(2010-06-09 ساعت 12:52)FARZANSA نوشته: سلام
من یه مقدار اطلاعات نیاز دارم که اگه کسی در اختیارم بزاره واقعا ممنون میشم
من از برندگان 2010 هستم
21 آپریل وقت مصاحبه داشتم و 23 آپریل ویزامو گرفتم که تا ماه مهر معتبره، الان ازدواج کردم البته رسمی و واقعی، میشه لطفا اگه اطلاعاتی دارید در مورد اینکه الان باید چه کار کنم، و آیا میتونم برای همسرم ویزا بگیرم یا نه بهم بدید و اینکه من یه خانم هستم
ممنون
من توجه شما رو به این قسمتی که چند وقت پیش تو wikipedia خوندم جلب می کنم:
Application process for family-sponsored visas
[edit] Green card holders and families
Green card holders married to non-U.S. citizens are able to legally bring their spouses and minor children to join them in the USA, but only after an extensive multi-year delay, during which time the family is separated. The foreign spouse of a green card holder must wait for approval of an 'immigrant visa' from the State Department before entering the United States. Due to numerical limitation on the number of these visas, the current wait time for approval is four to five years for all non-retrogressed countries (including Western Europe), and many more for the retrogressed countries. In the interim, the spouse cannot be legally present in the United States (let alone work), unless he/she secures a visa for himself/herself using some other means. However, securing such a visa is usually difficult (and nearly-impossible at US embassies in some countries). This is because the spouse has to overcome presumed immigrant intent in order to qualify for a non-immigrant (or tourist) visa, a position at odds with her or his marriage to a US permanent resident. Due to the long wait and the immigration intent issues, many green card holder opt to wait to become US citizens (usually 5 years), and only then sponsor their spouses and children (the process is much faster for US Citizens). This, however, imposes a family separation of several years, unique in the immigration laws of industrialized nations.
This puts US green card holders in a uniquely disadvantaged situation:
visitors and non-immigrants coming to the USA on temporary visas for work, business, or study (including H1, L1, B, J1, and F1 visas) can sponsor their dependent spouses to live with them (but usually not work) in the US;
U.S. citizens can sponsor their spouses to come to the USA in non-immigrant status; the spouse can then convert to an immigrant status under the Legal Immigration and Family Equity Act of 2000 (the "LIFE Act"). This process is fast (6–12 months) and, unlike with green card holders, the spouse can be present in the US during the process.
The issue of US green card holders separated from their families for years is not a new problem. A mechanism to unite families of LPRs was created by the LIFE Act by the introduction of a 'V visa,' signed into law by President Clinton. It effectively expired and is no longer available. Bills HR1823 and HR4448 were proposed in the 2005–2007 U.S. Congress, but did not pass, and were as such cleared from the books at the end of 2007 Congress session. A similar bill S1085 has been proposed in the US Senate in May 2009, but has since made only little progress.
These proposals for reviving the V visa are based on something that has little controversy—family unity. However, passing such a bill into law is not a small matter, mostly because it is often perceived as a back-door to increasing immigration numbers from heavily retrogressed countries such as China, India, the Philippines and Mexico.
[edit] Green card holders and families
Green card holders married to non-U.S. citizens are able to legally bring their spouses and minor children to join them in the USA, but only after an extensive multi-year delay, during which time the family is separated. The foreign spouse of a green card holder must wait for approval of an 'immigrant visa' from the State Department before entering the United States. Due to numerical limitation on the number of these visas, the current wait time for approval is four to five years for all non-retrogressed countries (including Western Europe), and many more for the retrogressed countries. In the interim, the spouse cannot be legally present in the United States (let alone work), unless he/she secures a visa for himself/herself using some other means. However, securing such a visa is usually difficult (and nearly-impossible at US embassies in some countries). This is because the spouse has to overcome presumed immigrant intent in order to qualify for a non-immigrant (or tourist) visa, a position at odds with her or his marriage to a US permanent resident. Due to the long wait and the immigration intent issues, many green card holder opt to wait to become US citizens (usually 5 years), and only then sponsor their spouses and children (the process is much faster for US Citizens). This, however, imposes a family separation of several years, unique in the immigration laws of industrialized nations.
This puts US green card holders in a uniquely disadvantaged situation:
visitors and non-immigrants coming to the USA on temporary visas for work, business, or study (including H1, L1, B, J1, and F1 visas) can sponsor their dependent spouses to live with them (but usually not work) in the US;
U.S. citizens can sponsor their spouses to come to the USA in non-immigrant status; the spouse can then convert to an immigrant status under the Legal Immigration and Family Equity Act of 2000 (the "LIFE Act"). This process is fast (6–12 months) and, unlike with green card holders, the spouse can be present in the US during the process.
The issue of US green card holders separated from their families for years is not a new problem. A mechanism to unite families of LPRs was created by the LIFE Act by the introduction of a 'V visa,' signed into law by President Clinton. It effectively expired and is no longer available. Bills HR1823 and HR4448 were proposed in the 2005–2007 U.S. Congress, but did not pass, and were as such cleared from the books at the end of 2007 Congress session. A similar bill S1085 has been proposed in the US Senate in May 2009, but has since made only little progress.
These proposals for reviving the V visa are based on something that has little controversy—family unity. However, passing such a bill into law is not a small matter, mostly because it is often perceived as a back-door to increasing immigration numbers from heavily retrogressed countries such as China, India, the Philippines and Mexico.
کلا میگه که کسی که گرین کارت داره برای آوردن همسرش یا بچه هاش پیش خودش، وضعش حتی از کسی که با ویزاهای معمولی مثل ویزای توریستی یا دانشجویی میخواد اینکارو بکنه بدتره!!(به قول خودش a uniquely disadvantaged situation)
حتی یه ویزای معمولی که فقط کنار هم باشن خیلی پروسه زمان بری هست ظاهرا، چه برسه به گرین کارت!
ببخشید که جواب امیدوار کننده ای نبود. بنده رو هم یجورایی همدرد خودتون بدونید!
نا امید نشین. همیشه یک راهی هست، باید پیداش کرد
I make my own luck
شماره کیس: 2010AS00016xxx
دریافت نامه قبولی: جولای 2009
کنسولگری: ابوظبی
ارسال فرمهای سری اول: 14 آگوست 2009
کارنت شدن کیس: بولتن آپریل 2010
دریافت نامه دوم: 11 آپریل 2010
مصاحبه: 20 می 2010
دریافت کلیرنس: 14 سپتامبر 2010 (118 روز)
شماره کیس: 2010AS00016xxx
دریافت نامه قبولی: جولای 2009
کنسولگری: ابوظبی
ارسال فرمهای سری اول: 14 آگوست 2009
کارنت شدن کیس: بولتن آپریل 2010
دریافت نامه دوم: 11 آپریل 2010
مصاحبه: 20 می 2010
دریافت کلیرنس: 14 سپتامبر 2010 (118 روز)