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-   -   quick questions, married and on an "I" visa. (https://britishexpats.com/forum/us-immigration-citizenship-visas-34/quick-questions-married-i-visa-608815/)

olliehm May 13th 2009 6:00 am

quick questions, married and on an "I" visa.
 
Not your regular question.


I recently got laid off, I'm in the US on a media visa (been a photographer over here for 4 years) and I got married.

My wife is an american citizen. I need a job....can't sustain myself any longer.


What do I need to do, apply for a green card and then a work permit while I wait for it to be processed


Or... just apply for status change on my visa????



help please :wub:

Just Jenney May 13th 2009 12:22 pm

Re: quick questions, married and on an "I" visa.
 
Since you are married to a USC, you should apply to adjust your status to permanent resident. Look up in the Wiki for how to do this, the forms you'll need, etc. That's probably the easiest way for you to stay here and get a work permit (EAD).

~ Jenney

Rete May 13th 2009 12:25 pm

Re: quick questions, married and on an "I" visa.
 
As Jenney said, you need to apply to adjust your status to a permanent resident based upon your marriage to a USC.

When you file the petitions you also include the form I-765 for an EAD which takes approximately 90 days to receive. Then you are free to accept employment.

ian-mstm May 13th 2009 4:25 pm

Re: quick questions, married and on an "I" visa.
 

Originally Posted by olliehm (Post 7566887)
I recently got laid off, I'm in the US on a media visa...

It's possible that your visa became invalid the day you were laid off... so you'll want to keep track of the time from when that happened to when you file for adjustment and it is accepted. You don't want to let any possible overstay get past 180 days!

Ian

olliehm May 13th 2009 9:18 pm

Re: quick questions, married and on an "I" visa.
 

Originally Posted by ian-mstm (Post 7568595)
It's possible that your visa became invalid the day you were laid off... so you'll want to keep track of the time from when that happened to when you file for adjustment and it is accepted. You don't want to let any possible overstay get past 180 days!

Ian

Isn't it all made invalid anyway by me being married though? Or is that not the case?

Where is this wiki? I looked but couldn't find anything on it?

Which forms do I need to fill out I 485? What else?

Thanks again for your help.

Noorah101 May 13th 2009 9:21 pm

Re: quick questions, married and on an "I" visa.
 

Originally Posted by olliehm (Post 7569257)
Isn't it all made invalid anyway by me being married though? Or is that not the case?

Where is this wiki? I looked but couldn't find anything on it?

Which forms do I need to fill out I 485? What else?

Thanks again for your help.

Here's the Wiki link: http://britishexpats.com/wiki/Adjustment_of_Status

The AOS package includes:
I-130
I-485
G-325A
I-864
I-765
I-131
Full Medical

All forms and instructions can be found at www.uscis.gov, Immigration Forms.

Rene

Noorah101 May 13th 2009 9:21 pm

Re: quick questions, married and on an "I" visa.
 

Originally Posted by olliehm (Post 7569257)
Isn't it all made invalid anyway by me being married though? Or is that not the case?

No, just the fact of you being married to a USC did not invalidate your visa or status in the USA.

Rene

olliehm May 13th 2009 9:32 pm

Re: quick questions, married and on an "I" visa.
 
Awesome somehow I missed the giant WIKI link at the top :o
Thanks for the links.



That's a ton of forms. UGH


May just hire an attorney to do this. Man they like to make things more difficult than they need to be...


As I only have just enough to pay for all this without an attorney, does anybody know if an attorney will pay for the whole thing, and then I can pay them in installments. Wishful thinking I'm sure.

Cheers again.

Noorah101 May 13th 2009 9:41 pm

Re: quick questions, married and on an "I" visa.
 

Originally Posted by olliehm (Post 7569296)
Awesome somehow I missed the giant WIKI link at the top :o
Thanks for the links.



That's a ton of forms. UGH


May just hire an attorney to do this. Man they like to make things more difficult than they need to be...


As I only have just enough to pay for all this without an attorney, does anybody know if an attorney will pay for the whole thing, and then I can pay them in installments. Wishful thinking I'm sure.

Cheers again.

It's a lot of forms, but also a lot of the info is repeated. If you just take it one form at a time, be patient and attentive to details, you can do it.

Of course you can turn it all over to an attorney as well...but they will probably ask you to hand-complete the forms anyway, so they will have something to go by when they type them up. So it doesn't make your work a heck of a lot easier.

Most attorneys (I think) will let you pay their fee in installments, but I haven't yet seen one who will lump the Filing Fees in with that. The Filing Fees are usually separate. Filing fees for AOS are currently:

I-130 = $355
I-485 + supporting docs (including biometrics) = $1,010

Total = $1,365

Plus the cost of a full medical....a few hundred dollars, probably. Must be done by an approved USCIS doctor. You can find one in your area at www.uscis.gov.

Rene

jeffreyhy May 13th 2009 9:46 pm

Re: quick questions, married and on an "I" visa.
 
ohm,

Who do you think is going to provide the attorney with all of the information that needs to be put on the forms? You're not going to escape the work!

You will hopefully escape making mistakes, but that may depend on how diligent you are in selecting an attorney.

Regards, JEff



Originally Posted by olliehm (Post 7569296)
May just hire an attorney to do this. Man they like to make things more difficult than they need to be...


olliehm May 13th 2009 9:47 pm

Re: quick questions, married and on an "I" visa.
 

Originally Posted by Noorah101 (Post 7569318)
It's a lot of forms, but also a lot of the info is repeated. If you just take it one form at a time, be patient and attentive to details, you can do it.

Of course you can turn it all over to an attorney as well...but they will probably ask you to hand-complete the forms anyway, so they will have something to go by when they type them up. So it doesn't make your work a heck of a lot easier.

Most attorneys (I think) will let you pay their fee in installments, but I haven't yet seen one who will lump the Filing Fees in with that. The Filing Fees are usually separate. Filing fees for AOS are currently:

I-130 = $355
I-485 + supporting docs (including biometrics) = $1,010

Total = $1,365

Plus the cost of a full medical....a few hundred dollars, probably. Must be done by an approved USCIS doctor. You can find one in your area at www.uscis.gov.

Rene

Awesome I may just try and tackle this with the misses then.

Only thing I'm stuck on is, how do I obtain a police record for myself. I have no criminal background and they did a background check when I obtained my "I" visa, so do I need to provide that again?

Apparently the Criminal Justice Bureau don't hand out reports for inderviduals.

Only thing I'm stumped on here.

Noorah101 May 13th 2009 9:54 pm

Re: quick questions, married and on an "I" visa.
 

Originally Posted by olliehm (Post 7569340)
Awesome I may just try and tackle this with the misses then.

Only thing I'm stuck on is, how do I obtain a police record for myself. I have no criminal background and they did a background check when I obtained my "I" visa, so do I need to provide that again?

Apparently the Criminal Justice Bureau don't hand out reports for inderviduals.

Only thing I'm stumped on here.

You don't need a police certificate when doing AOS. USCIS will take your fingerprints and do their own security check on you.

Rene

olliehm May 13th 2009 9:55 pm

Re: quick questions, married and on an "I" visa.
 

Originally Posted by olliehm (Post 7569340)
Awesome I may just try and tackle this with the misses then.

Only thing I'm stuck on is, how do I obtain a police record for myself. I have no criminal background and they did a background check when I obtained my "I" visa, so do I need to provide that again?

Apparently the Criminal Justice Bureau don't hand out reports for inderviduals.

Only thing I'm stumped on here.

Hmm I don't quite understand the wiki, do I only need to supply information about a criminal record if I have one, and If I don't I don't need to supply anything?

Noorah101 May 13th 2009 9:56 pm

Re: quick questions, married and on an "I" visa.
 

Originally Posted by olliehm (Post 7569374)
Hmm I don't quite understand the wiki, do I only need to supply information about a criminal record if I have one, and If I don't I don't need to supply anything?

See my post above, lol.

olliehm May 13th 2009 9:59 pm

Re: quick questions, married and on an "I" visa.
 

Originally Posted by Noorah101 (Post 7569367)
You don't need a police certificate when doing AOS. USCIS will take your fingerprints and do their own security check on you.

Rene


Nice and quick again, thank you!

Well here goes nothing. :thumbup:


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