend an interview, I will contact your office 2 months prior to when I hope to have an interview scheduled. I understand this may be longer due to the effect of COVID -19 on scheduling availability."
     
    Oct 8th: Selected Option 1. I didn't respond to the email until Oct 8th as my work had promised an offer letter but yet to provide it. The offer letter wasn't needed for the interview.
     
    Oct 9th: Email confirming the interview date scheduled for Oct 13.
     
    Oct 13th: Interview at Consulate: 
    Wife lives with me in Australia but didn't come to the interview. I was only allowed to enter 15 minutes before the interview time. If you go to the bottom of the MLC building there is a food court to hang out in, I'd avoid coffee as you'll be waiting a while when you get upstairs. Once admitted you're told to go downstairs and wash your hands, then clear security (similar to TSA). Then you take an elevator ride up to another level where your interview takes place. Take a ticket, sit down, read the magazine that you bought once over. Your first interview is with someone who checks all your paperwork and looks for any problems. When our I-130 was approved we received a message from the NVC that said we do "not meet the minimum income requirement to sponsor the intending immigrants for this case. The consular officer will make a decision regarding this" so we submitted a revised affidavit of support with assets instead of income because we didn't realize AUD income doesn't count. They had not reviewed it at this time and said they'd look over it now and told me to sit down. Manage your emotions, I saw a couple of people freak out. It does you no good, just relax, and read your magazine for the second time. Eventually, you'll get called up again, this is the actual interview. Get prepared to share your story of falling in love with the Interviewer and everyone else in the room.  They tell you if you're approved or not, and if you need to submit more docs. I didn't. Oct 19th: Passport with Visa received. Expiry date of visa matches expiry date of medical. 

    Any questions about the process feel free to ask or message me
     
  10. Like
    AussieAmy got a reaction from Jem.G in Australians Waiting For Interview at US Consulate Sydney   
    Congratulations JemG I’m so happy for you. 🥳🥳🥳
     It’s been quite a roller coaster journey.
    I had my medical last Monday and interview Tuesday. APPROVED pending documentation.
    I don’t know how long it will take from this point forwards but I do feel like a weight has been lifted off my shoulders.
    I had already booked return flights for January 😂 I was going to visit regardless of the outcome and having something to look forward to really helped keep mine and my husbands morale. 
    Not sure what I’ll do with the return ticket now 😂
  11. Like
    AussieAmy got a reaction from ChelseaLAllen in Australians Waiting For Interview at US Consulate Sydney   
    Hey all,
     
    🏥Warning long boring post about Medical🏥 
     
     
    Had my medical in Sydney today just thought since I found it hard to find info on the medical and the info I did find was mostly horror stories about being examined in the nude I would share my experience.
    I went with Dr Rapport one of the 2 doctors here in Sydney that are allowed to sign off on the visa medical. Highly recommend she was lovely.
    She is located on George Street above the food court in what appears to be a  predominantly Japanese medical complex.
    The nurse did urine collection first then checked BMI and blood pressure, eye sight test, I had to provide proof of vaccinations (I am overly organised and went to the GP a couple months ago and made sure I had all the vaccines up to date, there is one listed that is for children only, she said it’s surprising how many adults are paying for it when they don’t have to). 
    Then time to see the Doctor she made me feel very comfortable asked me a ton of questions about my medical history do I do drugs, how often do I drink, past hospitalisations, do I want children, my situation with my husband, do I suffer from depression (standard things you would get asked in a yearly physical or in a low key psych interview) ect.
    It reminded me of a tick box questionnaire you would fill out when visiting a GP you hadn’t seen before only verbal yes or no was required.
    She then did the physical where I did not have to get nude (thank you Jesus) bra and jocks was sufficient I did some exercise like movements, she did some doctorly  pushing on my abdomen, she checked my reflexes, asked me to cough and we were done. 
    She sent me to pathology for Syphillis and Ghonnorea (spelling?) blood tests (fun fact if you have ever had syphillis it will show up-I haven’t so I’m unsure what documentation you would need to prove you had been treated but that’s what they would need if your in that situation) the pathology was right down the hall from her office, then radiology for a chest X-ray to check for TB which was in another building down the street. 
    So the medical is $550 all up more if you need vaccinations which they do on the spot and charge for on the spot aswell.
    It took a couple hours mostly waiting for different professionals to do their little bit and since the consulate won’t receive the results before my interview she said it will take a week or so to get there. 
    I stressed out for nothing it was very low key just like a normal GP visit comfortable casual clothing is ideal.I hope this may help someone as OCD as myself wanting to know exactly what it entails. My take away was that  positive TB Syphillis or Ghonnorea (Spelling?) are the main barriers to the visa for medical reasons and we are lucky that we live in a first world country. 
    😊
     

     
     
     
  12. Thanks
    AussieAmy got a reaction from Jem.G in Australians Waiting For Interview at US Consulate Sydney   
    Hey all,
     
    🏥Warning long boring post about Medical🏥 
     
     
    Had my medical in Sydney today just thought since I found it hard to find info on the medical and the info I did find was mostly horror stories about being examined in the nude I would share my experience.
    I went with Dr Rapport one of the 2 doctors here in Sydney that are allowed to sign off on the visa medical. Highly recommend she was lovely.
    She is located on George Street above the food court in what appears to be a  predominantly Japanese medical complex.
    The nurse did urine collection first then checked BMI and blood pressure, eye sight test, I had to provide proof of vaccinations (I am overly organised and went to the GP a couple months ago and made sure I had all the vaccines up to date, there is one listed that is for children only, she said it’s surprising how many adults are paying for it when they don’t have to). 
    Then time to see the Doctor she made me feel very comfortable asked me a ton of questions about my medical history do I do drugs, how often do I drink, past hospitalisations, do I want children, my situation with my husband, do I suffer from depression (standard things you would get asked in a yearly physical or in a low key psych interview) ect.
    It reminded me of a tick box questionnaire you would fill out when visiting a GP you hadn’t seen before only verbal yes or no was required.
    She then did the physical where I did not have to get nude (thank you Jesus) bra and jocks was sufficient I did some exercise like movements, she did some doctorly  pushing on my abdomen, she checked my reflexes, asked me to cough and we were done. 
    She sent me to pathology for Syphillis and Ghonnorea (spelling?) blood tests (fun fact if you have ever had syphillis it will show up-I haven’t so I’m unsure what documentation you would need to prove you had been treated but that’s what they would need if your in that situation) the pathology was right down the hall from her office, then radiology for a chest X-ray to check for TB which was in another building down the street. 
    So the medical is $550 all up more if you need vaccinations which they do on the spot and charge for on the spot aswell.
    It took a couple hours mostly waiting for different professionals to do their little bit and since the consulate won’t receive the results before my interview she said it will take a week or so to get there. 
    I stressed out for nothing it was very low key just like a normal GP visit comfortable casual clothing is ideal.I hope this may help someone as OCD as myself wanting to know exactly what it entails. My take away was that  positive TB Syphillis or Ghonnorea (Spelling?) are the main barriers to the visa for medical reasons and we are lucky that we live in a first world country. 
    😊
     

     
     
     
  13. Thanks
    AussieAmy got a reaction from sydnekins in Australians Waiting For Interview at US Consulate Sydney   
    Hey all,
     
    🏥Warning long boring post about Medical🏥 
     
     
    Had my medical in Sydney today just thought since I found it hard to find info on the medical and the info I did find was mostly horror stories about being examined in the nude I would share my experience.
    I went with Dr Rapport one of the 2 doctors here in Sydney that are allowed to sign off on the visa medical. Highly recommend she was lovely.
    She is located on George Street above the food court in what appears to be a  predominantly Japanese medical complex.
    The nurse did urine collection first then checked BMI and blood pressure, eye sight test, I had to provide proof of vaccinations (I am overly organised and went to the GP a couple months ago and made sure I had all the vaccines up to date, there is one listed that is for children only, she said it’s surprising how many adults are paying for it when they don’t have to). 
    Then time to see the Doctor she made me feel very comfortable asked me a ton of questions about my medical history do I do drugs, how often do I drink, past hospitalisations, do I want children, my situation with my husband, do I suffer from depression (standard things you would get asked in a yearly physical or in a low key psych interview) ect.
    It reminded me of a tick box questionnaire you would fill out when visiting a GP you hadn’t seen before only verbal yes or no was required.
    She then did the physical where I did not have to get nude (thank you Jesus) bra and jocks was sufficient I did some exercise like movements, she did some doctorly  pushing on my abdomen, she checked my reflexes, asked me to cough and we were done. 
    She sent me to pathology for Syphillis and Ghonnorea (spelling?) blood tests (fun fact if you have ever had syphillis it will show up-I haven’t so I’m unsure what documentation you would need to prove you had been treated but that’s what they would need if your in that situation) the pathology was right down the hall from her office, then radiology for a chest X-ray to check for TB which was in another building down the street. 
    So the medical is $550 all up more if you need vaccinations which they do on the spot and charge for on the spot aswell.
    It took a couple hours mostly waiting for different professionals to do their little bit and since the consulate won’t receive the results before my interview she said it will take a week or so to get there. 
    I stressed out for nothing it was very low key just like a normal GP visit comfortable casual clothing is ideal.I hope this may help someone as OCD as myself wanting to know exactly what it entails. My take away was that  positive TB Syphillis or Ghonnorea (Spelling?) are the main barriers to the visa for medical reasons and we are lucky that we live in a first world country. 
    😊
     

     
     
     
  14. Like
    AussieAmy got a reaction from MissOphelia in Australians Waiting For Interview at US Consulate Sydney   
    For anyone flying out of New Zealand as an Australian citizen you don’t need a visa for entry to New Zealand period regardless of if it’s a layover or you have a short holiday before moving or decide to stay and work there for some unknown unforeseen reason.
     
    If only USA was so accommodating to Aussies. 😂
  15. Like
    AussieAmy got a reaction from ChelseaLAllen in Australians Waiting For Interview at US Consulate Sydney   
    For anyone flying out of New Zealand as an Australian citizen you don’t need a visa for entry to New Zealand period regardless of if it’s a layover or you have a short holiday before moving or decide to stay and work there for some unknown unforeseen reason.
     
    If only USA was so accommodating to Aussies. 😂
  16. Like
    AussieAmy got a reaction from Jem.G in Australians Waiting For Interview at US Consulate Sydney   
    For anyone flying out of New Zealand as an Australian citizen you don’t need a visa for entry to New Zealand period regardless of if it’s a layover or you have a short holiday before moving or decide to stay and work there for some unknown unforeseen reason.
     
    If only USA was so accommodating to Aussies. 😂
  17. Like
    AussieAmy got a reaction from Lelly in Australians Waiting For Interview at US Consulate Sydney   
    For anyone flying out of New Zealand as an Australian citizen you don’t need a visa for entry to New Zealand period regardless of if it’s a layover or you have a short holiday before moving or decide to stay and work there for some unknown unforeseen reason.
     
    If only USA was so accommodating to Aussies. 😂
  18. Like
    AussieAmy got a reaction from MissOphelia in Australian Embassy Appointment Wait Times   
    Heya,
    Received the docs received email on 17/6/20. We don’t really have a legitimate reason to expedite. Will just have to wait it out seems like it might take a while based on what I have read. It’s very disheartening I’m sure more so for those who have been waiting the longest.
    Thanks to all who posted.
    Anyone know anything about the additional  form we may or may not need to cover the not becoming a burden on the US one? I’ve seen mixed things On other threads.
  19. Like
    AussieAmy reacted to aus2tx in Australians Waiting For Interview at US Consulate Sydney   
    Amen!!! We’re aiming for the final move in October
     
    Thank you! Hopefully the process is a lot smoother for you down the line!
  20. Like
    AussieAmy reacted to Entheos in Australians Waiting For Interview at US Consulate Sydney   
    yes. I feel for those outside of NSW.... even outside Sydney.... I’m feeling genuinely lucky that I am 1 bus stop from Wynyard station.... and can walk from there.... albeit I’m in western Sydney.... I still am
    counting my blessings at the moment with the ability to get to the medical
    center and to the consulate with relative ease!
  21. Like
    AussieAmy reacted to Garghan in Australians Waiting For Interview at US Consulate Sydney   
    Got my Visa interview for the 15th July at the Sydney Consulate, been a long journey since October 2018, Glad we requested the expedite or else we wouldn't be in this position. Wife is due August 19th so here is hoping everything goes smooth and i can leave the country.
  22. Like
    AussieAmy reacted to Broadford in Australians Waiting For Interview at US Consulate Sydney   
    Best of luck @zochu and @Garghan hope you can both get you expedite approved and be with your partner in no time!

    I'm unsure if anyone else is feeling this way, but I'm feeling like the Australian citizens whom are trying to leave to be with their loved one/s have been forgotten about and are in a grey area being overlooked. We're not tourists trying to leave for a holiday and we don't need leave urgently so can't apply to be expedited so where do we actually fall into the scheme of things? Would love it if any governing body could just make a statement about what the game plan will be for those in the process of obtaining visas trying to leave Australia.  *Just having a vent into the wind*
  23. Like
    AussieAmy reacted to Gii in Australians Waiting For Interview at US Consulate Sydney   
    Following this forum. I wish we could just travel outside of Aus! I would be more than happy to pay the money to quarantine on arrival if it means I could see my fiancé. 
  24. Sad
    AussieAmy reacted to MissOphelia in Australian Embassy Appointment Wait Times   
    We filed in November and are now waiting for my interview. Last update on CEAC was July 9th saying that my case is "ready for my interview when scheduled" 
    It would be great to even have  a proposed commencement date for interviews. We've been apart since October 😓
  25. Like
    AussieAmy reacted to MissOphelia in Australian Embassy Appointment Wait Times   
    For those following, my request to expidite was approved! I have my interview next week. 
    Only took them about 6 days to get back to us. Whether we get approved or not remains to be seen, but I see no reason we wouldn't be. 
    So excited!
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