maEL
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Posts posted by maEL
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Usually private medical centers in the cities. But public hospitals are also catching up quickly. Most medical staff and doctors are trained for their sub-specialty in the U.S. and Europe. You get both worlds. Philippine General Hospital is more equipped and trained than Denver Public Health IMHO.
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17 hours ago, Bill Oxner said:
I would make sure you well healed before going to Philippines. I have spent some time in Philippines hospital and you put your life in jeopardy once you enter their medical system, lack of proper equipment, poorly trained doctors, etc makes it risky
If you need major medical done in Philippines there is a good chance you won't survive the procedure over there.
Nope. Healthcare in the Philippines is on par, if not greater than the US. And a lot cheaper too. I guess you have not been in the country for a long time.
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For many years now, at least a decade now, they do not use "X-ray Films" anymore. I don't know of any center/hospital use them nowadays. Everything is digital now.
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She will need a travel document or something like a boarding foil from the nearest Phil. consulate. Consulate in SFO used to issue those all done the same/next day for emergency trips before covid.
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If it's illegal, wouldn't they have abolished that loophole yet eh? Why is AOS present in the immigration option anyway in the first place?
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On 10/19/2022 at 10:30 PM, Nicolo Vito Nesta said:
Thanks again to those who have dedicated their time to my cause.
In summary, I am always an LPR and only an immigration judge can make me lose this status. At the most, at customs they can keep my green card and send me to the court, always remaining in the US and with the all necessary time. So I'm thinking it would be a good idea to seek out a lawyer immigration attorney in New York, because I will arrive at JFK, in case CBP blocks me and causes trouble entering the US. Anyone have a name to suggest to me?Unneccesary cost. But if it will help you put to sleep in the night, you might as well go for it.
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On 4/8/2022 at 1:01 AM, jacobson00 said:
wow, that's a long time. Does it mean the applicant needs to come back in 6 months to keep residency ?
That is the tricky part. What if your application gets denied and you're out of the country for more than 1 year already? Do you wanna risk it?
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It is always easy to remove a petition, not the other way around. He might change his mind when the time comes. So just let the petition be for now. It will take a lot more years to finish the process anyway. IMHO
Well, unless he plans on getting a visitor's visa.
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That's what Covid did to us. Nebraska.
Applied June 2020. Biometrics June 2021. Approved September 2021. Got the permit January 2022.
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I applied June 2020. Got my reentry permit January 2022.
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F2A
PD: June 8, 2020
February 18, 2022: USCIS is actively reviewing our case.
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1 minute ago, coolhead said:
oh.... for this trip, for how long you are out....?
3 months already.
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I was out for 8 months during the early Covid days. Got "8 months out" stamp and a hell of a chastisement!!!
Stayed in for 4 months. Out again for 177 days. Got in no problem, no questions asked.
Stayed in for 7 months. I'm out currently. Received my I-131 reentry permit last month. More than 1 1/2 years after I applied for it.
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I filed June 2020. Biometrics in June 2021. Approved in September 2021. Pick-up at local Consulate on January 2022.
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NOA says it was sent to Manila Consulate. Manila Consulate says they don't know what I'm talking about, as USCIS office in Manila already closed since 2019.
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I applied June 2020. Biometrics June 2021. Approved September 2021. I still haven't receive the reentry document yet. Nebraska Service Center.
In the Philippines, Which Documents are required to submit for Child's DS-260?
in Philippines
Posted
Every consulate or embassy has different requirements. Check USEM for specifics.