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AILA – Practice Advisory: Immigrant Visa (Green Card) Processing Delays

Update: The Department of State has updated their triad approach. For more information, click here.

After enduring the COVID-19 pandemic for over a year, most U.S. embassies and consulates are not operating at full capacity. Due to limited appointment availability, a significant backlog was created for immigrant (IV) and nonimmigrant visa (NIV) applicants waiting a visa interview. Immigrant Visas are for those seeking to come to the United States permanently as a legal permanent resident or green card holder, while NIVs are for those individuals seeking to come to the United States temporarily. The Department of State (DOS) prioritizes serving U.S. citizens abroad, which means that foreign national visa applicants are not a top priority.

Among foreign national applicants, the DOS is prioritizing Immigrant Visa applications. However, as of May 2021, there were more than 500,000 Immigrant Visa applications in DOS’s backlog. The pace at which interviews can be scheduled depends on the volume, type of visa, local conditions, and government restrictions on movement and gathering. A reduced number of applicants are processed each day to abide by social distancing and other preventative measures. Once it is safe, routine visa services will resume.

U.S. embassies and consulates are also prioritizing the processing of immigrant visa cases previously refused under rescinded Presidential Proclamations 9645 and 9983, which suspended entry into the United States of certain nationals from Burma, Eritrea, Iran, Kyrgyzstan, Libya, Nigeria, North Korea, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, Tanzania, Venezuela and Yemen.

Immigrant Visa applicants who were previously refused due to either P.P. 9645 or 9983 and were determined not to qualify for a waiver before January 20, 2020, may either (1) reapply for a visa by submitting a new visa application (DS-260) and paying a new visa application processing fee or (2) request their local embassy or consulate to reconsider their case within one year of the date of their waiver refusal without submitting a new application or paying a new visa application processing fee.

Immigrant Visa applicants who were refused due to either P.P. 9645 or 9983 and whose eligibility for a waiver was still being evaluated as of January 20, 2021, will continue to have their applications processed and prioritized.

WHAT OUR OFFICE IS DOING

For more information, please contact us today at info@enterlinepartners.com and speak with a U.S. immigration attorney in Ho Chi Minh City, Manila, and Taipei.

U.S. embassies and consulates are using a tiered approach to triage immigrant visa applications based on the category of immigrant visas as they resume and expand processing. Scheduling of appointments are prioritized as follows:

TIER 1: Immediate relative intercountry adoption visas, age-out cases (cases where the applicant will soon no longer qualify due to their age), and certain special immigrant visas (SQ and SI for Afghan and Iraqi nationals working with the U.S. government)

TIER 2: Immediate relative visas; fiancé(e) visas; and returning resident visas

TIER 3: Family preference immigrant visas and SE Special Immigrant Visas for certain employees of the U.S. government abroad

TIER 4: All other immigrant visas, including employment preference and diversity visas.

ENTERLINE & PARTNERS CONSULTING

Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam Office

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29 Le Duan Street
Ben Nghe Ward, District 1
Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

Tel: +84 933 301 488

Email: info@enterlinepartners.com

Facebook: Enterline & Partners – Dịch vụ Thị thực và Định cư Hoa Kỳ

Website: http://enterlinepartners.com/

Manila, Philippines Office

LKG Tower 37th Floor
6801 Ayala Avenue
Makati City, Philippines 1226

Tel: +632 5310 1491

Email: info@enterlinepartners.com

Facebook: Enterline and Partners Philippines

Website: https://enterlinepartners.com/

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©2021 American Immigration Lawyers Association #AILAStandsWithImmigrants
AILA is the national bar association of immigration lawyers comprised of over 15,000 members located in every state of the United States and worldwide.

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