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Guys seniors mentor urgent question on GC EAD


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Posted
1 minute ago, snoww said:

Employment green cards

There were 26,433 applications for employment-based green cards in the final quarter of FY2019, down sharply from 32,530 in the same period a year previously. In total, officials approved 13,709 employment green cards, down from 16,102 the previous year.

A total of 2,962 applications were denied, about the same as in Q4 2018. Overall, 17.8% of adjudicated employment green card applications were denied, up from 15.3% during the same period in 2018.

The number of pending employment-based green card applications fell to 147,252, down from 161,023 in Q4 2018.

What is reason brother ?

Posted

The data related to employment-related filings from FY 2016 to FY 2018 include:

  • The denial rate for I-129 petitions for temporary foreign workers increased from 16.8 percent to 22.6 percent.
  • The denial rate for I-485 employment-based adjustment of status applications from a temporary visa to a green card increased from 5.9 percent to 7.9 percent.
  • The denial rate for employment authorization documents jumped 6 percent to 9.6 percent.
Posted
58 minutes ago, tom bhayya said:

Stats adugu first then we can talk about it

Google sesthe 10-20% madhyalo vunnattu vundi vuncle. 

Intha high % anukole. 

Posted
9 minutes ago, JaiGangavva said:

Valid point but which one better H1 or EAD ?

malli which one better antavendi vayya...

H1 and EAD rendu simulataneous ga unchuko...

time bad aite EAD vadu..leda continue H1.....

Posted
6 minutes ago, snoww said:

Google sesthe 10-20% madhyalo vunnattu vundi vuncle. 

Intha high % anukole. 

Reason ?

Posted
1 hour ago, tom bhayya said:

Stats adugu first then we can talk about it

Uscis site lo soosa vuncle stats. 8-10% in 2019 

Posted
4 minutes ago, Spartan said:

malli which one better antavendi vayya...

H1 and EAD rendu simulataneous ga unchuko...

time bad aite EAD vadu..leda continue H1.....

Do u know the process to convert from H1 to EAD ?

Posted
Just now, JaiGangavva said:

Reason ?

USCIS Updates Rejection Criteria for Form I-129

On August 5, USCIS will begin rejecting Form I-129, Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker, petitions that do not include the petitioner’s or applicant’s name and primary U.S. office address in Part 1 of Form I-129.

USCIS currently rejects Form I-129 for several reasons. These include, but are not limited to, lack of signature, incorrect fees, or unauthorized third party signing on behalf of the petitioner. 

DHS regulations require every form to be submitted in accordance with the form instructions, and allow USCIS to reject any benefit request that is not filed in compliance with the regulations governing the specific benefit request. See 8 CFR 103.2(a)(1) and 8 CFR 103.2(a)(7)(ii)(C).

The petitioner’s or applicant’s primary U.S. office address in Part 1 of Form I-129 must not be the address of the petitioner’s or applicant’s outside counsel or clients. Failure to include the petitioner’s or applicant’s name or providing the address of the petitioner’s or applicant’s outside counsel or clients in Part 1 creates unnecessary delays in the adjudication of Form I-129 and may result in its rejection.

The Instructions for Form I-129 (PDF, 472.95 KB) state, in relevant part:

Petitioner Information
Complete the “Legal Name of Petitioner” field (if the petitioner is an individual person or a company or organization). For mailing address, list the address of the petitioner’s primary office within the United States. 

In many instances, the petitioner’s or applicant’s primary U.S. office address will determine the filing jurisdiction. Information about where to file Form I-129 is available on the Direct Filing Addresses for Form I-129, Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker page.

Form I-129 petitions that USCIS rejects due to missing information can generally be refiled with the required information and fee. However, there are instances when a refiled petition or application would be rejected, such as when a statutory cap-subject petition is resubmitted after USCIS has received a sufficient number of petitions projected as needed to reach the congressionally mandated numerical limit.

Posted
Just now, JaiGangavva said:

Do u know the process to convert from H1 to EAD ?

No. It will be new to me.

Posted
1 minute ago, snoww said:

No idea bro

 

1 minute ago, Spartan said:

USCIS Updates Rejection Criteria for Form I-129

On August 5, USCIS will begin rejecting Form I-129, Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker, petitions that do not include the petitioner’s or applicant’s name and primary U.S. office address in Part 1 of Form I-129.

USCIS currently rejects Form I-129 for several reasons. These include, but are not limited to, lack of signature, incorrect fees, or unauthorized third party signing on behalf of the petitioner. 

DHS regulations require every form to be submitted in accordance with the form instructions, and allow USCIS to reject any benefit request that is not filed in compliance with the regulations governing the specific benefit request. See 8 CFR 103.2(a)(1) and 8 CFR 103.2(a)(7)(ii)(C).

The petitioner’s or applicant’s primary U.S. office address in Part 1 of Form I-129 must not be the address of the petitioner’s or applicant’s outside counsel or clients. Failure to include the petitioner’s or applicant’s name or providing the address of the petitioner’s or applicant’s outside counsel or clients in Part 1 creates unnecessary delays in the adjudication of Form I-129 and may result in its rejection.

The Instructions for Form I-129 (PDF, 472.95 KB) state, in relevant part:

Petitioner Information
Complete the “Legal Name of Petitioner” field (if the petitioner is an individual person or a company or organization). For mailing address, list the address of the petitioner’s primary office within the United States. 

In many instances, the petitioner’s or applicant’s primary U.S. office address will determine the filing jurisdiction. Information about where to file Form I-129 is available on the Direct Filing Addresses for Form I-129, Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker page.

Form I-129 petitions that USCIS rejects due to missing information can generally be refiled with the required information and fee. However, there are instances when a refiled petition or application would be rejected, such as when a statutory cap-subject petition is resubmitted after USCIS has received a sufficient number of petitions projected as needed to reach the congressionally mandated numerical limit.

Thanks @Spartan brother 

Posted
1 minute ago, Spartan said:

USCIS Updates Rejection Criteria for Form I-129

On August 5, USCIS will begin rejecting Form I-129, Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker, petitions that do not include the petitioner’s or applicant’s name and primary U.S. office address in Part 1 of Form I-129.

USCIS currently rejects Form I-129 for several reasons. These include, but are not limited to, lack of signature, incorrect fees, or unauthorized third party signing on behalf of the petitioner. 

DHS regulations require every form to be submitted in accordance with the form instructions, and allow USCIS to reject any benefit request that is not filed in compliance with the regulations governing the specific benefit request. See 8 CFR 103.2(a)(1) and 8 CFR 103.2(a)(7)(ii)(C).

The petitioner’s or applicant’s primary U.S. office address in Part 1 of Form I-129 must not be the address of the petitioner’s or applicant’s outside counsel or clients. Failure to include the petitioner’s or applicant’s name or providing the address of the petitioner’s or applicant’s outside counsel or clients in Part 1 creates unnecessary delays in the adjudication of Form I-129 and may result in its rejection.

The Instructions for Form I-129 (PDF, 472.95 KB) state, in relevant part:

Petitioner Information
Complete the “Legal Name of Petitioner” field (if the petitioner is an individual person or a company or organization). For mailing address, list the address of the petitioner’s primary office within the United States. 

In many instances, the petitioner’s or applicant’s primary U.S. office address will determine the filing jurisdiction. Information about where to file Form I-129 is available on the Direct Filing Addresses for Form I-129, Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker page.

Form I-129 petitions that USCIS rejects due to missing information can generally be refiled with the required information and fee. However, there are instances when a refiled petition or application would be rejected, such as when a statutory cap-subject petition is resubmitted after USCIS has received a sufficient number of petitions projected as needed to reach the congressionally mandated numerical limit.

I-129 antey H1 anukunta bro. 

Posted
1 hour ago, Spartan said:

close all holes and apply for downgrade if your PD is in 2012.

u can maintain H1B until ur EAD/AP is used......safe side backup untadi

market assam ayi job pote use avutadi kaneesam.

Koncham detail ga tell e brother not uderstood @Spartan

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