+1. He can go on his own once his green card comes through.Anonymous wrote:Honestly might consider going to visit family without your son?
Anonymous wrote:You have to wait, like everyone else. I cannot believe the preciousness of your whiny post.
We got our green cards processed in Jan 2012 and had booked travel to the UK for the summer. But there was a blip on the form for my DD (the doctor checking the form had failed to mark an X by one of her current vaccinations) and her card was delayed while we had this corrected. So we canceled the whole trip - her card arriving just a day after we would have flown out.
This kind of thing happens all the time, even without a pandemic, but you have to understand that there are people desperate to be reunited with family members who are waiting under far more extreme circumstances. You are waiting for a trip back to the UK. Big flipping deal.
Just wait like everyone else. A lawyer cannot speed up a pile of forms, you're an idiot.
Anonymous wrote:You have to wait, like everyone else. I cannot believe the preciousness of your whiny post.
We got our green cards processed in Jan 2012 and had booked travel to the UK for the summer. But there was a blip on the form for my DD (the doctor checking the form had failed to mark an X by one of her current vaccinations) and her card was delayed while we had this corrected. So we canceled the whole trip - her card arriving just a day after we would have flown out.
This kind of thing happens all the time, even without a pandemic, but you have to understand that there are people desperate to be reunited with family members who are waiting under far more extreme circumstances. You are waiting for a trip back to the UK. Big flipping deal.
Just wait like everyone else. A lawyer cannot speed up a pile of forms, you're an idiot.
Anonymous wrote:
The last few years have been HELL on visa and green card applicants, OP.
There are hundreds of thousands of families all over the world who are currently separated because USCIS is taking way too long. Reasons for this are threefold:
1. Trump paved the way by defunding USCIS while in office.
2. Then the pandemic hit, and USCIS, operating on nothing bu fume, was forced into closing its offices. Some people worked from home, but visas and green card processing times started taking much longer.
3. Biden is not doing much to help USCIS, since it actually suits him fine to employ Americans first, and people like your son are not his administration's priority.
We are currently filing for a green card, after more than a decade on a series of visas, and our last visa filing this summer/fall was rough. We were told to expect a wait of THREE HUNDRED DAYS in our home country for the visa interview (which is merely a rubber-stamping of our already approved application, in our case). Luckily we managed to get an expedited appointment, but we had to leave our home in the US and pull our kids from school so we could stay in our home country for an indeterminate amount of time. Not knowing how long we would have to be away was incredibly stressful on our preparations for our departure. How do you plan for house and pets when you don't know when you'll return?
Anyway, it was a nightmare I wouldn't wish on anyone.
My oldest is applying to unis abroad, and if we're barred from leaving the US because our application is still in limbo, we will not be able to accompany him or go to him if he has any sort of problem. That's another scary thought.
Immigration lawyers have sought clarification from the US government, and indeed a group of lawyers filed suit against the Federal government on behalf of their clients stuck in never-ending visa and green card processes, to no avail.
We are just not on their radar right now.
Best of luck.
Anonymous wrote:There are thousands of people in the same boat as you, OP. This is not some unique situation. The entire green card/consular service situation is a clusterf*** right now.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly might consider going to visit family without your son?
Anonymous wrote:We applied about a year before you and got it recently so take into consideration it might take another year or so. If it's not worth the wait then cancel so you can travel again.
Anonymous wrote:This is pre-covid, so maybe different now, but when I used to apply for green cards for clients (part of my pro bono work for asylum seekers), when they were waiting for travel authorization, if they had imminent travel you could write to the processing facility asking for expedited processing, citing whatever reasons you have - urgent need to travel etc. Have you done this?
Anonymous wrote:this? As someone who was a green card holder now a dual citizen ( UK/US) I’m confused about this too.Anonymous wrote:Do you have green cards or are you on visas? What status did your son have before you applied for his green card?