Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Figuring out these issues is what we pay the agencies 9-10K+ a year to do. Just ask them for help.
JUST THIS. Don't as us anonymous host families. Ask you LCC!
You people acts like you don't know how useless some of these LCCs are!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Figuring out these issues is what we pay the agencies 9-10K+ a year to do. Just ask them for help.
JUST THIS. Don't as us anonymous host families. Ask you LCC!
Anonymous wrote:Figuring out these issues is what we pay the agencies 9-10K+ a year to do. Just ask them for help.
Anonymous wrote:I just re-did my visa.
She needs to go back to her home country and get a new visa, there is a risk she might get refused and in this case she will be stuck at home. I also think (though I am not sure) that as soon as you request a new visa your former one is canceled so even if she was to do it early, she might not be able to go back.
Anonymous wrote:I just re-did my visa.
She needs to go back to her home country and get a new visa, there is a risk she might get refused and in this case she will be stuck at home. I also think (though I am not sure) that as soon as you request a new visa your former one is canceled so even if she was to do it early, she might not be able to go back.
Anonymous wrote:These are not questions for the unvetted public forum. Go to the au pair agency you signed up with and/or immigration and check at the relevant source.
Anonymous wrote:If you want to take her out of the country in her second year (late July with an early July arrival) my understanding is that she needs a new visa, not just a visa extention and that she'd have to go out of country for that. I think the recommendation used to be that the AP travels home and applies in their home country... you might want to contact your agency (not your LCC but your area coordinator or the main office) what they currently recommend with the political climate.
I don't know anyone who tackled the application for their second year visa that early but again, your agency should be able to help you.
But yes, there is always a chance their visa may be delayed when they travel home or it could be denied which would leave them stuck in their home country.
If you weren't planning to take her out of the country she could just extend in country, which would possibly be easier but...
Anonymous wrote:It doesn’t matter if you had a match two months prior her arrival or a year. Her visa starts the day of her arrival to USA. That’s how agencies do that. I don’t believe it. All au pairs get their visa ahead issue date is not the same as expiration date. Check her visa in her passport..